Abstract
Maintaining the right balance between plasticity and robustness in biological systems is important to allow adaptation while maintaining essential functions. Developmental plasticity of plant root systems has been the subject of intensive research, but the mechanisms underpinning robustness remain unclear. Here, we show that potassium deficiency inhibits lateral root organogenesis by delaying early stages in the formation of lateral root primordia. However, the severity of the symptoms arising from this perturbation varies within a natural population of Arabidopsis and is associated with the genetic variation in CLSY1, a key component of the RNA-directed DNA-methylation machinery. Mechanistically, CLSY1 mediates the transcriptional repression of a negative regulator of root branching, IAA27, and promotes lateral root development when the auxin-dependent proteolysis pathway fails. Our study identifies DNA-methylation-mediated transcriptional repression as a backup system for post-translational protein degradation which ensures robust development and performance of plants in a challenging environment.
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Introduction
Developmental processes are tightly regulated to achieve a balance between plasticity and robustness in response to genetic and environmental perturbation1,2. Plasticity of developmental programs is particularly important for immobile organisms, such as plants, because it allows them to optimally explore their immediate environment. For example, plants can adjust the architecture of their root systems in response to edaphic signals, such as mineral nutrient concentrations and water gradients, and thus effectively track soil resources3,4,5. Understanding how individual parts of the root respond to nutrient depletion in the soil is important for selecting root architectures that can support crop yield with minimal fertilizer input.
Number and length of lateral roots (LRs) make an important contribution to shaping root system architecture. LRs emerge from xylem-pole cell triplets, so-called founder cells (FCs), which occur at regular longitudinal intervals in the pericycle layer that surrounds the central vasculature6. A local rise in the hormone auxin triggers FCs to undergo several rounds of anticlinal asymmetric divisions that produce a single-layered file of small and larger cells (stage-I LR primordia), followed by a round of periclinal divisions that yield the two-layered stage-II LR primordia. Additional divisions eventually form fully organised root meristems, which penetrate the outer root tissues and generate visible new lateral roots. The transcriptional programmes that underpin the different stages of LR development are activated by auxin responsive factors (ARFs), which bind to auxin responsive elements (AuxRe) in the promoters of their target genes. ARF regulation underlies the same basic steps of auxin signalling that are found in other developmental contexts6. In the absence of auxin, ARFs are inhibited by auxin co-receptors called IAAs. When an auxin receptor, e.g. TIR1, binds auxin it recruits the IAA and makes it available for degradation through the ubiquitin proteasome pathway. IAA degradation releases the brake on ARFs thereby inducing the downstream transcriptional changes that lead to LR formation. Given the importance of the auxin signalling pathway for LR development it is not surprising that many environmental signals target this pathway to modulate root architecture, both locally, e.g. by regulating auxin synthesis or transport, and systemically through mobile peptides and cross-talk with other hormonal pathways5,6,7.
Plasticity allows plants to adapt to changing conditions but can also be a disadvantage. For example, inhibiting growth and development in response to unfavourable environmental conditions saves resources but also causes unnecessary delays if problems only occur transiently or in a small area. Therefore, mechanisms to either lower the sensitivity of signalling pathways to environmental cues or over-ride downstream effects on phenotype should also have evolved. At the cellular level there is evidence that molecular buffering mechanisms such as chaperones can provide robustness2, but how the conflict between developmental plasticity and robustness is resolved at the population level is not clear. Identifying mechanisms that determine the plasticity/robustness set point of developmental processes is critical for understanding how genetic variation contributes to species performance under environmental change.
Previously, we have shown that potassium (K) deprivation alters LR development in Arabidopsis thaliana and that this response differs among Arabidopsis accessions8. Based on a genome-wide association (GWA) study of lateral root development under low-K conditions, we report here that genetic variation in a CLASSY chromatin remodelling factor (CLSY1) determines the robustness of LR development against perturbation of the auxin pathway by low K. CLSY1 is a component of a RNA-directed DNA methylation (RdDM) complex, which silences a distinct subset of transposable elements (TEs) and genes9,10 via a well-characterised molecular machinery9. RdDM exhibits a large natural variation in Arabidopsis11, but the physiological significance of this variation has remained unclear. Using a combination of cell biology and molecular genetics experiments we provide evidence that CLSY1-mediated silencing of IAA27 provides a ‘backup switch’ for maintaining lateral root development when the canonical auxin-mediated pathway is disrupted. Genetic variation in this backup circuit is cryptic and only becomes apparent under environmental or genetic challenge.
