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The Plant Cell 18:1331-1337 (2006) © 2006 American Society of Plant Biologists
Meristems in the Movies: Live Imaging as a Tool for Decoding Intercellular Signaling in Shoot Apical MeristemsDepartment of Molecular and Cellular Biology Department of Plant Sciences University of Arizona Tucson, AZ 85721
Department of Plant Sciences University of Arizona Tucson, AZ 85721 fetax{at}u.arizona.edu
The shoot apical meristem (SAM) is the source of all postembryonic aerial organs in plants. Because of their central importance in plant development, SAMs have been studied for more than 100 years and have also become a major focus of molecular genetic studies. These studies indicate that signaling between cells is important in the maintenance of SAM size and structure and for the positioning and development of new organs. Two signaling molecules are currently known to regulate SAMs: the secreted protein CLV3 and the classical plant hormone auxin. Studies of SAMs have been hindered by their small size and by their location within developing buds. Innovations in confocal microscopy and the development of markers for individual cells and for cell typespecific genes now allow for in vivo visualization of SAMs. These methods provide powerful tools for examining the dynamics of gene expression patterns and the instantaneous consequences of perturbation of gene function in living SAMs. In this essay, we describe the structure of SAMs, summarize experimental and molecular data for signaling events, and describe the impact of two new studies (Heisler et al., 2005 MERISTEM FORM AND FUNCTION The primary SAM is formed during embryogenesis (Figure 1 ) and typically produces organs such as leaves and stems. Meristems that form in the axil of a leaf (axillary meristems) have the same organ-forming potential as the SAM. When an Arabidopsis plant undergoes the transition from vegetative to reproductive growth, the SAM changes to an inflorescence meristem (IM), and initiation of flower buds begins from axillary meristems in bracts or directly from the IM. The floral meristem, which gives rise to the flower bud, is responsible for initiating the four types of floral organs, the sepals, petals, stamens, and carpels, which are produced in four concentric rings. While the SAM and IM are usually indeterminate and will produce organs throughout the life of the plant, the floral meristem is unique in that it terminates after producing the floral organs.
Two independent conceptual frameworks based on morphology and function are used to label SAMs (Lyndon, 1998
In the second framework, SAMs are characterized into three radially distinct zones based on function (Vaughan, 1952 INTERCELLULAR SIGNALING IN THE SAM The organization of the SAM is extremely stable, as the SAMs in long-lived trees or in saguaro cacti can be hundreds of years old. From a quick look at the structure of SAMs (Figure 1), it is obvious that cell division patterns need to be coordinated among layers both to maintain the identity of SAM layers and zones and to position organs. Cell division rates also need to be coordinated in organ primordia. This coordination would most likely involve signals.
Signals have also long been thought to play a role in the species-specific stereotypical phyllotaxy or arrangement of SAM-derived organs such as leaves or flowers (reviewed in Lyndon, 1998
Experimental evidence demonstrating that intercellular signaling is required for the maintenance of SAM organization initially came from the study of colchicine-induced chimeras in Datura (Satina and Blakeslee, 1941 These experiments suggest that several intercellular signals originating from different layers of the meristem are involved in regulating SAM maintenance and cell fate. One pathway that signals from the L1 to L2 and L3 cells has been identified that plays a role in meristem maintenance (see the description of the CLAVATA signaling pathway below). The camellia chimeras suggest there is an additional signal from the L1 to L2 and L3 that regulates cell fates. Ligands or receptors for signaling originating from the L3 to the L2 or L1 have yet to be identified. SIGNALING MOLECULES I: THE CLV PATHWAY
The signaling pathways in SAM communication remained elusive until the era of molecular genetic studies in Arabidopsis. Mutants in three genes with a variety of phenotypes, including extra leaves, extra floral organs with club-shaped carpels, altered phyllotaxy, and flattened stems, were identified and named clavata1 (clv1), clv2, and clv3 (Clark et al., 1993
Analysis of cell typespecific expression of CLV1 and CLV3 suggests that the CLV3 signal initiates from the L1 and L2 in the CZ, while CLV1 is expressed in L3 cells of the CZ (Figure1C). As a result of CLV1 activation by CLV3, the expression of WUSCHEL (WUS), which encodes a transcription factor required for stem cell maintenance, is restricted to four to eight cells in the L3 (Mayer et al., 1998 SIGNALING MOLECULES II: AUXIN Auxin plays two general roles in the meristem. First, auxin has long been thought to be the signal or one of the signals that regulates the initiation of primordia in a defined pattern, or phyllotaxy, in the PZ of the SAM. A second role for auxin is in the differentiation of organ primordia once they are initiated.
