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ORIGINAL RESEARCH article

Front. Plant Sci., 11 December 2013
Sec. Plant Physiology
This article is part of the Research Topic Current advances and challenges in understanding plant desiccation tolerance View all 12 articles

An emerging picture of the seed desiccome: confirmed regulators and newcomers identified using transcriptome comparison

\r\nEmmanuel TerrassonEmmanuel Terrasson1Julia BuitinkJulia Buitink2Karima RighettiKarima Righetti2Benoit Ly VuBenoit Ly Vu3Sandra PelletierSandra Pelletier2Julia ZinsmeisterJulia Zinsmeister3David LalanneDavid Lalanne2Olivier Leprince*Olivier Leprince3*
  • 1Université d'Angers, UMR 1345 Institut de Recherche en Horticulture et Semences, SFR 4207 QUASAV, Angers, France
  • 2Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique, UMR 1345 Institut de Recherche en Horticulture et Semences, SFR 4207 QUASAV, Angers, France
  • 3Agrocampus Ouest, UMR 1345 Institut de Recherche en Horticulture et Semences, SFR 4207 QUASAV, Angers, France

Desiccation tolerance (DT) is the capacity to withstand total loss of cellular water. It is acquired during seed filling and lost just after germination. However, in many species, a germinated seed can regain DT under adverse conditions such as osmotic stress. The genes, proteins and metabolites that are required to establish this DT is referred to as the desiccome. It includes both a range of protective mechanisms and underlying regulatory pathways that remain poorly understood. As a first step toward the identification of the seed desiccome of Medicago truncatula, using updated microarrays we characterized the overlapping transcriptomes associated with acquisition of DT in developing seeds and the re-establishment of DT in germinated seeds using a polyethylene glycol treatment (−1.7 MPa). The resulting list contained 740 and 2829 transcripts whose levels, respectively, increased and decreased with DT. Fourty-eight transcription factors (TF) were identified including MtABI3, MtABI5 and many genes regulating flowering transition and cell identity. A promoter enrichment analysis revealed a strong over-representation of ABRE elements together with light-responsive cis-acting elements. In Mtabi5 Tnt1 insertion mutants, DT could no longer be re-established by an osmotic stress. Transcriptome analysis on Mtabi5 radicles during osmotic stress revealed that 13 and 15% of the up-regulated and down-regulated genes, respectively, are mis-regulated in the mutants and might be putative downstream targets of MtABI5 implicated in the re-establishment of DT. Likewise, transcriptome comparisons of the desiccation sensitive Mtabi3 mutants and hairy roots ectopically expressing MtABI3 revealed that 35 and 23% of the up-regulated and down-regulated genes are acting downstream of MtABI3. Our data suggest that ABI3 and ABI5 have complementary roles in DT. Whether DT evolved by co-opting existing pathways regulating flowering and cellular phase transition and cell identity is discussed.

Introduction

Understanding osmotic stress responses is one of the most important topics in plant science as this stress causes adverse effects on crop yield and quality (Hirayama and Shinozaki, 2010). For example, the recent drought waves that occurred in Europe in 2003 and in most of the USA in 2012 caused an estimated 30% reduction in primary productivity (Ciais et al., 2005; Claeys and Inzé, 2013). With the prospect of climate changes that are expected to worsen water limitations in the future, these figures suggest that major progress in understanding how plants cope with drought stress remains to be made. Given these agricultural challenges, it is remarkable that there exist biological mechanisms that allow complete desiccation with loss of viability (Hoekstra et al., 2001; Moore et al., 2008; Leprince and Buitink, 2010; Gechev et al., 2012; Gaff and Oliver, 2013). Desiccation tolerant seeds and leaves have acquired mechanisms that enable them to safely experience decreasing water potentials at which drought tolerant tissues are barely surviving (i.e., > −3 MPa for cell protoplasts). Therefore, it is argued that understanding the molecular processes leading to desiccation tolerance (DT) in seeds and resurrection plants might help the design and production of drought tolerant crops (Bartels and Sunkar, 2005; Moore et al., 2009; Rodriguez et al., 2010; Oliver et al., 2011; Gechev et al., 2012).

The desiccome can be referred to as the set of genes, proteins and metabolites that are required for DT (Leprince and Buitink, 2010). They are part of the protective mechanisms that can be grouped in at least three types that act synergistically (for reviews see Hoekstra et al., 2001; Tunnacliffe and Wise, 2007; Moore et al., 2008, 2009; Mönke et al., 2012; Leprince and Buitink, 2010; Gaff and Oliver, 2013): (1) protection by stabilization of membranes and proteins by non-reducing sugars, late embryogenesis abundant (LEA) proteins and heat shock protein (HSP), (2) protection against oxidative damage by a range of antioxidant compounds such as tocopherols, glutathione, together with a coordinated response of metabolism during drying and (3) protection against structural stresses imposed by drying such as cell wall modification, reorganization of endomembranes and cytoskeleton, vacuolization and chromatin condensation. The desiccome also includes the regulatory mechanisms and signaling pathways controlling the induction of these protective mechanisms leading to DT. However, these pathways are still poorly understood.

Abscisic acid (ABA) has been long known to play a prominent regulatory role in DT. In several species of resurrection plants, exogenous ABA induces DT [reviewed by Gaff and Oliver (2013)] whereas in seeds, genetic screens for ABA insensitivity during germination has led to the discovery of abscisic acid insensitive 3 (abi3) mutants. Severe alleles of abi3 mutants of several species, including Arabidopsis (Ooms et al., 1993) and Medicago truncatula (Delahaie et al., 2013) produce desiccation-sensitive seeds and have reduced expression of many genes related to DT like LEA genes. An ABI3 ortholog has been found to activate LEA genes in the moss Physcomitrella patens (Yotsui et al., 2013), suggesting that ABI3 is part of an evolutionarily conserved regulatory network. ABI3 encodes a transcription factor belonging to the B3 domain-containing family and its function in the ABA signaling pathway in seeds is well characterized (Cutler et al., 2010; Hauser et al., 2011; Nakashima and Yamaguchi-Shinozaki, 2013). Transcriptional targets of ABI3 have been identified based either on transcript analysis in loss-of-function mutants or over-expressing transgenics (Nakashima et al., 2006) or through genome wide chromatin immunoprecipitation (Mönke et al., 2012). They include oleosins, LEA proteins and storage proteins. However, the experimental set up of these studies did not consider a putative link with DT.