Results
Low K disturbs early LR development
Previous research in our laboratory revealed that a low concentration of K in the root environment has profound effects on the root system architecture of Arabidopsis8. In the reference accession Col-0, low K supply (10 µM) decreases both main root (MR) length and LR number compared to control (2 mM), resulting in reduction of total root size compared to control conditions (Supplementary Fig. 1). The decrease in MR length is at least partially due to a decrease of cell length under low K (Supplementary Fig. 2). The low-K induced brake on root growth and development is released when the supply of iron (Fe) in the media is decreased from moderate (control, 42.5 µM) to low (but sufficient, 4.25 µM) levels. Lowering Fe alone slightly increases MR length but has no effect on LR number (Supplementary Fig. 1).
To gain further insight into whether the reduction of LR number in low K is a bona-fide developmental phenotype or merely a consequence of a shorter MR, we investigated the early stages of LR development after gravitational stimulation (Fig. 1a). We found that low K causes on average a 20% decrease in stage-two (SII) LR primordia and a concomitant increase in stage-one (SI) LR primordia and FCs (Fig. 1b, Col-0), indicating a post-initiation delay in the progression of LR development to SII. To assess whether auxin plays a role in the low-K phenotype, we monitored the auxin-dependent expression of DR5-VENUS, a synthetic fluorescent auxin reporter. Roots grown in low K show less fluorescence signal than roots grown in control conditions, specifically in LR FCs and S1 primordia (Fig. 1c, Supplementary Fig. 3) indicating either lower auxin levels or disrupted auxin signalling in these cell types. The delay of LR developmental progression in low K conditions is in good agreement with the measured ~25% decrease in the number of emerged LRs (Supplementary Fig. 1b), and shows similar Fe-dependency (Fig. 1b). We conclude that decreased LR number in low K is a macroscopic consequence of an early developmental defect and offers a convenient readout for LR development in high-throughput studies.
CLSY1 underpins natural variation of LR development in low K
To identify the genetic determinants of low-K induced LR inhibition, we performed a genome-wide association analysis in 147 Arabidopsis RegMap-panel accessions using 250 K single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) (Supplementary Data 1). Two SNPs at positions 14,741,463/Chr3 (LRNK1) and 8,075,456/Chr5 (LRNK2) associate with LR number specifically under low K and moderate Fe supply (Fig. 1d, Supplementary Fig. 4). This study focusses on the LRNK1 association that lies in an intergenic region. We tested three nearby genes, AHA8, EOL1 and CLSY1 (Supplementary Fig. 5a), for a potential function in LR development in Col-0. While aha8 and eol1 plants exhibit a similar decrease of LR number in low K as wild-type plants (Supplementary Fig. 5b), two independent CLSY1 knock-out lines, clsy1-5 and clsy1-7, show significantly greater LR inhibition in low K (~50% decrease of LR number in clsy1 compared to ~25% in wild type; Supplementary Fig. 5c, d). To check if CLSY1 affects LR responses to the limitation of other major nutrients namely nitrogen (N) and phosphate (P), we assessed LR number of Col-0 wild type and clsy1 mutant plants in low N and low P conditions. Both treatments cause a decrease in LR number which is similar in Col-0 wild type and clsy1 mutants (Supplementary Fig. 6). In the gravistimulation assays, clsy1 mutants show hypersensitivity of developmental defects to low K with a greater increase in FCs and SI primordia and a greater reduction in LR SII primordia compared to wild type (Fig. 1b). Thus, CLSY1 counteracts the low-K induced inhibition of LR development in Col-0 and potentially underlies the LRNK1 association.
The LRNK1 SNP identified by GWA (A (reference) to G (non-reference) at position 14,741,463/Chr3) is located 14.4 kb downstream of the CLSY1 coding sequence (Supplementary Fig. 5a). How does this SNP relate to CLSY1? A direct effect on CLSY1 expression is unlikely since there is no clear correlation between CLSY1 mRNA abundance and LR number across the Arabidopsis accessions, although CLSY1 mRNA levels in the reference accessions tend to reside at the upper end of the non-reference spectrum (Supplementary Fig. 7). GWA mapping with an extended set of 156 Arabidopsis accessions using imputed full sequence SNPs data12 confirmed the position of LRNK1 and did not identify a significant SNP in closer vicinity to CLSY1 (Supplementary Fig. 8a). To search for any SNPs within the coding region of CLSY1 that might be in linkage disequilibrium (LD) with the GWA SNP we, therefore, performed a local CLSY1-based association analysis13 using non-synonymous polymorphisms (Supplementary Data 2). A non-synonymous nucleotide polymorphism (A (reference) to C (non-reference)) at position 14,758,262/chr3 was found to associate with LR number variation (Supplementary Fig. 8b). This SNP is in complete LD with the LRNK1 SNP because there is not a single case of co-occurrence of the non-reference alleles (C and G, respectively) in the GWA panel of 156 Arabidopsis accessions or in the 874 genome sequences available from the ‘1001 Genomes’ project (Supplementary Table 1). The SNP in the CLSY1 coding sequence causes an aspartate (D) to glutamate (E) amino acid change at position 538 of CLSY1. Arabidopsis accessions carrying allele D, analysed alone (Supplementary Fig. 8c) or as a haplotype (Supplementary Fig. 8d), produce on average more LRs in low K than the accessions carrying allele E.
