Abstract
The stress hormone, Abscisic acid (ABA), is crucial for plants to respond to changes in their environment. It triggers changes in cytoplasmic Ca2+ levels, which activate plant responses to external stresses. However, how Ca2+ sensing and signaling feeds back into ABA signaling is not well understood. Here we reveal a calcium sensing module that negatively regulates drought stress via modulating ABA receptor PYLs. Mutants cbl1/9 and cipk1 exhibit hypersensitivity to ABA and drought resilience. Furthermore, CIPK1 is shown to interact with and phosphorylate 7 of 14 ABA receptors at the evolutionarily conserved site corresponding to PYL4 Ser129, thereby suppressing their activities and promoting PP2C activities under normal conditions. Under drought stress, ABA impedes PYLs phosphorylation by CIPK1 to respond to ABA signaling and survive in unfavorable environment. These findings provide insights into a previously unknown negative regulatory mechanism of the ABA signaling pathway, which is mediated by CBL1/9-CIPK1-PYLs, resulting in plants that are more sensitive to drought stress. This discovery expands our knowledge about the interplay between Ca2+ signaling and ABA signaling.
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Introduction
Global warming poses a severe threat to crop survival and yields, therefore, elucidation of the molecular mechanisms through which plants respond to drought is crucial for food security1. Abscisic acid (ABA) is a phytohormone that is vital in coordinating various responses of plants to the external environment, such as drought, salt, and heat resilience2,3. The positive and negative regulators of the ABA signaling pathway have been reported. In the core ABA pathway, the perception of ABA by pyrabactin resistance 1 (PYR1) and the PYR1-like (PYL)/regulatory component of ABA receptor (RCAR) proteins (hereafter referred to as PYLs) leads to the binding of ABA receptors to clade A protein phosphatases type-2C (PP2Cs), such as ABI1, ABI2, HAB1, HAB2, PP2CA, and AHG14,5,6,7. These effects relieve the inhibition of sucrose non-fermenting 1-related subfamily 2 protein kinases (SnRK2s) or other protein kinases, thereby activating the ABA signaling pathway, such as phosphorylation of slow anion channel-associated 1 (SLAC1), fast-activating anion channel 1 (QUAC1), and transcription factors (ABA-associated factors (ABFs))8,9,10,11. ABA also influences seed germination as well as dormancy and plays a vital role in plant growth and development2,12,13. In stomatal movement, the key event downstream of ABA is the stimulation of reactive oxygen species (ROS) production, which induces Ca2+ influx from the plasma membrane and activates the Ca2+-dependent ABA signaling pathway14,15,16,17,18,19,20.
The Arabidopsis PYLs family consists of 14 members that are highly redundant and play various roles in plant growth, development as well as responses to stress6,7,21. Among them, apart from PYL13, in the absence of PP2Cs, monomeric PYLs (PYL4-6 and PYL8-10) have a higher binding affinity for ABA than dimeric PYLs (PYR1 and PYL1-2). The monomeric PYLs can partially inhibit PP2Cs in the absence of ABA22,23. The precise mechanisms by which these ABA-independent ABA receptors maintain their inactive status in the absence of stress are poorly understood.
Given the significance of PYLs in ABA perception in plants, post-transcriptional regulation of PYLs has been intensively studied. The TOR kinase phosphorylates conserved sites of PYLs to inactivate them and balance plant growth as well as stress responses24. The AEL casein kinases promote PYLs ubiquitination and degradation via phosphorylation25. Postdegradation sorting of PYLs into vacuoles is mediated by the canonical endosomal sorting complex required for transport (ESCRT) components, such as VPS23A, FYVE1, and ALIX26,27,28. The E3 ubiquitin ligase (XBAT35.2) regulates ABA signaling by ubiquitinating VPS23A degradation. This ubiquitination is finely regulated by deubiquitinating enzymes (UBP12 and UBP13)29. Moreover, Cytosolic ABA Receptor Kinases (CARKs) positively regulate ABA signaling by phosphorylating PYLs30. Various key protein kinases that have the ability to phosphorylate ABA receptors have been identified; however, their phosphorylation modification mechanisms have yet to be fully established.
Spatiotemporally distributed calcium ions (Ca2+) are ubiquitous second messengers that play an important role in eukaryotic responses to biotic and abiotic stresses31. Physiologically, CNGC5/6/9/12 mediates ABA-induced influx of extracellular Ca2+, increasing cytoplasmic Ca2+ concentrations or ABA-specific oscillations32. These Ca2+ signals are sensed by intracellular calcium sensors, such as CAM, CML, CDPK (also known as CPK), and CBL-CIPK33,34,35. The regulatory network for CBL-CIPK is crucial for plants to respond to adverse environmental stimuli36. Moreover, CBL-CIPK has been implicated in ABA and drought responses. Arabidopsis CIPK1, CIPK3, CIPK8, CIPK11, CIPK14, CIPK17, and CIPK23 are involved in ABA signaling37,38,39,40,41. The CBL9-CIPK3 complex negatively regulates ABA responses during germination42. Overexpression of CIPK11 results in a drought hypersensitivity phenotype, while co-expressions of CBL5-CIPK11 in oocytes activate the SLAC1 anion channel43,44. Both cbl1/9 and cipk23 mutants exhibit drought resilience and ABA hypersensitivity outcomes in stomata, while CBL1/9-CIPK23 phosphorylates and activates SLAC1 and SLAH3 in oocytes40,45. Elucidation of the regulatory circuits involved in this paradoxical phenotype and the associated mechanisms will be of vital significance. These CIPKs have a role in ABA responses; however, their precise regulation processes have yet to be fully established.