To date, the ABA-signaling pathway leading to DT is mainly inferred from the knowledge gained from genetic and biochemical studies in drought tolerance in vegetative tissues and seed development. Indeed, the backbone of the ABA core signaling pathway, including positive and negative regulators involved in the response to osmotic stress in vegetative tissues, is very similar to that involved in seed maturation during which DT is acquired (Finkelstein et al., 2005; Fujita et al., 2011; Hauser et al., 2011; Nakashima and Yamaguchi-Shinozaki, 2013). In seeds and seedlings, basic leucine zipper (bZIP) transcription factors (TF) belonging to the ABA Responsive Element Binding Factors (AREB/ABF) and ABA INSENSITIVE 5 (ABI5) clade represent key TF controlling ABA-responsive gene expression such as LEA genes by interacting with ABA responsive regulatory elements (ABRE) in their promoter region. In Arabidopsis, promoters of genes with transcript levels that accumulate during maturation drying and that are stored in the dry seeds exhibit an enrichment in ABRE elements (Nakabayashi et al., 2005). ABI5 is considered as a crucial player in ABA signaling (Fujita et al., 2011). ABI5 appears to be courted by multiple proteins, thereby forming a complex interactome (Lindemose et al., 2013). There is also a large body of evidence suggesting that ABI5 forms a complex with ABI3 to regulate the expression of downstream genes with ABI3 acting as an accessory enhancer of transcription (Nakamura et al., 2001; Lindemose et al., 2013). It is suggested that such interaction occurs only during seed maturation (Finkelstein et al., 2005). ABI5 exerts a positive regulation of EM1 and EM6 genes (Nakamura et al., 2001; Finkelstein et al., 2005) both encoding LEA proteins whose abundance correlates with DT in developing and germinating seeds of Medicago (Boudet et al., 2006; Chatelain et al., 2012). However, null alleles of ABI5 apparently produce desiccation-tolerant seeds in Arabidopsis. During seedling establishment, ABI5 controls an ABA- or osmotic stress induced post-germinative growth arrest that is accompanied by an increased drought tolerance (Lopez-Molina et al., 2001, 2002). Therefore, the precise role of ABI5 in DT, if any, remains to be elucidated.

In this study, we investigated the regulatory components involved in DT in M. truncatula seeds by revisiting the transcriptome changes associated with the acquisition of DT during seed maturation and the re-establishment of DT in emerged radicles upon an osmotic treatment using a PEG solution at −1.7 MPa (Buitink et al., 2006; Verdier et al., 2013). We used an updated Nimblegen slide containing the almost complete M. truncatula genome. One of the identified TF that was further characterized for its role in DT was MtABI5. New putative ABI5-regulated target genes that are involved in DT were identified from a transcriptome analysis. In addition, to identify ABI3-related genes involved in DT, we also took advantage of recently obtained transcriptome data on Medicago Mtabi3 seeds and hairy roots ectopically expressing MtABI3. The comparison of these five transcriptomes provides insights into the desiccome that is regulated by ABI3 and ABI5 and identifies new regulators that might play a role in DT in seeds.

Materials and Methods

Plant Materials and Physiology

Plants of Medicago truncatula ssp. tricycla (R108) were grown in a sterile mix of vermiculite and soil in a growth chamber at 24°C/21°C, 16 h photoperiod at 200 μM m−2 s−2. Seeds were harvested upon pod abscission and stored at 5°C at 43% relative humidity (RH) until use. Two M. truncatula mutants with Tnt1 insertions in the MtABI5 gene (NF4383, hereafter referred to as Mtabi5-1 and NF3376, Mtabi5-2) were obtained from the Samuel Noble Foundation (Oklahoma, USA). Tnt1 insertions in both mutants were verified by PCR according to Delahaie et al. (2013) using forward and reverse primers ATGGTGGTAAGAGAAGGTGAGAT and AGCAGCAAGATCTAGAGCCAGA, respectively. Mutant and wild-type lines (R108) were multiplied in a growth chamber according to Chatelain et al. (2012). The Mtabi5-1 line was backcrossed twice.

To determine ABA sensitivity, batches of 30–50 seeds were scarified with sand paper and imbibed on filter paper on a range of ABA concentrations (mixed isomers, Sigma, St Louis, MO, USA) at 20°C in the dark. ABA was dissolved in methanol prior to dilution in water. Control seeds were imbibed in the MeOH concentration corresponding to the highest ABA concentration (0.5% MeOH). Germination was scored after 14 days.

The re-establishment of DT after germination was performed according to Buitink et al. (2003). Germinated seeds with a protruded radicle length of 2.7–2.9 mm (thereafter referred to as 2.7 mm) were selected and submitted to an osmotic treatment by incubation in a PEG 8000 solution (−1.7 MPa) at 10°C in the dark. After 72 h, seeds were removed from the PEG solution and rinsed thoroughly. Three replicates of 50 radicles before and after PEG treatment from WT and Mtabi5 mutants were excised and frozen for RNA extraction. DT of germinated, untreated and PEG-treated germinated seeds was assessed by drying 50 seeds for each condition for 3 days at 20°C under an air flow at 42% RH. Radicles were considered desiccation-tolerant when they resumed growth upon re-imbibition.