To further ascertain that CLSY1 underlies the LRNK1 association, we performed quantitative complementation tests. Several Arabidopsis accessions (Supplementary Fig. 9) carrying either allele D (Col-0, Mnz-0, Pog-0, Ove-0 and Rak-2) or allele E (Chat-1 and Fei-0) were each crossed with Col-0 clsy1-7 mutant or Col-0 wild type. F1 plants from these crosses were genotyped for heterozygosity (Supplementary Fig. 10) and phenotyped for LR number (Fig. 2a and Supplementary Fig. 11). The crosses reveal a significant allele-background interaction for LR number specifically in low K (Fig. 2b). F1 plants carrying a Col-0 CLSY1 allele have similar LR numbers, whether they carry allele D or allele E on the homologous chromosome. However, allele-E/clsy1-7 F1 plants (Chat-1/clsy1-7 and Fei-0/clsy1-7) show significantly lower LR numbers than allele-D/clsy1-7 plants (Col-0/clsy1-7, Mnz-0/clsy1-7, Pog-0/clsy1-7, Ove-0/clsy1-7 and Rak-2/clsy1-7). The fact that clsy1 complementation for LR number is allele-dependent rather than phenotype-dependent is apparent in the fact that the Rak-2 (D allele) complements the Col-0 clsy1 mutant even though the parental phenotype is similar to that of Chat-1 and Fei-0 (E alleles). We propose that the D538E polymorphism, in CLSY1 underpins the observed natural variation of LR number in low K. The SNP lies in a predicted acidic domain of unknown function (Supplementary Fig. 8b), and how exactly it can alter CLSY1 structure and function remains to be investigated.
We next investigated whether genetic variation in CLSY1 had physiological significance beyond root branching. Allele-E accessions showed a strong decrease of shoot dry weight (DW) in low K while allele-D accessions were less affected (Fig. 2c and Supplementary Fig. 12). Shoot growth inhibition by low K was more pronounced in clsy1 than in wild-type Col-0, and was rescued by D-alleles but not by E-alleles in the F1 lines (Fig. 2c and Supplementary Fig. 12). A strong positive correlation between shoot DW and LR number, particularly under low-K (Supplementary Fig. 13) reflects the important role of root branching for plant growth. Importantly, CLSY1 genetic variation influences LR root development and shoot growth of Arabidopsis in K-limited environments without affecting either phenotype under normal conditions (cryptic variation).
CLSY1 acts on lateral root development through IAA27
How does CLSY1 act on LR development? CLSY1 is a component of a multi-protein complex required for the Pol-IV mediated production of 21-24-nt siRNA, which initiates RdDM9. Col-0 mutants in which other components of the same complex are inactive, nrpd1-3 and rdr2, mimic the K-hypersensitive LR phenotype of clsy1 mutants (Supplementary Fig. 14). We searched three independent, published DNA-methylomes of RdDM mutants10,14,15 for target regions related to auxin signalling. This analysis identified that a putative promoter region of a member of the IAA family, IAA27, which contains several TEs, consistently displayed hypomethylation in RdDM mutants. Using bisulfite-PCR on root samples, we confirmed that clsy1, nrpd1-3 and rdr2 mutants all had strongly reduced cytosine methylation rates in this region, particularly in a CHH context (Fig. 3a and Supplementary Fig. 15). The loss of TE methylation can influence the expression of neighbouring genes9. Indeed, we found that IAA27-mRNA levels are >2-fold higher in clsy1, nrpd1-3 and rdr2 mutant than in wild-type roots (Fig. 3b).
Neither the DNA methylation patterns nor the expression levels of IAA27 differ between Col-0 plants grown in control or low-K conditions (Fig. 3a, b), which indicates that RdDM is not involved in signal perception per se. This was further corroborated by the lack of regulation of IAA27 transcription in control or low K conditions by known K-transport or K-signalling component, such as NRT1.5/NPF7.316, AKT117 and CIPK2318 (Supplementary Fig. 16). IAA27 belongs to a family of auxin co-receptors in Arabidopsis, several of which (IAA3, IAA12, IAA14, IAA28) negatively regulate auxin signalling targets and inhibit LR development6. We tested two independent Col-0 lines that over-express IAA27 under an estradiol-inducible promoter for LR phenotypes in control and low-K conditions (Supplementary Fig. 17). The IAA27 over-expression lines are hypersensitive to low K in the presence of estradiol (but not without estradiol), thus mimicking clsy1 (as well as nrpd1-3 and rdr2) mutants (Fig. 3c). We, therefore, propose that CLSY1 reduces the inhibitory effect of low K on LR development by repressing IAA27 through the RdDM pathway.