In this study, we found that the calcium sensor (CBL1/9-activated CIPK1) phosphorylates PYLs by directly interacting with ABA receptors (PYR1/PYL1-6). The phosphorylation of PYLs inhibits their activities and negatively regulates ABA signaling. Additionally, Ser129 in PYL4 was shown to be essential for PYLs to bind ABA and inhibit PP2C. This negative regulation is important for preventing stress signaling by ABA-dependent and ABA-independent PYLs in the absence of stress. Under stress conditions, ABA inhibits PYLs phosphorylation by CIPK1, activating downstream ABA signaling and ensuring plant survival. The discovery of the regulatory mechanisms of CBL1/9-CIPK1 in the ABA signaling pathway sheds light on the intricate ways in which plants respond to drought stress and adapt to ever-changing environmental conditions.
Results
In Arabidopsis cv. Wassilewskija plants, CIPK1 regulates ABA signaling38, thus, we evaluated whether it responds to ABA signaling during drought in Columbia plants. We used two independent T-DNA lines, cipk1-2 (N822018) and cipk1-3 (GK230-D11), for our investigations. The expression pattern of CIPK1 was comparable to those of CBL1/938, and the expression of CIPK1 in guard cells was comparable to those of CBL1, CBL9, and CIPK2340, which is consistent with our findings for native promoter-driven GUS transgenic lines (Fig. 1a).
Given the significance of CIPK1 in ABA signaling and its expression in stomata, we aim to assess its function in preventing water loss following soil drying. In this assay, 2-week-old seedlings were water deprived for 20 d, followed by rewatering. To ensure uniform drought exposure for all plants, the relative water content of the soil in each small pot was determined during the drought phase. No significant difference was observed in soil water content among the genotypes during the entire experiment (Supplementary Fig. 1a). Compared to the wild type, the two cipk1 mutants exhibited better growth performance during late stage of soil drought, suggesting that the functional deficiency of CIPK1 has greater drought resilience (Fig. 1b). To explore whether the improved water retention capacity in cipk1 plants is linked to changes in transpiration rate, we monitored the rate of water loss from detached leaves. Our findings revealed that cipk1-2 and cipk1-3 exhibited a slower water loss compared to the wild type (Fig. 1c).
Further, the effects of ABA on stomatal closure were evaluated. The stomata were fully opened in MES buffer under strong light and treated with 10 μM ABA. The cipk1-2 and cipk1-3 stomata were shown to close faster than the wild type (Fig. 1d, e). We then utilized a far-red camera to measure leaf temperatures, which are indicative of transpiration levels, with higher temperatures, indicating lower levels of transpiration. Our results revealed that the cipk1-2 and cipk1-3 mutants displayed higher leaf temperatures than the wild type (Fig. 1f), suggesting that the cipk1 mutants had lower levels of water transpiration compared to the wild type.
To validate the functions of CIPK1 in ABA-induced stomatal closure, a constitutively active (CA) variant of CIPK1 was generated under ProGC1 with the critical Thr (T) phosphorylation site in the activation loop converted to Asp (D)46. In this study, ProGC1: CIPK1T179D is referred to as CIPK1CA. Transgenic plants expressing CIPK1CA had lower water retention capacity after soil drying (Fig. 1g, and Supplementary Fig. 1b). We also conducted detached leaf water loss experiments and observed that the CIPK1CA plants had a higher rate of water dissipation compared to the wild type (Fig. 1h). Furthermore, our findings revealed that the ABA-promoted stomatal closure was impaired in CIPK1CA plants as compared to the wild type (Fig. 1i, j). In addition, the leaf temperature measurements indicated that the CIPK1CA lines had a lower temperature than the wild type, suggesting that the CIPK1CA plants transpired more water than the wild type (Fig. 1k). These findings imply that CIPK1 negatively regulates ABA responses during drought.
Physiologically, CIPK is activated by binding specific CBL, which initiates the downstream signaling processes47,48. Therefore, soil drought assays were performed on two CBLs (CBL1 and CBL9) that interact with CIPK1 in vivo and whose double mutants are sensitive to ABA, as well as the cbl1/9/cipk1 triple mutant. The cbl1/9/cipk1 triple mutants exhibited comparable water retention capacity to cbl1/9, consistent with previous studies40, indicating that the CBL1/9-CIPK1 complex negatively regulates Arabidopsis responses to drought (Fig. 1l, and Supplementary Fig. 1c). Accordingly, the leaf temperature measurements also showed that cbl1/9/cipk1 had similar water dissipation rates as cbl1/9 and cipk1 (Fig. 1m). In conclusion, the CBL1/9-CIPK1 complex negatively regulates ABA signaling during drought.
CIPK1 interacts with the PYLs ABA receptors
The CBL1/9-CIPK1 complex has been shown to be a negative regulator of plant responses to drought resilience, and VaCIPK02 has been reported to directly or indirectly regulate the response to drought resilience by interacting with VaPYL949; thus, we aimed to evaluate whether CIPK1 directly interacts with the ABA receptors, which are core components of ABA signaling. To validate our hypothesis, a bimolecular fluorescence complementation (BiFC) assay, in which CIPK1 harbors the N-terminal YFP (YFPn-CIPK1) and the ABA receptors are fused to the C-terminal YFP (PYR1/PYLs-YFPc) was conducted. When CIPK1 was combined with 14 PYR1/PYLs in N. benthamiana leaves for 4 d, the YFP fluorescence was detected in PYR1/PYL1-6 (Fig. 2a, and Supplementary Fig. 2a). To further investigate the location of interactions between CIPK1 and PYLs in plants, we conducted an analysis using tobacco leaf protoplasts. Our results showed that the interaction between CIPK1 and PYLs occurred in the cytoplasm, nucleus, and cell membrane (Fig. 2b). In addition, we also introduced CBL1-FLAG into the interaction system and observed that the interaction between CIPK1 and PYLs only occurred at the cell membrane. This finding suggests that the interaction between CIPK1 and PYLs in plants is likely to occur at the cell membrane (Fig. 2b).