Bioinformatic Analyses

A blast was performed on the Medicago IMGAG Mt3.5.1 version using the Arabidopsis ABI5 amino acid sequence (At2g36270.1) to retrieve homologous genes (score e < 1E-20). An unrooted tree was constructed with the nine identified MtABI5-like sequences and the Arabidopsis ABI5 using the sequence alignment program ClustalW (http://www.ebi.ac.uk/Tools/msa/clustalo/) and presented using Treeview (Page, 1996). Gene lists were analyzed for enrichment in gene ontology (GO) terms using the Singular Enrichment Analysis (SEA) tool of AgriGO (http://bioinfo.cau.edu.cn/agriGO/) with a Chi-square statistical test method and the Yekutieli multi-test adjustment method (Du et al., 2010). For the large dataset of down-regulated transcripts related to DT, Plant Slim GO analysis was used. Data lists were analyzed using the Arabidopsis TAIR9 background based on homology with the Medicago sequences since the M. truncatula genome background in AgriGO is incomplete.

For cis-element enrichment analysis of the DT-UP list, 1.5 Kb promoter regions upstream of the translational start of the 382 IMGAG Mt3.5.1 sequences were retrieved using the Legoo gateway (https://www.legoo.org/). Promoter sequences were analyzed using the PLACE database resource, (http://www.dna.affrc.go.jp/PLACE/signalup.html). The frequency of a specific motif in the promoters of genes was tested against a background frequency generated using a randomized sample of 1470 Medicago genes. The significance of the enriched cis-elements was calculated using a Chi-square test against the background sample.

RNA Extraction and Microarray Analysis

Total RNA were extracted using the nucleospin RNAplant kit (Macherey Nagel, Düren, Germany) and 400 ng were amplified using the Ambion messageAmp II (Ambion, Austin TX) following manufacturer's instructions. Five μg of amplified RNA were retro-transcribed with 400 U of Superscript II reverse-transcriptase (Invitrogen Corp., Carlsbad, CA) and labeled with 1.5 mmol of Cyanine-3 (Cy3) or Cyanine-5 (Cy5) (Interchim, France) then purified using NucleoSpin Gel and PCR Clean-up column kits (Macherey-Nagel, GmbH and Co. KG, Germany). Purified and labeled cDNA were quantified using a NanoDrop ND-1000. Corresponding Cy3- and Cy5 labeled samples (30 pmol) were combined and co-hybridized to Medtr_v1.0 12x135K arrays according to Verdier et al. (2013). The Medtr_v1.0 chip was in situ synthesized by Nimblegen (Madison, WI) and contains 102,123 60-mer oligoprobes that were designed from an intermediate annotation of the M. truncatula genome, containing one probe per sequence of the IMGAG Mt3.5.1 version and additional sequences from RNAseq (Verdier et al., 2013). Three biological replicates were analyzed per comparison using the dye-switch method, and statistical analysis on the gene expression data was performed according to Verdier et al. (2013). Probes with a P < 0.01 and a log ratio>|1| were considered differentially expressed.

Data Submission

Nimblegen microarray data were deposited on the NCBI GEO database [(Barrett et al., 2012); accession GSE51830]. Data on the ectopic expression of MtABI3 in hairy roots discussed in this publication have been deposited in NCBI Gene Expression Omnibus (Edgar et al., 2002) and are accessible through GEO Series accession number GSE44291 (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/geo/query/acc.cgi?acc=GSE44291).

Quantitative PCR

For real time RT-PCR, 1 μg total RNA was reverse-transcribed using Quantitect Reverse Transcription kit (Qiagen, Courtaboeuf, France) and qPCR was performed on a CFX96 Real-Time Detection System (Bio-Rad Laboratories, Hercules, CA) using the manufacturer's instructions with SsoFast Eva Green Supermix (Bio-Rad Laboratories, Hercules, CA). For Medtr5g010210.1 (GCL210, glutamate cysteine ligase), 5′TCTACGGCCAAAACTGTTGC3′ and 5′CGTAACGTACCTTGGGCACTA3′ were used as forward and reverse primers, respectively. For Medtr5g010230.1 (GCL230), 5′TCCTGGATATGATTGCTGATTGGA3′ and 5′AGAGTCTTTAAACCGGTGAAAGGA3′ were used as forward and reverse primers, respectively. The reference gene used for normalization was MSC27 (Bolingue et al., 2010). Relative expression levels were calculated using the comparative 2∆(Ct) method. Each data point represents the mean of three biological replicates.

Results and Discussion

Identification of the Transcriptional Desiccome Using Two Physiological Models of Desiccation Tolerance

To obtain an overview of the genes implicated in DT, we produced two transcriptome data sets using an updated Medicago Nimblegen microarray: one on the acquisition of DT during maturation (GEO database accession GSE49350), and a second one on the re-establishment of DT during PEG incubation. To identify genes that are differentially expressed during the acquisition of DT, transcript levels were compared between 14 days after pollination (DAP), when seeds are still desiccation sensitive, and 32 DAP, when 100% of the seeds have acquired their DT (Figure 1A). Data analysis identified 3626 and 14601 transcripts that increased or decreased at least two-fold, respectively, between 14 and 32 DAP. Next, we characterized the transcriptome in relation to the re-establishment of DT. DT is lost following germination after the radicle is protruded, first in the radicles and then in the cotyledons. However, it is possible to re-establish DT in these protruded radicles by an osmotic stress treatment using a PEG solution at −1.7 MPa (Buitink et al., 2003; Faria et al., 2005). We performed a transcriptome analysis on 2.7 mm long protruded radicles before and after 72 h of PEG incubation, corresponding to desiccation sensitive and -tolerant tissues, respectively (Figure 1B). A total of 3598 and 6691 transcripts increased or decreased significantly (ratio log2 > 1 or <-1, P < 0.01). Both datasets were compared to each other to identify overlapping transcripts (Figure 1C). This resulted in the identification of 740 transcripts that positively correlate with DT (hereafter referred to as the DT-UP list) and 2829 transcripts that are down-regulated when DT is installed (DT-DOWN list) (Figure 1C) (Supplementary Table S1). It should be noted that some redundancy exists between the probes. Some of them are recognized by the same gene transcript, which can only be removed when the assembly of the M. truncatula genome is completed.