Does this model hold at population level? To assess the natural variation of IAA27 promoter DNA-methylation and mRNA abundance we performed bisulfite-sequencing and RT-qPCR for IAA27 in twenty accessions, ten carrying the CLSY1 D-allele and ten carrying the CLSY1 E-allele. The average methylation rate of cytosine (specifically in CHH context) is significantly higher in the D-allele accessions than in E-allele accessions, and the average mRNA-level is significantly lower in D-allele accessions than in E-allele accessions (Fig. 4). Both entities vary between the individual accessions, as expected given the different genetic backgrounds, but they fall into distinct ranges for D and E-allele accessions (Supplementary Figs. 18 and 19). The results show that differences in CLSY1 alter RdDM-mediated repression of IAA27 both in mutants and in naturally occurring genotypes.
Low K acts upstream and CLSY1 acts downstream of auxin
Why does IAA27 over-expression affect LR development in low K but not in control conditions? One possible explanation is that differences in IAA27 transcription only matter when regulation at the protein level is perturbed. To monitor IAA27 protein levels in vivo we generated Col-0 lines expressing IAA27 N-terminally fused to GFP, and measured fluorescence in the roots of plants grown either in control or in low-K conditions. The fluorescence signal/background ratio from the transgenic lines was generally low but provided nevertheless statistically significant evidence for higher IAA27 protein levels in low-K roots compared to control roots, particularly in the nuclei (Supplementary Fig. 20). When we expressed GFP-IAA27 in a mutant line defective for the auxin receptor TIR1 (tir1-11) we recorded a significant nuclear fluorescence signal already in control conditions, confirming impaired IAA27 degradation, and no further increase was seen when the tir1-11 plants were grown in low K, suggesting that TIR1 acts downstream of low K. The observations support a model in which low K prevents TIR1-dependent degradation of IAA27 protein, thereby opening an opportunity for CLSY1 to regulate IAA27 levels via transcriptional repression.
At which point does low K interfere with the auxin pathway? Mutants defective for the IAA27-interacting transcription factor ARF7 (arf7)19,20, the auxin receptor TIR1 (tir1-11, tir1-12) and the auxin transporter, PIN3, (pin3-4, pin3-10) all have a constitutive LR developmental phenotype, forming less LRs than wild type in control, and not responding to K availability (Fig. 5a, Supplementary Fig. 21). Thus, low K acts upstream of auxin transport and perception. PIN3 enables auxin reflux into the developing LRs from the overlaying endodermis cells21. Confocal microscopy of a Col-0 line expressing pPIN3::PIN3-GFP revealed that low K eliminates PIN3-GFP expression specifically in the endodermis cells that overlie the LR initials (Fig. 5b and Supplementary Fig. 22). Again, this effect was not seen when Fe was lowered together with K. Less auxin accumulation in LR primordial cells under low K is also consistent with the earlier experiments showing less DR5-VENUS fluorescence in FCs and SI-primordia (Fig. 1c).
Based on the mutant phenotypes and the microscopy analyses we propose that low K, in an Fe-dependent manner, interferes with cell-type specific PIN3 expression and reduces auxin reflux to LR initials, thereby perturbing auxin-dependent proteolysis of IAA27 and downstream signalling (Fig. 6a). We further tested this model with pharmacological assays. As would be expected, exogenous application of synthetic auxin (1-naphthaleneacetic acid, NAA) counteracts the effect of low K and of the clsy1 mutation on LR growth, while inhibition of auxin transport with a phytotropin (naphthylphthalamidic acid, NPA) makes LR development sensitive to CLSY1-function, even in K-sufficient conditions (Fig. 6b and Supplementary Fig. 23).
The combined findings provide strong evidence that CLSY1-mediated RdDM and transcriptional repression of IAA27 constitute an independent backup pathway that regulates LR development when the canonical auxin pathway is perturbed (Fig. 7a). The model predicts that CLSY1 would also protect LR development against genetic disruption of the auxin pathway upstream of IAA27 degradation, even when K supply is sufficient. To test this hypothesis, we generated a clsy1-7 tir1-11 double mutant. The TIR1 mutation inhibits LR root development more strongly in the clsy1 than in the Col-0 wild type background, in both control and low K conditions, and has no additive effect to clsy1 in low K (Fig. 7b). The results confirm that CLSY1 maintains LR development process when the auxin pathway fails, irrespective of whether the perturbation is caused by an environmental or genetic challenge.