After establishing that CIPK1 can physically interact with ABA receptors, the split-luciferase complementation (LCI) assays were performed in N. benthamiana. In this analysis, CIPK1 was fused to the N-terminal fragment of Photinus luciferase (nLUC), while ABA receptors and cLUC were combined to establish fusion proteins. After co-injection of CIPK1-nLUC and PYR1/PYL1-6-cLUC, recombinant LUC fluorescence activities were visible in tobacco leaves (Fig. 2c). In contrast, LUC fluorescence activities were not detected in the combination of CIPK1-nLUC and PYL7-PYL13-cLUC group and the corresponding negative control (Supplementary Fig. 2a, b). These results suggest that CIPK1 interacts with the PYR1/PYL1-6 ABA receptors.
Then, glutathione S-transferase pull-down (GST pull-down) assays were performed to confirm these interactions in vitro. In this assay, CIPK1 was fused to the 6xHis tag, while ABA receptors were fused to the GST tag to produce the fusion protein. Through pull-down assays using GST-PYL9 as a negative control, our results showed that CIPK1 only interacted with PYR1/PYL1-PYL6 (Fig. 2d). These findings imply that CIPK1 and ABA receptors PYR1/PYL1-PYL6 directly interacted in vitro.
To investigate whether CIPK1 physically interacts with ABA receptors in vivo, we extracted protein from transgenic Arabidopsis plants expressing both PYL1/4-GFP and CIPK1-FLAG. Empty GFP was used as a negative control. Our results showed that PYL1-GFP or PYL4-GFP were immunoprecipitated by CIPK1-FLAG (Fig. 2e). Taken together, these in vivo and in vitro assays demonstrate that CIPK1 physically interacts with ABA receptors.
CIPK1 phosphorylates PYLs to inhibit their activities
One of the most prevalent biological regulatory mechanisms is phosphorylation by kinases to control the activities of targets. The CIPK-mediated phosphorylation events of downstream target proteins have been reported47,48. An in vitro phosphorylation assay in which PYR1/PYL1-6 was fused to His-tag and CIPK1-His was conducted as previously described48. In the assay to fuse PYLs with GST or MBP tags, they were both shown to be close to CIPK1-His protein bands. Meanwhile, the fusion of CIPK1 with other tags resulted in weak activities in our system. Therefore, we used CIPK1-His as the kinase and PYLs-His as the substrate for phosphorylation assays. Autoradiography revealed the phosphorylation band of ABA receptors by CIPK1, consistent with prior interaction results (Fig. 3a, and Supplementary Fig. 3a).
To establish the target of CIPK1 phosphorylation on ABA receptors, phosphorylation sites were predicted using the Group-based Prediction System web tool (http://gps.biocuckoo.cn/online.php). Then, several nonphosphorylated variants of PYL4, including PYL4S8A, PYL4S54A, PYL4S129A, PYL4S8/129A, PYL4S131A, and PYL4S151A were generated. Phosphorylation intensities were significantly attenuated in the presence of Ser129 variants (Fig. 3b). By combining sequence conservation analysis and preferred phosphorylation pattern analysis of CIPK, Ser129 of PYL4 was shown to be evolutionarily conserved in ABA receptors (Supplementary Fig. 4), and was located close to the previously described potential ABA binding site (PYL4 Phe130)50.
Protein kinases frequently modify the stability, activity, or localization of their substrates to affect downstream signaling51,52. Studies have explored the roles of PYLs mutations in ABA signaling24,25,50. First, in this study, the mechanisms via which phosphorylation affects PYL activities were evaluated using a modified in vitro system of the recombinant core signaling pathway (ABA-PYL-ABI1-OST1-ABF2), as previously described24. It was revealed that PYL4S129A inhibits ABI1 and promotes ABF2 phosphorylation similar to PYL4. However, PYL4S129D did not inhibit the phosphatase activities of ABI1 (Fig. 3c). Regarding the in vitro phosphatase activities, it was revealed that phosphorylated PYL1 and PYL4 diminished the ability to inhibit ABI1 phosphatase, consistent with findings of the in vitro recombinant core ABA signaling pathway (Fig. 3d, e, and Supplementary Fig. 3c). An analysis was conducted to determine whether the interactions between ABI1 and ABA receptors were affected by phosphomimic mutations at the conserved site in PYL4, using both pull-down and yeast two-hybrid assays. The results showed that the phosphomimic mutations reduced the ABI1-PYL interactions (Fig. 3f and Supplementary Fig. 3b, d). These results suggest that CIPK1-mediated phosphorylation of PYLs alleviated their interactions with ABI1.
PYL4Ser129 is essential for plant responses to ABA and drought stress
Next, the mechanisms via which PYL4Ser129 phosphorylation impacts ABA responses in planta were investigated. The effects of phosphorylation on the localization of PYL4 were determined by constructing 35S promoter-driven PYL4, PYL4S129A, or PYL4S129D fusion GFP transgenic plants. The phosphorylation did not alter the subcellular localization of PYL4 (Supplementary Fig. 5). Then, transgenic plants harboring native promoter-driven wild-type PYL4, PYL4S129A, and PYL4S129D were created in quintuple-mutant pyr1pyl2pyl4pyl5pyl8 (abbreviated as 12458) plants (Fig. 4a). The ABA-hypersensitive phenotype of quintuple mutants was complemented in germination and seedling growth in transgenic plants of wild-type PYL4 or PYL4S129A. In contrast, transgenic lines expressing PYL4S129D exhibited the ABA-insensitive phenotype of 12458 mutant plants (Fig. 4a, and Supplementary Fig. 6a, b). Meanwhile, treatment of these transgenic plants with ABA did not inhibit their growth. Although PYL4, PYL4S129A, and PYL4S129D did not result in significant differences in root elongation when compared with 12458 (Supplementary Fig. 6c), PYL4 and PYL4S129A showed comparable shoot biomass to that of the wild type, while PYL4S129D and 12458 exhibited comparable shoot biomasses (Fig. 4b, and Supplementary Fig. 6d). Based on the in vitro findings and the results obtained from transgenic plants, it can be inferred that phosphomimetic mutated PYLs located at the conserved site corresponding to PYL4 Ser129 are not active receptors.