A number of synthetic auxins and auxin transport inhibitors affect phyllotaxy (reviewed in Lyndon, 1998
Information from molecular and genetic studies has led to the development of tools and assays that are used to probe the specific role of auxin in a variety of processes. One tool is a synthetic auxin-responsive promoter called DR5 (Ulmasov et al., 1997
The results of recent studies that examined DR5 and/or PIN1 expression in fixed tissue in SAMs suggested that auxin is first transported from more basal epidermal cells apically toward a new primordium (Figure 2A) (Benkova et al., 2003 DECIPHERING THE ROLE OF AUXIN IN SAMS From the experiments described, it is clear that auxin plays a role in the initiation of organs in SAMs and in phyllotaxy. Could auxin be the inducer for primordia initiation? All of the PZ of the SAM appears able to form primordiaare concentrations of auxin above a certain threshold the trigger for initiation? Once an individual primordium is initiated, does auxin play a role in determining the axes of this organ?
If auxin is a key regulator of the differentiation of primordia, the localization and signaling potential of auxin is predicted to overlap with other components essential for differentiation. A number of transcription factors that play important roles in SAM development or primordial outgrowth and differentiation have been identified. These are expressed in spatially restricted regions of SAMs or primordia and can be used as markers to detect patterning. For example, SHOOT MERISTEMLESS (STM), a member of the Knotted class of homeodomain proteins, is required for SAM establishment and maintenance (Barton and Poethig, 1993
Heisler et al. (2005) Imaging of PIN1 and DR5 expression identified a stereotypical pattern in which PIN1 is localized in the lateral membranes of cells in older primordia, directing flow of auxin toward an incipient primordium. As the primordium begins to grow, some PIN1-GFP reverses cellular polarity, directing auxin back to the IM center and to newer primordia (Figure 2B). Imaging of DR5:YFP is also consistent with the predicted auxin movement. There is an additional reversal of auxin at the tip of the primordium from adaxial cells to abaxial cells. The movies are visually impressive!
The clear prediction of these results is that accumulation and depletion of auxin are important regulators of primordia initiation and phyllotaxis in IM epidermal cells and that auxin is not simply moved out of the way to the vasculature (Reinhardt et al., 2003 The results of these experiments are perhaps best described based on auxin dynamics. High levels of auxin response are detectable in the cells that will generate the next primordium, and this is correlated with downregulation of both STM and CUC2. After the PIN1-GFP polarity reversal directs auxin away from the new primordium, STM and CUC2 are upregulated at the boundary between the leaf primordia and the CZ. By contrast, LFY shows the opposite pattern, and its expression is coincident with high levels of PIN1 and DR5. A comparison of the expression of REV, FIL, and PIN1 also suggests that auxin movement influences the domains of expression of REV and FIL. Thus, auxin may play a role in positioning the boundary between abaxial and adaxial cell fates. These experiments point to a pivotal role for auxin in establishing boundaries and cell fates and in combination with the genetic approach described below can generate an extraordinary amount of information about the components of phyllotaxis and organ initiation. APPLYING A NEW STANDARD IN PHENOTYPIC ANALYSIS TO THE CLV SIGNALING PATHWAY
In the past 20 years, mutants and their phenotypes have been the main tools used to study signaling pathways. While this approach has generated a number of well-established signaling pathways in plants, a major problem arises in that it becomes difficult to discern between the direct effects of the loss of a single gene and the indirect effects of the loss of that gene on other genes in the genome (Cutler and McCourt, 2005
Reddy and Meyerowitz (2005)