Discussion
K is an essential mineral nutrient required for many fundamental processes of life including electric, osmotic and metabolic functions22. It is highly soluble and therefore leaches from soils with low colloid or clay content or from clay-rich soils with poor structure23. In agriculture, particularly in developing countries, K management is often neglected in favour of nitrogen and phosphorus, but once soils have become K-depleted soil health cannot easily be restored. K deficiency, therefore, limits natural vegetation and crop production in many parts of the world24. Even in soils that have overall sufficient K, high K demand during certain developmental stages (e.g. early growth or seed filling) can lead to local K depletion in densely-rooted areas23. Whether roots avoid or outgrow depletion zones and how this affects plant performance is an important question for agriculture and for ecology, calling for a more detailed understanding of root developmental responses to low K.
We have shown here that low K in the root environment inhibits early LR development by causing a delay in the progression from FC towards stage-II LR primordia. Genetic and microscopic evidence revealed that low-K disrupts the auxin-dependent initiation of LR development upstream of auxin perception by TIR1 and interferes with the expression of PIN3 transporter proteins and with auxin accumulation in the LR primordia (Fig. 6a). The exact mode of action remains to be elucidated. Other K-deficiency responses involve the K-channel AKT1 as a ‘transporter-receptor’ in conjunction with a calcium signalling module consisting of calcineurin-B like (CBLs) calcium-binding proteins and CBL-interacting protein kinases (CIPKs). Mutants in these components are generally smaller in low K than wild-type plants and show some changes in root architecture. Whether AKT1/CBL/CIPK signalling is also required for the low-K response of early LR development and for PIN3 expression remains to be explored. In analogy with previously reported Fe-dependence of MR inhibition by low phosphate the observed Fe-dependence of LR-inhibition by low K suggests that the molecular events upstream of PIN3 expression include Fe-dependent redox processes. These could either directly impact on protein translation and quality control in the ER or be part of a signalling pathway involving reactive oxygen species (ROS). An increase of ROS in K-deprived roots has been reported25. Whether and how redox potentials and/or ROS signalling contribute to the early LR developmental phenotype in low K remains to be investigated.
In this study we focussed on the question what determines the extent of LR suppression in low K. The vast majority of accessions analysed here have lower LR number in low K than in sufficient K, but the severity of the inhibition varies. Robustness has been defined as invariant phenotype under environmental perturbation1 and requires mechanisms to buffer or over-ride sensitivity. We found that the strategy used by plants to maintain LR development in low K is similar to how engineers introduce robustness into control systems. CLSY1-mediated RdDM does not alter the K-sensitivity of the auxin pathway per se but generates a bypass circuit that directly controls an important switch at the end of the pathway (IAA27). When the auxin pathway is off (low K or tir1) and the backup is on (D-allele genotypes), CLSY1-mediated transcriptional repression maintains low IAA27 levels, thereby releasing inhibition of ARFs and maintaining LR development (Fig. 6a). This model currently offers the best explanation for the combined evidence from our experiments, but proof of quantitative differences in IAA protein levels in vivo is technically challenging. The GFP-IAA27 expressing lines generated here show increased IAA27 protein levels in Col-0 wild type in low K compared to control, and constitutively high IAA27 protein levels in Col-0 tir1 mutants, which is in accordance with the model. However, the signal/background ratio is still low preventing quantitative comparison between different lines. Stronger and ratio-metric reporters are needed in the future, and they would have to be expressed in the background of different accessions and mutants to fully prove our model.
While CLSY1 is an important determinant of LR development when the auxin pathways is interrupted, it is not the only one. Accessions with a CLSY1 D-allele showed on average higher CHH methylation in a TE-containing upstream region of IAA27, lower IAA27 mRNA levels and more LRs in low K than accessions with an E allele. Crossing D-alleles from different accessions into the Col-0 clsy1 mutant rescued the K-hypersensitive phenotype whereas crossing with E-alleles did not, confirming that D is the functional allele. Nevertheless, all three readouts (DNA methylation and IAA27 mRNA, and LR number in low K) still varied considerably among accessions with the same CLSY1 allele indicating that each of them is also regulated by other factors, which differ between accessions. GWA statistics can extract individual pathways even if they are buried in complex networks and allowed us to separate the mechanism that links CLSY1 with LR number from a larger network of interactions. To further unravel this network it would be informative to characterise those accessions in which individual links between DNA-methylation, transcript levels and LR number are broken and to identify the genes and pathways that are responsible.
