| Literature DB >> 30115738 |
Rahul Bhosale1,2,3,4, Veronique Boudolf1,2, Fabiola Cuevas1,2, Ran Lu1,2, Thomas Eekhout1,2, Zhubing Hu1,2,5, Gert Van Isterdael1,2,6, Georgina M Lambert7, Fan Xu8, Moritz K Nowack1,2, Richard S Smith9, Ilse Vercauteren1,2, Riet De Rycke1,2,10, Veronique Storme1,2, Tom Beeckman1,2, John C Larkin11, Anna Kremer4,10, Herman Höfte8, David W Galbraith7,12, Robert P Kumpf1,2, Steven Maere13,2,3, Lieven De Veylder13,2.
Abstract
Somatic polyploidy caused by endoreplication is observed in arthropods, molluscs, and vertebrates but is especially prominent in higher plants, where it has been postulated to be essential for cell growth and fate maintenance. However, a comprehensive understanding of the physiological significance of plant endopolyploidy has remained elusive. Here, we modeled and experimentally verified a high-resolution DNA endoploidy map of the developing Arabidopsis thaliana root, revealing a remarkable spatiotemporal control of DNA endoploidy levels across tissues. Fitting of a simplified model to publicly available data sets profiling root gene expression under various environmental stress conditions suggested that this root endoploidy patterning may be stress-responsive. Furthermore, cellular and transcriptomic analyses revealed that inhibition of endoreplication onset alters the nuclear-to-cellular volume ratio and the expression of cell wall-modifying genes, in correlation with the appearance of cell structural changes. Our data indicate that endopolyploidy might serve to coordinate cell expansion with structural stability and that spatiotemporal endoreplication pattern changes may buffer for stress conditions, which may explain the widespread occurrence of the endocycle in plant species growing in extreme or variable environments.Entities:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 30115738 PMCID: PMC6241279 DOI: 10.1105/tpc.17.00983
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Plant Cell ISSN: 1040-4651 Impact factor: 11.277