FIGURE 1
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Figure 1. Changes in desiccation tolerance (DT) and the associated desiccome in Medicago truncatula. (A,B) Schematic representation of the acquisition of DT during seed maturation (MAT) at the indicated days after pollination (DAP) [A, curve taken from Chatelain et al. (2012)] and the re-establishment of DT (RDT) in emerged radicles of germinated seeds during the incubation in a polyethylene glycol solution (PEG) at −1.7 MPa [B, curve taken from Buitink et al. (2006)]. Arrows indicate the time at which samples were taken for the transcriptome analysis. (C) Venn diagrams comparing the overlapping transcripts whose levels are increased (UP) or decreased (DOWN) during the transition from a desiccation-sensitive to -tolerant stage during maturation (MAT) and PEG incubation (RDT). Genes were considered statistically different when −1 < M(log2) > 1 and P < 0.01.

The DT associated transcriptome of Medicago corresponding to a more complete dataset using updated slides, was compared to the recently obtained data set on a similar system of re-establishment of DT in Arabidopsis (Maia et al., 2011). Compared to this study, the number of transcripts overlapping between Arabidopsis and Medicago increased from 22 (48 transcripts) to 77% (115) of the total amount of up-regulated genes in Arabidopsis during re-establishment of DT and from 13 (49 transcripts) to 50% (139) for the down-regulated genes. These values reinforce the idea that core mechanisms and key regulators involved in DT are conserved across species, despite the fact that whole seeds were used for Arabidopsis and only radicles for M. truncatula (Maia et al., 2011).

To gain insight into the Medicago DT-related transcriptome, a GO enrichment analysis was performed using agriGO. Within the up-regulated genes, the main enriched GO terms belonged to three broad categories: developmental processes, endogenous stimuli and external stimuli and stress (Figure 2A). A closer look at these GO terms identified categories previously described by Maia et al. (2011) in the relation to the re-establishment of DT in germinated seeds, such as post-embryonic development, response to ABA, and response to water deprivation. The latter two GO terms were also enriched in the transcriptome of dehydrating leaves of the resurrection plant Craterostigma plantagineum (Rodriguez et al., 2010), reinforcing the importance of ABA as a core regulator of DT. Our data also revealed an important and previously un-described category in the DT-UP list, namely “anatomical structure development.” Apart from genes that have been discovered previously in relation to DT, such as LEA genes, oleosins, or 1-cys peroxyredoxin, this GO category revealed genes whose Arabidopsis homologs are involved in the regulation of cell growth, cell formation or identity. This category also contains several probes whose homologs in Arabidopsis impose maternal effects on seed development such as DEMETER (responsible for endosperm maternal-allele-specific hypomethylation at the MEDEA gene) and MATERNAL EFFECT EMBRYO ARREST 11 and 14 (MEE11, MEE14), whose mutants are embryo lethal because of endosperm development arrest (Pagnussat et al., 2005). It is long recognized that many seed traits such as weight, germination and even longevity (i.e., survival in the dry state for a period of time) are under the influence of parent-of-origin effects (Blödner et al., 2007; Donohue, 2009; Kochanek et al., 2011). Since the acquisition of DT is essential to complete the plant life cycle, these data raise the intriguing question whether maternal effects might also influence the transcriptional part of the desiccome.

FIGURE 2
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Figure 2. Gene Ontology (GO) enrichment analysis of the desiccation tolerant UP list (A) and desiccation tolerant DOWN list (B). Analysis was performed on the DT-UP and DT-DOWN list from Figure 1 using AgriGO with the Arabidopsis TAIR9 background applying a Chi2 statistical test with the Yekutieli multi-test adjustment method. Gray bars: input genes, black bars background genes.

The GO categories of the DT-down list were related to cell cycle, growth and regulation of cell size (Figure 2B). For instance, they contained genes associated with the modification of cell walls (cellulose synthase, expansins, ATGH9B1 (ARABIDOPSIS THALIANA GLYCOSYL HYDROLASE 9B1) and the cytoskeleton. Also GO categories related to transport and metabolism were found to be enriched in the down-regulated desiccome.

Characterization of Transcriptional Regulators and Regulatory Cis-Elements in the Up-Regulated Desiccation-Tolerance Related Transcriptome

To gain further insight into the transcriptional machinery regulating DT independently of the developmental context, 48 TF that were manually curated using Ensembl and Plantdtb (http://planttfdb.cbi.pku.edu.cn) were retrieved from the up-regulated gene list (Table 1). AP2/EREBP, bHLH, and bZIP family members were found to be the most abundant TF. Twenty-two percent of these TF correspond to Arabidopsis homologs associated with freezing, cold and drought response and/or mediating an ABA response such as members of the DREB (DRE binding protein) subfamilies (Table 1, bold characters) as previously described (Fujita et al., 2011).

TABLE 1
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Table 1. Transcription factors identified in the desiccome of Medicago truncatula (UP-DT list, see Figure 1) and homologs in Arabidopsis thaliana.

Strikingly, 17 TF (35%) with increased transcript levels in relation to DT were homologs of Arabidopsis regulators that are broadly associated with cell fate or cell identity (see italics characters in Table 1). For example, TRANSCRIPTION FACTOR GROUP E6 (GTE6) regulates differences in leaf patterning between juvenile and mature leaves. PLETHORA 2 (PLT2) is a master regulator of embryonic pattern formation during embryogenesis and root development during seedling growth (Galinha et al., 2007). CUP-SHAPED COTYLEDON 3 (CUC3) regulates embryonic shoot meristem formation and cotyledon boundary specification (Hibara et al., 2006). HAT3 controls apical embryo development and meristem function (Turchi et al., 2013). GRF5 regulates the promotion and/or maintenance of cell proliferation activity in leaf primordia. In rice, the homolog of WOX11 regulates the activation of crown root emergence and growth (Zhao et al., 2009). Yet, during the acquisition of DT during maturation and during PEG, the cell cycle activities are repressed (Faria et al., 2005). Whether these TF participate at the repression of these activities or whether they are necessary to coordinate the resumption of growth and development during rehydration remains to be assessed.