An obvious question is why natural genetic variation has targeted CLSY1 rather than IAA27 itself. Possible answers range from positional preferences to functional advantages. DNA-methylome sequencing indicates several hundred potential gene targets of RdDM in Col-0 and the target subsets differ for different CLSY isoforms10. IAA27 was the only obvious candidate relating to LR development that is consistently shown to be a target of RdDM in Col-0 accession across independent studies10,14,15 (Fig. 3a), but it would be interesting to explore whether the CLSY1 D/E polymorphism leads to other cryptic phenotypes and whether there is a functional bias among CLSY1 targets. One possibility is that RdDM-mediated transcriptional silencing more generally provides a backup system for processes that involve protein degradation of negative regulators (double-negative regulation), which is a typical feature of hormonal regulation in plants. It is worth noting that in most cases the transcriptional repression of a negative regulator will only affect protein levels when the canonical protein degradation pathway is perturbed, and its effect is, therefore, conditional by nature. By contrast, changing transcription rate of a positive regulator is more likely to have constitutive effects under normal conditions. The advantage of employing an RdDM-mediated backup circuit to achieve robustness is, therefore, likely to be restricted to double-negative regulation and could have contributed to its evolution.
Does CLSY1-mediated robustness of LR development give plants an advantage, and under which conditions? Our analysis of Arabidopsis seedlings grown on moderately low K for 2 weeks revealed higher shoot weights of plants carrying the CLSY1 D-allele than of plants carrying the E-allele. We also found a positive correlation between LR number and shoot weight across tested genotypes, which is not surprising given the important role of LRs in uptake of water and nutrients. Therefore, at least in the case of moderate or short-term K deficiency continuing LR development seems to be an advantage. Manipulating transcript levels of IAA27 could offer an opportunity to increase the robustness of lateral root development and improve plant performance in low-K environments that are characterised by patchy or transient K-deficiency. Seen in this light it makes sense that CLSY1 itself is not regulated by environmental cues as it would be difficult for the plant to sense the wider geographical or temporal context of K-deficiency. By contrast, this context could have contributed to evolution of CLSY1 and its natural variation. Unfortunately, insufficient information is available on the habitats from which the accessions used in this study were collected. New accessions with detailed metadata for the specific soil properties and temporal patterns of K supply should be collected in the future to determine the exact scenarios under which continued LR development under K-deficiency is advantageous.
In summary, our study reveals that cryptic natural variation in the RdDM machinery defines the balance between robustness and plasticity in the face of environmental and genetic perturbation. Gene repression through RdDM provides a backup system for maintaining lateral root development when hormone-mediated protein degradation is impaired, thus enabling plants to adopt a root system architecture that favours growth in a challenging environment.
Methods
Plant materials and growth conditions
Arabidopsis thaliana accessions used in the study comprised 139 accessions shared between the RegMap26 and 1001 genome12 panels, and 8 accessions specific to RegMap and 17 accessions specific to 1001 genome panel. The seeds were obtained from Nottingham Arabidopsis Stock Centre (NASC). The homozygous T-DNA insertion mutant lines for several genes, namely CLSY1 (clsy1-7 (SALK_018319) and clsy1-5 (SAIL_1229_H10), TIR1(tir1-11 (SALK_090445C), tir1-12 (SALK_151603C)), PIN3 (pin3-4 (N9363), pin3-10 (SALK_113246C)), NRPD1a (nrpd1-3 (SALK_128428)), RDR2 (Sail_1277_H08), nrt1.5-2 (SALK_005099), and cipk23-1 (SALK_032341) were also obtained from NASC. Previously described akt14 and arf7-127 mutant were also used during this study. The clys1 tir1 double mutant was generated by crossing clsy1-7 and tir1-11 single mutant plants. Transgenic lines (ESTRA:IAA27-1 (N2102233) and ESTRA:IAA27-2 (N2102234)) expressing IAA27 transcription factor under the control of beta(β)-estradiol inducible promoter were obtained from the TRANSPLANTA collection28.
Surface sterilization of seeds was performed using 1 min wash with absolute ethanol followed by 5 min wash with a solution containing 2.8% sodium hypochlorite and 0.1% Tween®-20. The seeds were then washed five times using sterile distilled water. The seeds were stratified at 4 °C for 5–7 days and then sown on vertical plates with minimal media4 containing 1% agar (Formedium), 0.5% sucrose and pH 5.6 (0.2 M MES/Tris). Control media contained 0.5 mM NaH2PO4, 2 mM KNO3, and 0.25 mM MgSO4, 0.25 mM MgCl2, 2 mM CaCl2, and 42.5 µM Fe(III) Na-EDTA, as well as 1.8 µM MnSO4, 45 µM H3BO3, 0.38 µM ZnSO4, 0.015 µM (NH4)6Mo7O24, 0.16 µM CuSO4, and 0.01 µM CoCl2. For low K and/or low Fe experiments, concentrations of K and Fe were lowered to 10 and 4.25 µM, respectively. The osmotic potential of these media was adjusted with NaCl. Low N and low P media contained 50 and 20 µM of N and P, respectively. Plants were grown for 12 days in a growth chamber at 60% relative humidity and 22 °C, with cycles of 9 h light (120 µE m−2 s−1). The expression of IAA27 in the IAA27 over-expressing lines was induced by growing plants for 12 days on media supplemented with 5 µM β-estradiol (Sigma Aldrich, cat#E2758). For treatments with auxin efflux inhibitor (N-1-naphthylphthalamidic acid (NPA) (1 µM) (Santa Cruz Biotechnology, cat#132-66-1)) or synthetic auxin (1-Naphthaleneacetic acid (NAA) (10 nM and 40 nM) (Sigma Aldrich, cat#317918)), seeds were germinated and grown for 12 days on media supplemented with these chemicals.
