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Christian Fleck Center for Biological Systems Analysis

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Presentation on theme: "Christian Fleck Center for Biological Systems Analysis"— Presentation transcript:

1 From protein dynamics to physiology: New Insights into Phytochrome B mediated photomorphogenesis
Christian Fleck Center for Biological Systems Analysis University of Freiburg, Germany

2 Plant, Light, Action! All mechanisms throughout plant life cycle are regulated by light

3 Plant photoreceptors photoreceptor phytochromes phototropins
hypocotyl growth flower induction flavonoid synthesis root growth shade avoidance greening etc. photoreceptor phytochromes phototropins cryptochormes UV-B receptor evolutionary precursor bacterial two-component histidine kinases bacterial light, oxygen, voltage receptors photolyases genes CRY1 CRY2 PHOT1 PHOT2 PHYA PHYB PHYC PHYD PHYE blue UV-A red far-red photo- responses hypocotyl growth flavonoid synthesis phototropism stomata opening chloroplast movement flavonoid synthesis flower induction

4 Phytochrome characteristics
Dimeric protein of about 125kDa Two reversibly photointerconverting forms: Phytochrome B: Abundant in red light (660nm) Pfr is light stable Low Fluence Response in red light Early, transient, nuclear speckles late, stable, nuclear speckles Mediated actions: Growth of hypocotyl length Magnitude of cotyledon area Regulation of chlorophyll synthesis Induction of flowering Shade avoidance 5 weeks old A.thaliana (wt)

5 Phytochrome characteristics
Pr Pfr k1 k2 Overlapping absorption spectra ⇒ wavelength dependent photoequilibrium Adjustable parameters: spectral composition of incident light light intensity (photon flux) duration of irradiation protein dynamics can be changed by switching on/off the light

6 Developmental programs
Alternative developmental programs during early plant growth: light-dependent de-etiolation Skotomorphogenesis Photomorphogenesis darkness white light

7 How do the phytochromes influence hypocotyl growth?
How is the phytochrome dynamics changed by light? How do hypocotyls grow? How can we connect the mesoscopic protein dynamics with the macroscopic hypocotyl growth?

8 Time resolved hypocotyl growth
Darkness Continuous red light phyB-9 Col WT phyB-GFP Active phytochromes present No active phytochromes present

9 The logistic growth function
Population or organ growth (Verhulst, 1837) Growth rate is proportional to existing population and available resources Small population: exponential growth; growth rate α>0 Large population: saturated/inhibited growth due to environmental factors; inhibition coefficient βL>0 Growth is given by

10 Experimental investigations of growth patterns
Sachs (1874): ”large period of growth”: growth velocity increases, reaches a maximum, growth velocity decreases Backman (1931): S-shaped growth curve is called “growth cycle”, integration of the “large period” BUT: symmetry is not given the period of increasing velocity is of greater amplitude than the period of decreasing velocity Growth is characterized by: asymmetric S-curve asymmetric bell-shape of velocity function describes the “large period” decrease of velocity takes longer than increase -> growth rate is not constant over time

11 The biological growth function
Biological time Growth rate Environmental limitation Variation of γ ⇒ γ determines the asymmetry of L and dL/dt Variation of α/γ ⇒ α/γ determines initial growth profile Fit dark grown data

12 The underlying protein pool dynamics
dark phyB-GFP 24h red Speckle formation

13 Time resolved experiments for the protein dynamics

14 How does active phytochrome come into play?
A. Hussong Modified growth rate

15 Multi-experiment fit FRAP Dark reversion Pfr degradation
phyB-GFP Col WT phyB-YFP Hypocotyl growth Fluence rate response Col WT A. Hussong, S.Kircher

16 Prediction: fluence rate response of a phyB over-expressing hypocotyl
phyB-GFP

17 Sensitivities: Effect of parameter variation on hypocotyl length
k3 k4 k1 kdr kdfr k2 kr kin kS k5

18 The importance of the expression level
WT OX-R OX-A Wagner et al. Plant Cell (1991) ⇒ phyB-OX leads to hypersensitivity Khanna et al. Plant Cell (2007) Leivar et al. Plant Cell (2008) ⇒ PIFs regulate hypocotyl growth by modulating phyB levels Al-Sady et al. PNAS (2008) Expression strength (phyB level) is determined on protein level Hypocotyl growth is determined on organ level ⇒ What is functional relation between hypocotyl length and phyB level?

19 Hypocotyl growth and phyB expression level
Growth function for light grown seedlings: Pool dynamics is quite fast, i.e., steady states are reached quickly in comparison to hypocotyl growth Analytical solution for hypocotyl L can be derived: determines expression level for t>>tc, i.e., if hypocotyl growth has reached steady state for t<tc

20 Functional and quantitative relation between expression level and hypocotyl length
Khanna et al., Plant Cell (2007) Al-Sady et al., PNAS (2008) Leivar et al., Plant Cell (2008) A. Hussong (unpublished data)

21 Conclusions Quantitative understanding of phytochrome B dynamics
Phenomenological model captures many features of phyB mediated photomorphogenesis Physiology is most sensitive to changes in photoreceptor expression level Excellent quantitative agreement between mesoscopic protein dynamics and macroscopic physiology

22 Outlook Wavelength dependence of the phytochrome dynamics
Phytochromes form dimers: how does this change the overall dynamics and when is this important? PIF - PHYB interaction: phyB degrades PIF3, but there is also a PIF3 mediated phyB degradation. How does this double negative feedback work? PHYB abundance is circadian clock regulated. How is this achieved and how does light feed into the clock?

23 Acknowledgements Institute of Physics Center for Systems Biology
Faculty of Biology Andrea Hussong Julia Rausenberger Stefan Kircher Eberhard Schäfer Jens Timmer


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