The Medicago TF list also contains homologs of transcriptional activators of Arabidopsis that participate in the precise regulation of the timing of flowering by incorporating temperature or day length information to promote floral transition and flower meristem identity (Table 1). Among these, we find bHLH80 and bHLH130, respectively, homologs of FLOWERING BHLH 1 and 4 (FBH1 and FBH4), MADS-box protein SVP (homolog of SHORT VEGETATIVE PHASE SVP) and Myb-related protein MYB4 (homolog of MYB17) (Gregis et al., 2008; Jang et al., 2009; Zhang et al., 2009; Ito et al., 2012). The implication of regulators integrating light information or controlling flowering was further reinforced by the identification of homologs of CHO1 (CHOTTO1) and SOM (SOMNUS) (Kim et al., 2008; Yano et al., 2009) and, in the DT-UP list, the photoreceptor FLAVIN-BINDING KELCH REPEAT F BOX 1(FKF1). Although our analysis is based solely on the comparison of transcript levels, and care should be taken with the interpretation of the data based on Arabidopsis homologs, altogether, these findings raise new questions about the mechanisms involved in the regulation of DT and developmental transitions. One such question is whether these regulators could play a role in integrating developmental and environmental signals such as light to maintain irreversible the transition from a desiccation-sensitive to a tolerant stage.

If DT has integrated regulatory pathways that relay developmental and environmental cues, then this should be revealed in the cis-regulatory elements of promoter genes of the DT-UP list. For 393 out of 740 transcripts of the DT-UP list, promoters could be retrieved using the IMGAG Mt3.5.1 version. The most abundantly represented cis-elements were related to ARBRE elements (Table 2): 213 out of 393 promoters contained ABRE-related sequences (ABRERATCAL). These elements are targets of the bZIP ABI5 or ABRE binding factors, which suggests a role of these TF in DT in M. truncatula seeds. Many promoters of the DT-UP genes also contain DRE elements, but they were not significantly over-represented. DRE regulatory cis-elements known to regulate ABA-dependent and -independent gene expression in response to osmotic stress and their role in seeds has been suggested (Fujita et al., 2011). Numerous genes contained cis-elements that are related to light mediated regulation/“G box” (GBOXLERBCS), known for binding with GBF, “BoxII” (LREBOXIIPCCHS1), “LRE” (LRENPCABE), and “Sequences Over-Represented in Light-Induced Promoters” (SORLIP4AT). The cis-element GBOXLERBCS was also found enriched in the DT transcriptome of PEG-treated germinated seeds of Arabidopis (Maia et al., 2011), and supports our hypothesis that regulation of DT has adopted regulatory pathways integrating light signals. Two overrepresented cis-regulatory elements were related to auxin, AUXREPSIAA4 and SGBFGMGMAUX28. This is consistent with the observation that several genes involved in cell identity present in the DT-list (PLT2, GRF5, Table 1) mediate auxin responses. Twenty seven genes contained the Sucrose Responsive Element 2 (SURE2), a motif conserved among genes regulated by sucrose (Grierson et al., 1994). Finally, 27 genes contained a UPRMOTIFIIAT “Motif II,” a conserved UPR (unfolded protein response) cis-acting element in Arabidopsis genes coding for stress proteins (Martinez and Chrispeels, 2003, Table 2).

TABLE 2
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Table 2. Indentification of Cis-acting elements in promoters of genes correlated with desiccation tolerance in Medicago truncatula.

A New Player in Desiccation Tolerance: the bZIP Transcription Factor MtABI5

One of the TF that was present in the DT-UP list is a bZIP that is highly homologs to the Arabidopsis ABI5 gene (Table 1). In Arabidopsis, ABI5 binds to ABRE elements of Em genes whose homologs were found in our DT list (Finkelstein et al., 2005; Cutler et al., 2010; Supplemental Table S1). In concert with ABI3, ABI5 is known to regulate post-germinative growth arrest leading to drought tolerance in Arabidopsis seedlings (Lopez-Molina et al., 2001, 2002). This prompted us to test whether MtABI5 was a key factor in regulating DT and if so, what its target genes are in the desiccome gene set. Considering that the Arabidopsis genome comprises nine genes forming a ABI5-homologs subfamily of bZIP TF binding to ABRE elements (Fujita et al., 2011), we first determined whether the Medicago gene Medtr7g104480 is homologous to ABI5 or other ABI5-like genes. The Arabidopsis ABI5 amino acid sequence was blasted against the Mt3.5.1 Medicago database and nine sequences were retrieved. A phylogenetic tree was constructed including the Arabidopsis ABI5 sequence (Figure 3A) and confirmed that Medtr7g104480 is indeed the closest homolog to ABI5.

FIGURE 3
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Figure 3. Characterization of abscisic acid insensitive 5 (Mtabi5) mutants of Medicago truncatula. (A) Unrooted tree showing MtABI5 and closest homologs together with the Arabidopsis thaliana ABI5. CLUSTALW was used for alignment and TREEVIEW for graphical output. Gene identifiers correspond to IMGAG Mt3.51 (B) Gene structure of MtABI5 with Tnt1 insertions in Mtabi5-1 and Mtabi5-2 alleles. (C) Percentages of germination of wild type and Mtabi5 mutant seeds in the presence of ABA. Seeds were scarified before imbibition. Germination (30–50 seeds) was scored as emergence of the radicle after 14 days. Data are the average of duplicates from two independent experiments.