Previous experiments have shown that the increase in IM size is due to increases in cell number in both the CZ and rib zone (Clark et al., 1995 Using the live imaging methods described above along with a marker specific to the CZ (a CLV3 promoter driving transcription of GFP [pCLV3:GFP]), the authors were able to examine the effects of CLV3 silencing on CZ size and organization (Figures 1D and 1E). Close examination of the CZ and the junction between the PZ and CZ showed that cells that had already differentiated and moved beyond the CZ began to show pCLV3:GFP activity within 24 h after silencing. These results with the CLV3 marker indicate that the increase in the size of the CZ seen after the loss of CLV3 is due to the dedifferentiation of PZ cells into CZ cells, as suggested by the third mechanism. Live imaging of single cells and their progeny showed that there was an increase in the rate of cell division after expansion of the CZ. However, the effects of the increase in division rate were observed to be greatest outside of the CZ, rather than throughout the IM. This suggests that zone-specific signaling in the IM is involved in expansion as well as being critical for maintaining the balance among the different zones. These results have shown that CLV3 is involved in maintaining meristem organization both through regulation of cell fate determination as well as regulation of cell division. The implications from these results are that the boundaries between the different zones of the meristem are dynamic and rely on signals from across zone boundaries. QUESTIONS FOR THE NEXT 10 YEARS Live imaging can now be used to answer a myriad of questions about SAM organization, maintenance, the positioning and development of new organs, and the signaling mechanisms that regulate these events. Inhibiting the action of a gene or genes and following the consequences on cell behavior and gene expression simultaneously will likely become de rigueur in this literature in the next few years. Below, we highlight a few areas where these methods could be successfully applied.
Determining the Role(s) of Auxin in SAMs
Several other key areas of focus will be in understanding the mechanisms that regulate the polarity of the PIN proteins and in understanding how the rapid reversals in auxin movement occur. The cytoplasmic kinase PINOID (PID) regulates the polar localization of PIN1 (Friml et al., 2004
Unraveling the Complexity of the CLV Signaling Pathway
Investigating Possible Connections between Auxin and the CLV Signaling Pathway
Toward a Universal Model for Meristems Phyllotactic patterns vary between species but also between different stages within a single species. While most Arabidopsis leaves and flowers display spiral phyllotaxis, the first two leaves developing from the seedling in Arabidopsis display a form of phyllotaxy known as decussate, in which pairs of leaves emerge at the same node at right angles to the previous lateral organs (in this case cotyledons). Maize leaves arise on the opposite side of the meristem from the previously formed leaf, a pattern known as distichous phyllotaxy. Examining the regulation of auxin movement and the expression dymamics of primordia patterning genes will reveal which aspects of primordia initiation are conserved and the mechanisms that allow for these different forms of phyllotaxy.
Systems Approaches to Studying Signaling in Meristems Acknowledgments We apologize to authors whose work we were unable to cite or discuss due to space limitations. We thank Karen Schumaker, Ravishankar Palanivelu, and the reviewers for their insightful comments on the manuscript. Research in the Tax lab is supported by grants from the National Science Foundation (IBN-0347675 and MCB-0418946). A.D. is supported by the National Science Foundation Integrative Graduate Education Research Training Grant Genomics Initiative (DGE-0114420). REFERENCES Aida, M., Ishida, T., and Tasaka, M. (1999). Shoot apical meristem and cotyledon formation during Arabidopsis embryogenesis: Interaction among the CUP-SHAPED COTYLEDON and SHOOT MERISTEMLESS genes. Development 126, 15631570.[Abstract] Barbier de Reuille, P., Bohn-Courseau, I., Ljung, K., Morin, H., Carraro, N., Godin, C., and Traas, J. (2006). 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