Root phenotyping
Images of plants on plates were acquired using a flatbed scanner at 200 dpi29. Lateral root number, main root length, and total root size of individual plants were quantified from the images using a semi-automated pipeline in the EZ-Root software30. Statistical analysis and visualization of average root system architectures was carried out using Root-Vis software30.
Gravistimulation assays were performed to visualize the dynamics of LR development responses to K and Fe availability. This method helps to synchronize the location and timing of LR primordia initiation27 by inducing an auxin maxima at the outer site of the bend31. Plates with 12-d-old plants were rotated by 90°, and the plants were allowed to grow for another 20 h. Plant roots were then mounted in the clearing solution (1 M chloral hydrate and 33% glycerol) and observed after 10 min with Zeiss LSM510 microscope using a white field camera.
Genetic mapping
For genome-wide association (GWA) analysis, LR number data were obtained from two sets of Arabidopsis accessions: (i) 147 accessions belonging to RegMap panel26; and (ii) 156 accessions from 1001 genome panel12, each with an average of five replicates (Supplementary Data 2). 139 Arabidopsis accessions were shared between the two panels. GWA mapping was performed on mean LR number data using the GWAPP web interface (https://gwas.gmi.oeaw.ac.at/) and the accelerated mixed-model (AMM) method32. Genotype data from 250k single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) chip26 and imputed full sequences12 were respectively used for mapping in the RegMap and 1001 genome panels, and only SNPs with minimum allele frequency (MAF) > 0.05 were considered. In both GWA analyses, the LR number-associated SNP under low K environment identified at position 14,741,463/Chr3 (LRNK1) was located 14.4 kb downstream of the CLSY1 coding region, whereas, closer SNPs did not show any significant association. To clarify, we performed CLSY1-based local association analysis. The coding DNA sequences of CLSY1 from 156 accessions were retrieved from Salk Arabidopsis 1001 Genomes database (http://signal.salk.edu/atg1001/index.php). Association analysis for LR number variation was performed using 13 non-synonymous SNPs (MAF > 0.05) with Tassel 5 using generalized linear model33. CLSY1 haplotypes were defined based on these polymorphisms.
Quantitative complementation
To verify that CLSY1 underlies LR number association under low K environment (LRNK1), we performed quantitative complementation tests34. These tests allow the effects of natural alleles to be determined in a heterozygous state with a null allele. Moreover, the phenotypes of transgenic Arabidopsis plants tend to be highly variable due to experimental uncertainties, such as the copy number, transgene expression levels, and the insertion sites. Arabidopsis accessions Col-0, Mnz-0, Pog-0, Ove-0, and Rak-2 corresponding to CLSY1 allele D, and the accessions Chat-1 and Fei-0, which carry the allele E, were each crossed with either clsy1-7 mutant or its wild type (Col-0) background. F1 plants from these crosses were genotyped using the indel markers to ensure that they had the expected allelic combinations. Primer sequences for indel markers are provided in Supplementary Table 2. F1 plants along with parental accessions were phenotyped for LR number and shoot dry weight (DWs). Allele-to-background interactions were assessed using Two-way analysis of variance (ANOVA).
Quantitative gene expression analysis
CLSY1 and IAA27 mRNA abundance was characterized in natural Arabidopsis accessions or in T-DNA lines using quantitative real-time (qRT-PCR). Total RNA was extracted from pools of 18–24 plant roots (see figure legends) using a SV Total RNA Isolation System (Promega, cat#Z3101). One µg of total RNA was used for first strand cDNA synthesis using M-MLV Reverse Transcriptase, RNase H Minus, Point Mutant (Promega, cat#M3681) and Oligo(dT)15 Primer (Promega, cat#C1101) in a final volume of 25 μL, according to the manufacturer’s instructions. 25 ng of first strand cDNA was used as template for qRT-PCR. qRT-PCRs were performed in StepOnePlus RT-PCR system (Applied Biosystems). cDNA amplification was monitored using SYBR Green (Clonetech, Cat#RR820Q) at an annealing temperature of 55 °C. PP2A (AT1G13320) was used as an internal control. The primer sequences used are listed in Supplementary Table 2. The PCR efficiency (E) for each primer pair was determined after the analysis of 1∶4, 1∶16, 1:64 and 1:256 dilutions of first strand cDNA by using the equation E = (10−1/s), where s is the slope of the linear regression of the threshold cycle (Ct) values. Relative transcript levels of IAA27 compared to the PP2A were determined using the equation RTL = [(E)−Ct]IAA27 /[(E)−Ct]PP2A35,36.