The effects of PYL4S129 phosphorylation on plant growth and responses to stressful environments were also investigated. Since 12458 exhibits a highly drought-sensitive and impaired growth phenotype in normal conditions, the growth and development of these transgenic plants were tracked in the greenhouse (Fig. 4c). The transgenic PYL4S129A and PYL4 plants recovered the mutant growth defects and drought sensitivity (Fig. 4c, d). The drought-hypersensitive phenotypes of 12458 and PYL4S129D plants were found to be correlated with the rapid decrease in soil water content (Supplementary Fig. 1d). However, the phenotypes of PYL4S129D transgenic plants were comparable to those of 12458 mutants (Fig. 4c). The soil drought assay showed that PYL4 and PYL4S129A transgenic plants recovered the drought-sensitive phenotype of 12458, while PYL4S129D and 12458 mutants were more sensitive to drought (Fig. 4d). We conducted a study in which we statistically analyzed detached rosette leaves to determine their wilting status. Our results indicated that PYL4S129D had similar water transpiration rates to 12458 but at a higher level (Fig. 4e). This was in contrast to PYL4 and PYL4S129A, which exhibited similar water transpiration rates to the wild type (Fig. 4e). We also carried out a leaf temperature analysis, which showed that PYL4 and PYL4S129A had a comparable water transpiration rate to the wild type (Fig. 4f). However, PYL4S129D exhibited lower leaf temperature and higher water transpiration rates than the wild type, comparable to 12458. These findings indicate that PYL4 Ser129 is crucial in responses to ABA in plants.
ABA directly inhibits CIPK1-mediated phosphorylation of PYLs
The major component of ABA signaling, SnRK2s, interacts with CIPKs53 and OST1 regulation of TOR kinase activities by phosphorylation plays a key role in modulating stress responses and growth24. In this study, the LCI assay showed that there were no interactions between CIPK1 and OST1 (Supplemental Fig. 2c). Subsequently, we conducted pull-down and Co-IP assays to examine the impact of ABA on the interaction between CIPK1 and PYL1, as well as PYL4. Our findings indicated that the presence of ABA decreased the binding strength between CIPK1 and, PYL1 and PYL4 (Fig. 5a–c and Supplementary Fig. 7). Consistently, the phosphorylation of PYL4 was partially inhibited by elevated ABA concentrations (Fig. 5d). Moreover, supplementation of ABA did not alter the kinase activities of CIPK1. Therefore, ABA directly inhibits the interactions between CIPK1 and PYL4.
To establish whether phosphorylation exerts regulatory functions on PYLs in plants in response to ABA, we assessed whether exogenous ABA affects the phosphorylation of PYL4. Transgenic plants overexpressing CIPK1-FLAG were grown for 24 h under 60 μM ABA treatment. Then, CIPK1-FLAG was extracted, enriched with anti-FLAG antibodies, and incubated at 30 °C for 30 min with recombinant PYL4-His and 2 μCi [γ-32P] ATP (Fig. 5e). It was established that within 6 h, ABA treatment did not alter CIPK1-mediated phosphorylation of PYL4, but from the 9th h, it significantly suppressed PYL4 phosphorylation. These findings suggest that ABA can directly inhibit CIPK1-mediated phosphorylation of PYL4.
To determine whether Ca2+ plays a vital role in CIPK1-mediated phosphorylation of PYLs, we performed in vitro phosphorylation assays. Our results revealed that the presence of EGTA, a Ca2+ chelator, in the reaction significantly impacted the phosphorylation of PYL4 by CIPK1. Furthermore, we found that the addition of Ca2+ to the reaction had no significant effect on CIPK1 autophosphorylation at high concentrations of Ca2+. However, it did affect the phosphorylation of PYL4 by CIPK1, indicating that PYL4 is likely to be phosphorylated by CIPK1 at lower cytosolic Ca2+ levels (Fig. 5f).
To further elucidate if CIPK1-mediated phosphorylation of PYLs requires CBL1/9, an in vivo phosphorylation assay was conducted. We subjected PYL4, PYL4S129A, and PYL4-FLAG/cbl1/9 transgenic plants to ABA treatment for 0, 6, and 9 hours. The PYL4 protein was then extracted and isolated using anti-FLAG antibodies, and the phosphorylation level of PYL4 was determined via anti-P-Ser antibodies. Notably, significant phosphorylation bands could be detected in PYL4 plants, while the intensity of phosphorylation was significantly depleted at the 9th h. In addition, only weak phosphorylation bands were observed in PYL4S129A and PYL4-FLAG/cbl1/9 plants compared with PYL4 plants; the phosphorylation bands in PYL4-FLAG/cbl1/9 plants were stronger than those in PYL4S129A plants, suggesting that there may be other CBLs involved in the phosphorylation of PYL4 by CIPK1 in vivo (Fig. 5g). These results unequivocally established that CIPK1-mediated phosphorylation of PYL4 requires CBL1/9.