The function of MtABI5 in DT was assessed using two independent homozygous Tnt1 insertion mutants (Mtabi5-1 and Mtabi5-2, Figure 3B) that were obtained from the insertion collection curated by the Samuel Noble Foundation. The Tnt1 insertions were located at 599 and 1034 bp from the start-codon, respectively, before the bZIP domain (Figure 3B). After the production of freshly harvested seeds, the ABA sensitivity of both Mtabi5 mutants was tested (Figure 3C). Like for abi5 mutants of Arabidopsis (Lopez-Molina et al., 2001), mature Mtabi5 seeds exhibited a strongly reduced sensitivity to ABA. In the presence of 10μM, Mtabi5 seeds germinated at 100% whereas germination was fully inhibited in wild type seeds at this concentration.

Scarified, dry mature seeds of the Mtabi5 mutants were all able to germinate when imbibed at 20°C on wet filter paper, indicating that they acquired DT. Next, we tested whether ABI5 was implicated in the re-establishment of DT in sensitive emerged radicles during an osmotic treatment at −1.7 MPa using a PEG solution. In germinated wild type seeds, DT of emerged radicles is lost progressively during growth from 1 to 3 mm (Buitink et al., 2003). Control experiments confirmed that germinated seeds of the Mtabi5 mutants were not desiccation tolerant (Figure 4A). Furthermore, like germinated untreated wild-type seeds, the germinated Mtabi5 mutants started to lose their viability when water content decreased below 1.0 g H2O g DW−1 and decreased sharply below 0.5 g H2O g DW−1 (Figure 4B). The comparable critical water content between germinated Mtabi5 and wild type seeds suggests that Mtabi5 seeds are not more sensitive to drought. Next, we tested whether germinated Mtabi5 seeds exhibiting a 2.7 mm long emerged radicle were able to tolerate the osmotic stress (−1.7 MPa) brought by the PEG treatment that is necessary to re-establish DT in wild type seeds. Figure 4A shows that after 3 days in PEG, germinated Mtabi5 seeds were able to resume growth when transferred into water. However, when germinated, PEG-treated Mtabi5 seeds were dried to water contents of 9% (dry weight basis), they were no longer able to resume growth upon rehydration, indicating that the Mtabi5 seeds remain desiccation sensitive, and lost their competence to re-establish DT upon osmotic treatment (Figure 4A).

FIGURE 4
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Figure 4. Desiccation tolerance is not re-established during PEG treatment in germinated Mtabi5 seeds. (A) Percentages of desiccation tolerance of 2.7 mm long protruded radicles from germinated wild-type and Mtabi5 seeds. Seeds were dried at 42% relative humidity (RH) for 3 days before or after a PEG treatment consisting in incubating seeds for 3 days in a polyethylene glycol (PEG) solution (−1.7 MPa) at 10°C. Data represent the average (±SE) of three independent experiments of 50 seeds. (B) The effect of drying at 42% RH at the indicated water content on survival of 2.7 mm long protruded radicles of germinated seeds. Each data points represent 30 seeds from three independent experiments. (C) Euler diagrams showing the number of transcripts in the DT-UP and DT-DOWN list (Figure 1) that do not change significantly in germinated Mtabi5 radicles after PEG incubation.

Our data show that Mtabi5 seeds acquire their DT during maturation but were unable to re-establish it after germination. Although the temporal acquisition of DT might differ between Mtabi5 seeds and wild type seeds during seed development, our data suggest that MtABI5 is much more a critical determinant for DT in seedlings than during maturation. Possibly, there might be redundant pathways in place during maturation that are absent in germinated seedlings. Indeed ABI5 and other bZIP factors of the same class operate with many other TF in a complex combinatorial control of gene expression that is poorly understood (Nakamura et al., 2001; Lopez-Molina et al., 2002; Finkelstein et al., 2005; Cutler et al., 2010; Lindemose et al., 2013; Verdier et al., 2013).

To characterize the part of the desiccome that is influenced by MtABI5 during the re-establishment of DT tolerance, a transcriptome analysis was performed on the protruded radicles of germinated Mtabi5 mutants before and after the incubation in the PEG solution (Figure 4C). A total of 852 out of the 3626 transcripts with increased levels in the wild type were no longer up-regulated by the PEG treatment in the Mtabi5 mutant (P > 0.01 and ratio after PEG/before PEG < 1 or > −1). Likewise, out of the 6691 transcript levels that decreased during the PEG treatment in the wild type, 1865 no longer decreased in the Mtabi5 mutants. Next, these data were compared to the DT-UP and DT-DOWN lists (Figure 4C, Supplementary Table S2). 112 of the 740 transcripts (15%) that are present in the DT-UP list were no longer up-regulated in the Mtabi5 mutants whereas 23% (677) of the 2829 transcripts of DT-DOWN list were no longer down-regulated. From these data, MtABI5 seems to play a predominant role as a repressor rather than an activator during the re-establishment of DT. Further work is needed to investigate which of these genes are under the direct regulation of MtABI5 or modulated downstream of MtABI5 pathways.

Transcriptome Analysis Identifies MtABI3-Related Genes Involved in DT

A recent characterization of Tnt1 abi3 mutants of Medicago demonstrated that like for Arabidopsis, Medicago abi3 mutant seeds are desiccation sensitive and contain reduced amount of LEA proteins (Delahaie et al., 2013). To investigate which genes of the desiccome were regulated directly or acting downstream of MtABI3, we took advantage of recently published transcriptome data of developing desiccation-sensitive Mtabi3 mutant seeds (Verdier et al., 2013, GEO database accession GSE44291). These seeds were analyzed at 32 DAP and compared to wild type seeds of the same age, after DT had been acquired (Verdier et al., 2013). In addition, we compared this dataset to that of the transcriptome of Medicago roots ectopically expressing the genomic sequence of MtABI3 (35S::ABI3, Verdier et al., 2013; GEO database accession GSE44291). Amongst the 1151 transcripts with significantly decreased levels in the Mtabi3 seeds, 249 were present in DT-UP list (i.e., 33% of the list, Figure 5, Supplementary Table S3) and 43 were present in the three data sets. Similarly, out 3745 transcripts that increased significantly in the Mtabi3 seeds, 817 were present in the DT-DOWN list (i.e., 28%) and 39 were found in common between the three data sets (Figure 5, Supplementary Table S3). To further validate the MtABI3-mediated expression of DT genes, we verified whether their Arabidopsis homologs were among the list of the experimentally validated targets of the Arabidopsis ABI3 regulon (Mönke et al., 2012). For the 43 up-regulated genes present in all three dataset (Figure 5), 19 Arabidopsis homologs were identified as part of the regulon of MtABI3. Genes in this list encoded LEA proteins and genes involved in seed storage deposition such as oleosins and seed storage proteins. It is noteworthy that transcripts of two cystathionine beta-synthase (CBS) domain proteins were also identified, one of them being MtSNF4b, a subunit of the metabolic regulator SUCROSE NONFERMENTING RELATD KINASE (SnRK1). MtSNF4b plays a role in seed longevity and activation of biotic stress pathways in dormant seeds (Rosnoblet et al., 2007; Bolingue et al., 2010). Since Mönke et al. (2012) did not investigate targets that are repressed by ABI3, a comparison was impossible (Figure 5).