Bisulfite sequencing
Genomic DNA was extracted from roots of Col-0, clsy1-7, nrpd1-3, and rdr2 plants using DNeasy Plant Mini kit (Qiagen, cat#69104), following the manufacturer’s instructions. Three independent experiments were performed each comprising pooled samples of 24 plant roots. 0.5 µg of genomic DNA was treated with bisulfite using the EpiTect Bisulfite kit (Qiagen, cat#59104). The primers listed in Supplementary Table 2 were used to amplify the IAA27 promoter region corresponding to TEs (AT4TE67750, AT4TE67755, and AT4TE67760). The fragments were then cloned in pDONR207 and in total 10 (at least 3 from each experiment) clones for each genotype were sequenced individually. The sequences were aligned using MEGA version 7.0.2637, and the methylation rates of individual cytosines were calculated through bisulfite conversion rate in percentage. DNA methylation rates of IAA27 promoter in natural accessions of Arabidopsis were monitored in the same manner.
Confocal microscopy
Arabidopsis Col-0 plants expressing 3XVENUS-N7 under the control of auxin-responsive promoter pDR538 were used to study the effects of K and Fe availability on transcriptional responses to auxin. The pDR5::3XVENUS-N7 fluorescence was visualized using confocal laser-scanning microscopy (Zeiss LSM510). Plant roots were illuminated with a 488 nm laser and light was collected using LP560 emission filter. For quantitative comparison of pDR5 activity, the laser power, pinhole and gain settings of the confocal microscope were identical among different treatments. The fluorescence signal intensity in cell nuclei was quantified with ImageJ. The regulation of PIN3 spatial expression pattern by K and Fe availability was studied using pPIN3::PIN3-GFP fusion protein39. Confocal microscopy was performed using a Leica SP8 microscope. Plant roots were imaged with a 488 nm argon laser line for excitation of GFP fluorescence. Emissions were detected between 505 and 530 nm.
Statistical analysis
Unless stated otherwise, the statistical significance of differences between two means was assessed using one-way ANOVA. Multiple comparisons were analysed using least significant differences test. Statistical analyses were performed, and results plotted using SigmaPlot 11.0. Centre lines and crosses within box plots, respectively, represent sample medians and means. Box limits indicate the 25th and 75th percentiles; whiskers extend 1.5 times the interquartile range from the 25th and 75th percentiles. Treatments were generally repeated at least three times with the number of independent biological replicates (number of individual roots n) indicated in the figure legends.
Accession numbers
Sequence data from this article can be found in the Arabidopsis Genome Initiative or GenBank/EMBL databases under the following accession numbers: AT3G42670 (CLSY1), AT4G29080 (IAA27), AT3G62980 (TIR1), AT1G70940 (PIN3), AT5G20730 (ARF7), AT1G63020 (NRPD1a), AT4G11130 (RDR2), AT2G26650 (AKT1), AT1G30270 (CIPK23), and AT1G32450 (NRT1.5/NPF7.3).
Reporting summary
Further information on research design is available in the Nature Research Reporting Summary linked to this article.
Data availability
Data supporting the findings of this work are available within the paper and its Supplementary Information files. A reporting summary for this article is available as a Supplementary Information file. Datasets generated and analysed during the current study are available from corresponding authors upon request. The source data underlying Figs. 1b, 1d, 2b, 2c, 3b, 3c, 4, 5a, 6b, and 7b as well as Supplementary Figs. 1b–d, 2b, 3, 4, 5b, 5c, 6a, 7, 12–19, 20b, 21, and 22 are provided as a Source Data file.
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Acknowledgements
We thank Dr. Maria Papanatsiou for constructive discussion and Dr. Benjamin Péret for providing DR5-Venus and prPIN3:PIN3-GFP seeds. This work was funded by BBSRC grants (BB/N018508/1, BB/R019894/1) to A.A.
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Z.S. performed and analysed all experiments, supported by R.E. and C.C. Z.S. and A.A conceived the experiments, interpreted the results, and wrote the paper.
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Shahzad, Z., Eaglesfield, R., Carr, C. et al. Cryptic variation in RNA-directed DNA-methylation controls lateral root development when auxin signalling is perturbed. Nat Commun 11, 218 (2020). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-019-13927-3
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-019-13927-3
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