To verify their genetic interactions, the 12458/cipk1 sextuple mutant was obtained by hybridization. The 12458/cbl1/9 heptamutant was not generated by hybridization because CBL1 and PYR1 are localized in close positions on chromosome 4, and CBL9 is positioned in the same chromosome with both PYL5 and PYL8 in Arabidopsis. Then, a CRISPR-Cas9 vector was constructed to knock out CBL1 and CBL9 in 12458 plants; however, the 12458/cbl1/9 heptamutant was not obtained. Comparisons of water loss among WT, cipk1-3, 12458, and 12458/cipk1 plants in soil revealed comparable drought sensitivities between 12458 and 12458/cipk1 with the same soil water stress (Fig. 5h, and Supplementary Fig. 1e). The leaf temperatures of different plants were also measured, and the results showed that 12458/cipk1 and 12458 had similar water transpiration (Fig. 5i). In summary, CIPK1 negatively regulates Arabidopsis responses to drought by suppressing ABA receptor activities via phosphorylation. This confirms the existence and physiological functions of the Ca2+-CBL1/9-CIPK1-PYLs signaling pathway, which is probably involved in the negative feedback of Ca2+ on ABA signaling (Fig. 6).
Discussion
The regulatory system that balances plant growth and stress responses largely depend on ABA signaling54. This regulatory network is regulated during growth and stress responses55,56,57. The changing external environment causes Ca2+ oscillations in plant cells, and intracellular Ca2+ sensors directly induce downstream signaling networks to regulate plant growth and stress responses31. In this study, we reveal a mechanism whereby CBL1/9-CIPK1 phosphorylation inhibits ABA signaling. The CBL1/9-activated CPK1 directly phosphorylates PYLs to negatively regulate drought stress. Additionally, under normal growth conditions, CIPK1-mediated phosphorylation of PYLs at Ser129 of PYL4 inactivates PYLs that fail to inhibit PP2C, such as ABI1. When plants are exposed to drought stress or ABA treatment, ABA inhibits PYLs phosphorylation by directly blocking the interactions between CIPK1 and PYLs. This ensures plant survival in harsh conditions. Therefore, the CBL1/9-CIPK1 complex appears to be a key mediator of stress response by integrating the Ca2+ and ABA signaling pathways. Overall, these findings provide insights into the complex signaling networks that regulate plant responses to drought stress, which could be useful in developing strategies to improve crop resilience to water scarcity.
CBL1/9-CIPK1 negatively regulates ABA responses during drought
The second messenger Ca2+ signaling regulates various aspects of eukaryotic physiology31. In response to several stimuli, specific calcium signatures are created in plants via the influx of extracellular Ca2+ or the release of Ca2+ in organelles58. The different Ca2+ signals are sensed by different calcium sensors to activate specific physiological responses. In plants, calcium sensors (CBLs) interact with specific CIPKs to regulate diverse physiological processes36. In vivo, CBL1/9 and CIPK1 exhibit comparable expression patterns, and CBL1/9 recruits CIPK1 to the plasma membrane38. The loss of cbl1 does not alter the sensitivity of plants to ABA38, whereas CBL9 responds to ABA signaling59. Even though cbl1 is sensitive to drought60, the cbl1/9 double mutant exhibits drought resilience, while still being ABA-sensitive in stomatal movement40. In this study, it was established that cipk1 has drought resilience, whereas stomata exhibit hypersensitive responses to ABA. In Arabidopsis, CIPK17 and CIPK1 are close homologs. Although CIPK17 has also been noted to inhibit ABA responses41, consistent with our results, CIPK1 is primarily expressed in shoots, whereas CIPK17 is primarily expressed in roots61. Preferentially, CIPK17 binds CBL2/3 at the tonoplast membrane to regulate stomatal movement41, while CIPK1 interacts with CBL1/9 to function at the plasma membrane38. Moreover, cbl1/9 and cipk23 mutants exhibit drought resilience and ABA hypersensitivity outcomes in stomata, while CBL1/9-CIPK23 phosphorylates and activates SLAC140,45. How does this positive regulator of SLAC1 negatively regulate ABA-induced stomatal closure? In addition to the inhibition of SLAC1-type ion channels by CIPK23T190D in guard cells62. Preferentially, CBL1/9 negatively regulates drought stress by activating CIPK1 to phosphorylate ABA receptors.
CIPK1 interacts with and phosphorylates PYLs to abolish their activities
In the past two decades, the discovery of the ABA receptor has been the most significant outcome in studies on ABA perception and signaling6,7. Physiologically, PYLs are regulated at the transcriptional and posttranscriptional levels. During seed germination, ABA inhibits PYLs expressions whereas ABI5 positively regulates PYLs expressions to regulate seed germination63. In plants, PYLs also undergo post-transcriptional modifications, including tyrosine nitration, phosphorylation, and ubiquitination. These adjustments regulate the fine-tuning of responses to environmental changes. Regarding the molecular mechanism via which CIPK1 regulates ABA signaling, interaction analyses were performed to investigate whether CIPK1 directly physically interacts with and regulates PYLs. The interaction analyses identified the ABA receptor (PYR1/PYL1/2/3/4/5/6) to be an important target that is regulated by CIPK1.
Moreover, CIPK1 was found to primarily phosphorylate PYL4 at Ser129. Biochemical analyses showed that phosphorylation regulates ABA receptor functions and that the phosphomimicking PYL1 and PYL4 versions failed to inhibit ABI1 phosphatase activities in the presence of ABA. Our complementary assays showed that PYL4 and PYL4S129A can significantly restore ABA insensitivity of 12458 during seed germination and seedling growth. When 4-day-old seedlings were grown on an ABA-supplemented medium, there were no significant differences in root elongation among the mutants. This may be because 1258 has significant ABA insensitivity and PYL4 is mainly expressed in seeds and stomata5. The PYL4 and PYL4S129A complementary transgenic lines almost completely restored the growth inhibitory characteristics and drought sensitivity of 12458. The phosphomimic PYL4S129D showed a comparable phenotype to 12485. These results suggest that CIPK1 phosphorylates the ABA receptor and inhibits the activities of PYLs.