FIGURE 5
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Figure 5. Venn diagram identifying DT transcripts related to ABSCISIC ACID 3 (ABI3) of Medicago truncatula. Transcripts that were identified in the DT-UP or DT-DOWN lists were compared to those that are differentially expressed in Mtabi3 seeds at 32 DAP compared to wild type seeds (Mtabi3 32 DAP) and to those that are differentially expressed upon ectopic expression of MtABI3 in hairy roots compared to control. Transcript levels were considered significant when P < 0.01 and −1 > Mlog2 > 1.

Analysis of ABI3- and ABI5-Specific Datasets in Relation to DT

Having identified the transcripts that are affected in the Mtabi3- and Mtabi5 mutants in relation to DT, we investigated the putative function of the genes that modulated by one or both TFs (Figure 6). It should be noted that the change in transcript levels is not necessarily through a direct action of ABI3 and or ABI5, since transcript levels can be modified by downstream targets of these TFs or through other mechanisms than transcriptional activation. However, to facilitate the reading, we refer hereafter to ABI3 or ABI5-related genes. The putative regulation of transcripts by these two TFs is annotated in Table 1 and Supplemental Table 1. A GO-enrichment analysis was performed on these gene lists (Table 3).

FIGURE 6
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Figure 6. Identification of ABI3- and/or ABI5 related genes in the desiccome (DT-UP and DT-DOWN lists).

TABLE 3
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Table 3. MtABI3 and MtABI5 are involved in complementary processes in relation to desiccation tolerance in Medicago truncatula.

Only a small amount of transcripts are influenced by both TFs, representing 4 and 7% of the DT-UP and DT-DOWN lists, respectively (Figure 6). Among the 27 genes from the DT-UP list that are downstream of both TFs, we noticed three different glutamate-cysteine ligases that catalyze the first and rate limiting step in the biosynthesis of glutathione (GSH, Noctor et al., 2012) (Supplementary Table S1). In Arabidopsis, gsh1 mutants confer a recessive embryo-lethal phenotype and it was suggested that the autonomous synthesis of GSH in the embryo was necessary for proper seed maturation (Cairns et al., 2006). During drying, the resurrection plant Sporobolus stapfianus exhibited an important increase in GSH and γ-glutamyl amino acids compared to the desiccation-sensitive Sporobulus pyramidalis (Oliver et al., 2011). Thus, GSH might represent a key antioxidant involved for the survival in the dry state. A RT-qPCR study validated their expression level (Supplemental Table S4). Surprisingly, LEA transcripts were found to be regulated only by ABI3; in the Mtabi5 mutants they increased in a comparable way to the wild type radicles (Supplementary Table S3). Four TFs were related to both MtABI3 and MtABI5 (Table 1). It is noteworthy that homologs of two of them mediate light responses in Arabidopsis; FBH1 and a gene bearing high homology to LZF1 (LIGHT-REGULATED ZINC FINGER PROTEIN 1). In Arabidopsis, LZF1 is a positive regulator functioning in de-etiolation and the accumulation of anthocyanin (Chang et al., 2008).

The pathway downstream of ABI3 is more affected compared to ABI5, representing, respectively, 30% (222 transcripts) of the DT-UP list and 23% (648 transcripts) of DT-DOWN list. Biological processes that were overrepresented in the ABI3-related gene list were “response to abscisic acid stimulus,” including ABA responsive genes such as homologs of RD26 or PROTEIN-L-ISOASPARTATE METHYLTRANSFERASE 1 (PIMT1), playing a role in protein repair after seed ageing (Ogé et al., 2008) (Table 3). The GO term “response to heat” included heat stress associated proteins, HSP (HSP101, sHPs) and HSF, whereas the GO term “multicellular organismal development” contained ABI3 targets, such as storage reserve proteins, 1-cys-peroxiredoxin and LEA genes.

Out of the 85 transcripts corresponding to Medicago genes that were identified as up-regulated via MtABI5, only few were annotated (Supplemental Tables S1, S2). Many of them corresponded to sequences implicated in transcriptional regulation (DNA polymerases, RNA processing) and post-transcriptional regulation (ubiquitin-related). Several bHLH TFs were identified, namely bHLH135 (PRE5), bHLH84, and bHLH130 (FBH4). The Arabidopsis FBH4 positively regulates CONSTANS transcription for photoperiodic flowering together with FBH1 (Ito et al., 2012).