High concentration of ABA inhibits the phosphorylation of PYLs by CBL1/9-CIPK1
Functionally, CBL anchors CIPK to a specific location. The CBL-CIPK complex plays an important regulatory role in plant growth, development, and responses to the external environment31,64. Both CBL1/9 and CIPK1 are involved in various processes in Arabidopsis, including potassium absorption and drought stress responses48,65. This study established that CBL1/9-CIPK1 is a negative regulator of ABA signaling, thus, the CBL1/9-CIPK1 complex may be a key node in plant responses to stress and growth. CBL1/9-CIPK1 serves as a regulatory mechanism that inhibits the occurrence of aberrant ABA signaling in plants. This is achieved through the phosphorylation of PYLs at lower concentrations of ABA or reduced levels of Ca2+ concentration.
More than 1 μM ABA concentration was shown to inhibit the growth of plant roots66. However, low ABA levels (2 nM) in aba2-1 protoplast were sufficient for activating ABA responses67. Structural studies highlight the conserved gate-latch-lock mechanism of ABA perception and signal transduction68,69,70,71,72. When the ABA receptor binds ABA, the conformational change allows the ligand to entry the gate onto the latch, allowing the receptor to dock with PP2Cs. A tryptophan conserved in the PP2C active site is in turn inserted between the gate and the latch, further locking the receptor-PP2C complex68. The capacity of PYLs to bind ABA is nearly 100-fold higher when clade A PP2C proteins are present73. Therefore, PP2Cs can be considered as co-receptors for ABA, which have an important role in the stabilization of ABA signaling and ABA-PYLs-PP2Cs complexes in plants7. The phosphorylated PYLs cannot bind to PP2C, which is detrimental to the binding of ABA and ABA signaling.
Additionally, previous study has shown that ABA could inhibit the interaction and phosphorylation of PYLs by EL1-like casein kinases to prevent the degradation of ABA receptors25. In this study, we found that ABA impaired the interactions between CIPK1 and PYLs, and phosphorylation activities of PYL4 by CIPK1 in plants decreased significantly from 9 h after 60 μM ABA treatment. Phosphorylated PYL4 failed to respond to ABA signaling and inhibited the phosphatase activities of ABI1. These results also suggested that CIPK1-mediated phosphorylation of PYLs may occur under normal conditions or in low ABA concentrations. These phosphorylated PYLs cannot activate ABA signals. When subjected to external stress, high concentrations of ABA in plants directly suppress CIPK1 phosphorylation of PYLs to ensure ABA responses and allow plants to survive the harsh environment.
Methods
Plant materials and growth conditions
The Columbia (Col-0) accession was used as the control for all experiments. The T-DNA insertion lines (cipk1-2 (SAIL_521_F05), cipk1-3 (GK230-D11), and pyr1pyl2pyl4pyl5pyl8 were obtained from the Nottingham Arabidopsis Stock Centre (NASC). The T-DNA insertion line (cbl1/9) was described previously48. The pyr1pyl2pyl4pyl5pyl8/cipk1 sextuple mutant was generated by hybridizing pyr1pyl2pyl4pyl5pyl8 with cipk1-3 while the cbl1/9/cipk1 triple mutant was generated by hybridizing cbl1/9 with cipk1-2.
To generate overexpression or complementary transgenic plants, each different CDS (coding sequence) fused FLAG/GFP tag driven by 35 S or native promoter was cloned into a pCAMBIA1300 vector. All constructs were transduced into Agrobacterium cells (GV3101), which were grown at 28 °C for 2 d, and then transformed into the wild type or related mutants. The primers used in this study are listed in Supplementary Data 1.
Arabidopsis seeds were surface sterilized for 15 min in 10% bleach, rinsed six times in sterile-deionized water, sown on 1/2 MS medium (PhytoTech) supplemented with 1% (w/v) sucrose and 0.6% (w/v) (for horizontal growth) or 1% (w/v) (for vertical growth) agar and stratified for 3 d at 4 °C. Then, the plates were transferred to a growth chamber with a long-day cycle (16 h light/8 h dark) at 22 °C. For soil cultures, the 7-day-old vertical growth seedlings were transferred to nutrient-rich soil (Pindstrup substrate, Denmark) and grown in a greenhouse under controlled conditions (22 °C, 16 h light/8 h dark, a regime with light intensity adjusted to 120 μmol m−2 s−1).
The GUS Histochemical assay
Leaves of 4-week-old transgenic plants expressing a GUS reporter gene under CIPK1 native promoter were cut off and immersed in a staining buffer at 37 °C for 12 h. The samples were washed using 70% ethanol after which epidermis images were microscopically (OLYMPUS DP80) obtained.
Physiological experiments
For the soil drought assay, nine 7-day-old seedlings were placed each in a pot with the same amount of soil and grown for another 7 d in the greenhouse. After each pot had fully absorbed the water, excess water was removed. Then, water was withheld from these plants for about 2-3 weeks, and during this period, the pot was regularly replaced to avoid the position effects. When differential drought phenotype appeared, images were obtained after which the pots were re-watered for 2-3 d and imaged again.
For the ABA-induced stomatal closure assay, the assay was performed as previously described74. In brief, the 5th or 6th rosette leaves of Arabidopsis thaliana that had been grown for about 20 d in the greenhouse were obtained, placed in MES buffer (10 mM MES-KOH, pH 6.15, 10 mM KCl, and 50 μM CaCl2) and incubated in a light incubator for 2.5 h to fully open the stomata. Then, the leaves were transferred to a MES buffer containing 10 μM ABA and incubated for 2 h. The epidermal strips were microscopically (OLYMPUS DP80) imaged. The minimum pore space between the two guard cells that make up the stomata was the stomata width. Finally, the stomatal apertures were measured using the Image J software. The data for each ecotype was collected from three repetitions, with a total of no less than 100 stomata measured.
For the water loss of detached leaves, five seedlings per pot in soil were grown in the greenhouse for 3-4 weeks, and the rosette leaves were cut and placed on a piece of weighing paper. The rosette leaves were periodically weighed for 3 h. Water loss was shown as a percentage of the original fresh weight. At least three different experiments were performed.
For infrared thermography assay, about 3-week-old seedlings grown in the greenhouse had water withheld for 6-8 days (soil moisture 70%-85%) before being imaged with the FLIR A655sc infrared camera (Teledyne FLIR). Leaf temperature was measured using FLIR ResearchIR Max professional software.
For the germination assays, seeds for each genotype were sown in 1/2 MS medium containing 3 μM ABA, and incubated in a light incubator for 3 d after which radicle emergence was analyzed.
For the growth assays, 3-4-day-old vertically cultured seedlings were transferred to 1/2 MS medium containing 20 μM ABA, and incubated in a light incubator for 10 d. The fresh weights were measured on the 10th d.
The RNA expression assay
Total RNA was extracted using the RNAsimple Total RNA Kit (DP419, TIANGEN). Then, 2 μg RNA was used for first-strand cDNA synthesis with the HiScript II Q RT SuperMix for qPCR (+gDNA wiper) (R223, vazyme). NtActin was used as the internal control. The primers used for RT-PCR are shown in Supplementary Data 1.
The bimolecular fluorescence complementation (BiFC) assay
The BiFC assay was conducted as previously described75. Briefly, Agrobacterium was resuspended in a buffer (10 mM MES, 10 mM MgCl2, pH = 5.6) and mixed to a specific concentration. The YFPn-CIPK1 and PYR1/PYLs-YFPc were transformed into N. benthamiana leaves and expressed for 4 d. Fluorescence signals were captured using a confocal laser scanning microscope (Olympus IX83-FV3000). Tobacco protoplasts BiFC assay was conducted as previously described47.
The split-luciferase complementation (LCI) assay
The LCI assay was conducted as previously described75. Briefly, the resuspension method was consistent with that of the BiFC assay. In this assay, CIPK1-nLUC and PYR1/PYLs-cLUC were transformed into Agrobacterium GV3101 and co-injected into N. benthamiana leaves. After 72 h, signals were detected by a cold charge-coupled device camera (CCD; Lumazone Pylon 2048B; Princeton).
In vitro pull-down assay
The in vitro pull-down assay was performed as previously described76. Briefly, 5 μg of purified GST-PYR1/PYLs recombination protein was incubated with GST-Sefinose (TM) Resin 4FF (Settled Resin) (BBI) at 4 °C for 2 h and incubated with 2 μg of CIPK1-His for another 2 h in a pull-down buffer, after which the beads were washed 6 times using the pull-down buffer. The proteins were separated by SDS-PAGE for the immunoblot assay using anti-His (1:5000, TransGen, HT501) antibody and anti-GST (1:5000, TransGen, HT601) antibody. The interactions between ABI1 and PYLs were also determined in pull-down assays.
For ABA inhibition of CIPK1 interaction with PYLs, 5 μg of CIPK1-His protein was incubated on Ni-NTA beads for 2 h and incubated with 2 μg of GST-PYL1 or GST-PYL4 for another 2 h in the pull-down buffer. Then the beads were washed 6 times using the pull-down buffer. The proteins were separated by SDS-PAGE for the immunoblot assay using anti-His (1:5000, TransGen, HT501) antibody and anti-GST (1:5000, TransGen, HT601) antibody.
Co-immunoprecipitation (Co-IP) assay
The Co-IP assay was performed as previously described47. The constructs were co-expressed in transgenic Arabidopsis. The CIPK1 and PYL1/PYL4 were respectively detected using anti-FLAG antibodies (1:5000, TransGen, HT201) and anti-GFP antibodies (1:5000, TransGen, HT801). For ABA inhibits the interaction between CIPK1 and PYL4 in Co-IP assays, 100 μM ABA was added to the protein extracts. Then the Co-IP assay was performed as previously described47.
Protein kinase assays
The PYR1-His, PYL1-His, PYL2-His, PYL3-His, PYL4-His, PYL5-His, PYL6-His, CIPK1-His, MBP-OST1, GST-ABI1 and GST-ABF2 recombinant protein was purified from E. coli BL21 (Rosetta). Then, the in vitro protein kinase assays were performed as previously described24,47. For CIPK1 and PYLs, in the assay, 1.5 μg CIPK1-His and ~ 2 μg PYLs-His were incubated for 30 min at 30 °C in a kinase buffer with 2 μCi [γ-32P] ATP. For in vitro recombinant core ABA signaling pathway, about 2 μg wild-type or mutated PYL4 proteins were incubated with 0.5 μg GST-ABI1 with or without 5 μM ABA in 20 μL of reaction buffer, the reactions without PYL4 were used as control. After 15 minutes incubation, 1 μg MBP-SnRK2.6 was added to the reaction and incubated for additional 15 minutes. Then, a mixture containing 1 μM ATP, 1 μCi [γ-32P] ATP, 2 μg GST-ABF2 fragment, and phosphatase inhibit cocktail 3 was add to the reaction to total volume of 25 μL. The reaction mixtures were incubated for 30 minutes at 30 °C. The proteins were separated by 12% SDS-PAGE. Autoradiography (upper panel) and Coomassie staining (lower panel) show the phosphorylation and protein loading of the PYLs, respectively. The phosphorylation signals are detected using a Typhoon 9410 imager (Bio-Rad).