A GO enrichment analysis on the DT-DOWN list revealed that the main biological processes for which transcripts are down-regulated by both TFs are cell cycle, secondary metabolic processes and specific kinase or receptor signaling pathways (Table 4). The ABI5-related dataset showed a highly significant overrepresentation of processes related to cell division and actin cytoskeleton organization. This category goes together with the previously mentioned CUC3 TF whose expression is affected by ABI5 and involved in the repression of cell division (Table 1). Another biological processes enriched in the ABI5-related probe list is “defense response,” including genes involved in flavonoid and phenylpropanoid biosynthesis and programmed cell death. The GO analysis of the overrepresented biological processes of the down-regulated transcripts that are related to ABI3 is complementary to that of the ABI5-related list (Table 4). ABI3 appears to regulate biological processes involved in “DNA replication,” “cell wall modification” and genes involved in microtubule-based processes. Interestingly, this goes together with the ABI3-dependent up-regulation of PHS1 (PROPYZAMIDE-HYPERSENSITIVE 1), involved in phosphorylation cascades that control the dynamics of cortical microtubules in plant cells (Naoi and Hashimoto, 2004). Phs1 mutants are hypersensitive to ABA. In addition, other biological processes were related to primary metabolic process, such as fatty acid biosynthetic process, carbohydrate metabolic process, and lipid biosynthetic process. A final category is related to DNA repair.

TABLE 4
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Table 4. MtABI3 and MtABI5 are involved in complementary processes in relation to desiccation tolerance in Medicago truncatula.

Concluding Remarks

The transcriptome comparisons combining two developmental contexts during which DT is acquired, together with the transcriptome analysis of two desiccation sensitive mutants generated many intriguing hypotheses related to the regulatory mechanisms that determine DT. We are aware that the hypotheses described in this study are based solely on steady-state transcript levels and inferred from homologous genes characterized in Arabidopsis. Therefore, more work is necessary to define gene functions and dissect the complex regulation of gene expression. In addition, post-transcriptional and post-translational processes need to be taken into account. Yet, the data suggest that the regulatory pathways leading to DT act redundantly and respond to both developmental and environmental cues. None of the monogenic mutation in the 49 TF gene that were identified in the desiccome induced lethal or desiccation sensitive phenotypes in Arabidopsis, except for ABI3. These TFs are likely acting redundantly depending of the environmental context. Our data suggest that ABI3 and ABI5 have complementary roles in DT and act in a complex combinatorial control of gene expression (Nakamura et al., 2001; Finkelstein et al., 2005; Cutler et al., 2010; Lindemose et al., 2013).

The desiccome contained a surprisingly high number of transcripts for which Arabidopsis homologs are involved in the control of flowering, cellular phase transitions and cell identity. These data suggest that DT evolved by coopting existing genetic pathways regulating developmental phase transition and light-sensing. There is increasing evidence in the literature suggesting an interaction between photoperiod and drought stress, whereby photoperiodically- or light-induced genes coordinate the ABA-mediated activation of genes (Chen et al., 2008; Riboni et al., 2013). Therefore, it is important to investigate whether genes regulated by photoperiod or light have a conserved function regulating DT both in seeds as well as resurrection plants.

Authors Contributions

Julia Buitink and Olivier Leprince conceived and designed the experiments and wrote the MS. Emmanuel Terrasson and David Lalanne performed the transcriptome analysis. Emmanuel Terrasson and Benoit Ly Vu carried out the physiological experiments. Julia Zinsmeister performed the qPCR experiments. Emmanuel Terrasson, Karima Righetti, and Sandra Pelletier performed the bioinformatic analyses. Emmanuel Terrasson and Karima Righetti critically reviewed the MS.

Conflict of Interest Statement

The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest.

Acknowledgments

Emmanuel Terrasson and this work were supported by a grant from the Région Pays-de-la-Loire (QUALISEM 2009-2013). We acknowledge Dr. Pascal Gamas and Jérôme Gouzy (INRA, Toulouse, France) for sharing the Medicago truncatula genome data. The abi5 mutants of Medicago truncatula used in this research project, which are jointly owned by the Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique, were obtained from The Samuel Roberts Noble Foundation, Inc. and were created through research funded, in part, by a grant from the National Science Foundation (NSF# 703285).

Supplementary Materials

The Supplementary Material for this article can be found online at: http://www.frontiersin.org/journal/10.3389/fpls.2013.00497/abstract

Table S1. List of transcripts that are differentially expressed in relation to desiccation tolerance (DT-UP and DT-DOWN) list (Figure 1).

Table S2. List of desiccation tolerance (DT) correlated transcripts that are affected by the absence of MtABI5 compared to wild type seeds during the re-induction of DT.

Table S3. List of transcripts that are affected by the absence of MtABI3 compared to wild type seeds during seed maturation at 32 DAP (Mtabi3 32 DAP), or that show increased or decreased transcript levels in hairy roots ectopically expressing MtABI3 compared to roots with an empty plasmid.

Table S4. Transcript levels of two glutamyl cysteine ligase genes (Medtr5g010210.1 and Medtr5g010230.1) after the re-induction of desiccation tolerance in radicles of germinated wild type, Mtabi5-1 and Mtabi5-2 mutant seeds by a PEG treatment at −1.7 MPa.

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Keywords: ABI3, ABI5, ABA, desiccation tolerance, transcription factor, seed, transcriptome, Medicago truncatula

Citation: Terrasson E, Buitink J, Righetti K, Ly Vu B, Pelletier S, Zinsmeister J, Lalanne D and Leprince O (2013) An emerging picture of the seed desiccome: confirmed regulators and newcomers identified using transcriptome comparison. Front. Plant Sci. 4:497. doi: 10.3389/fpls.2013.00497

Received: 29 September 2013; Accepted: 18 November 2013;
Published online: 11 December 2013.

Edited by:

Jill M. Farrant, University of Cape Town, South Africa

Reviewed by:

Ján A. Miernyk, University of Missouri, USA
Vasileios Fotopoulos, Cyprus University of Technology, Cyprus

Copyright © 2013 Terrasson, Buitink, Righetti, Ly Vu, Pelletier, Zinsmeister, Lalanne and Leprince. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) or licensor are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.

*Correspondence: Olivier Leprince, Agrocampus Ouest, UMR 1345 Institut de Recherche en Horticulture et Semences, 16 bd Lavoisier, 49045 Angers, France e-mail: olivier.leprince@agrocampus-ouest.fr

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