For the in vivo protein kinase assay, CaMV35S: CIPK1-FLAG transgenic seedlings were grown on 1/2 MS medium for 10 days. The seedlings were transferred to plates containing 60 μM ABA and treated for different times (0, 0.5, 1, 3, 6, 9, 12, 24 h), then the proteins were extracted using IP buffer and incubated with anti-FLAG agarose (Sigma-Aldrich, #A2220) for 2 h at 4 °C. Then, samples were eluted with 40 μL 3× FLAG peptide (Sigma, #F4799) for another 2 h at 4 °C. The CIPK1-FLAG protein was incubated with PYL4-His in the kinase reaction buffer at 30 °C for 30 min. The subsequent procedures were consistent with those of the in vitro phosphorylation assay.
For the in vivo protein kinase assay, PYL4 protein was immunoprecipitated with anti-FLAG antibodies in PYL4, PYL4-FLAG/cbl1/9, and PYL4S129A plants. The PYL4 signals were detected with anti-FLAG antibodies (1:5000, TransGen, HT201), and the phosphorylation signals were analyzed by western blotting using anti-phospho-Ser antibodies (1:2000, ImmunoWay, #YM3440).
In vitro phosphatase activity assay
For PYL1 and PYL4, the Serine/Threonine Phosphatase Assay System (Promega) was used to determine the PP2C activities as previously described77. Briefly, recombinant proteins (PYL1-His, PYL1T133A-His, PYL1T133D-His, PYL4-His, PYL4S129A-His, PYL4S129D-His, and GST-ABI1) were incubated at room temperature for 15 min after which the samples were mixed with the reaction buffer (250 mM imidazole (pH7.2), 1 mM EGTA, 25 mM MgCl2, 0.1% β-mercaptoethanol, and 0.5 mg/mL BSA) and the synthetic phosphopeptide substrate (RRA[pT]VA). The mixture was incubated at 37 °C for 30 min and supplemented with 50 μL Molybdate dye/additive mixture to terminate the reaction. After incubation at room temperature for 20 min, the color was developed and the absorbance was measured at 600 nm using a BioTek microplate spectrophotometer. The amount of phosphate released from the sample was determined according to the standard curve prepared using the 0, 100, 200, 500, 1000, and 2000 pmol phosphate solution.
The yeast two-hybrid assay
For the yeast two-hybrid assay, the CDS of ABI1 was cloned into the pGADT7 vector while the CDS of PYL4 was cloned into a pGBKT7 vector. Then, they were used for site-directed mutagenesis using specific primers (Supplementary Data 1). To investigate protein interactions between ABI1 and PYL4, the plasmids were co-transformed into Saccharomyces cerevisiae AH109 cells. After 2 d of incubation on yeast SD/-Leu/-Trp at 30 °C, the SD/-Leu/-Trp liquid medium was used to culture yeasts to an optical density (OD = 1.0). To determine the intensity of protein interactions, saturated yeast cultures were diluted to 10−1, 10−2, and 10−3 after which 3 μL of each dilution was spotted onto SD/-Leu/-Trp/-His medium in the absence or presence of 10 μM ABA and cultured at 30 °C for 4 d.
Analysis of subcellular localization of PYL4
The PYL4-GFP transgenic plants were vertically grown on 1/2 MS medium. Then, 5-day-old seedlings were treated with 60 μM ABA for 1 h after which GFP fluorescence was observed using a confocal microscope (IX83-FV3000; Olympus).
Sequence alignment and conservation analysis
To obtain different PYLs of different species, we used Arabidopsis PYLs to obtain possible PYLs of 12 different species by BLAST in NCBI. A total of 122 candidate proteins whose percentage was not less than 50% were retained. Sequence alignment was performed using the Jalview software. Amino acid conservativeness analysis was performed using the MEME (https://meme-suite.org/meme/tools/meme) online tool.
Statistics and reproducibility
The Arabidopsis plants used in this study were grown in a greenhouse or incubator at 16 / 8 h (day/night) and 22 °C. To avoid bias, the relative soil water content was ensured to be consistent before the start of the drought experiments and the position of the small pots was changed regularly every day during the experiments; the stomatal apertures were counted as randomized statistics for the same ecotype with a sufficient sample size. For microscopic and physiological experiments, as least three completely independent experiments were performed. For phosphorylation assays, each experiment was repeated at least twice. No data were excluded from the study. Source data underlying the figures are provided as a Source Data file.
Reporting summary
Further information on research design is available in the Nature Portfolio Reporting Summary linked to this article.
Data availability
All data generated and analyzed in this study are available in the article and its supplementary information file. Source data are provided with this paper. Source data in this paper have been deposited in Figshare with a DOI (https://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.22736900). Source data are provided with this paper.
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Acknowledgements
We thank Dr. Xueling Huang, Dr. Hua Zhao, and Dr. Fengping Yuan (National Key Laboratory of Crop Improvement for Stress Tolerance and Production, Northwest A&F University, Yangling, China) for technique assistance. This research was funded by a grant from the National Natural Science Foundation of China (32222008 to C.W, 32100215 to PP.H).
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This research was conceived by C.W. Z. Y, SY. G, Q. L, YJ, F, PP. H, and CF. J performed the experiments. Z.Y analyzed the data. C.W and Z.Y wrote the manuscript with comments from all authors.
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You, Z., Guo, S., Li, Q. et al. The CBL1/9-CIPK1 calcium sensor negatively regulates drought stress by phosphorylating the PYLs ABA receptor. Nat Commun 14, 5886 (2023). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-023-41657-0
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-023-41657-0
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