| Literature DB >> 30626969 |
Shunsuke Miyashima1,2, Pawel Roszak1,3, Iris Sevilem1, Koichi Toyokura3,4, Bernhard Blob3, Jung-Ok Heo1,3, Nathan Mellor5, Hanna Help-Rinta-Rahko1, Sofia Otero3, Wouter Smet6,7,8, Mark Boekschoten9, Guido Hooiveld9, Kayo Hashimoto2,10, Ondřej Smetana1, Riccardo Siligato1, Eva-Sophie Wallner11, Ari Pekka Mähönen1, Yuki Kondo12, Charles W Melnyk3,13, Thomas Greb11, Keiji Nakajima2, Rosangela Sozzani14, Anthony Bishopp5, Bert De Rybel15,16,17, Ykä Helariutta18,19.
Abstract
Apical growth in plants initiates upon seed germination, whereas radial growth is primed only during early ontogenesis in procambium cells and activated later by the vascular cambium1. Although it is not known how radial growth is organized and regulated in plants, this system resembles the developmental competence observed in some animal systems, in which pre-existing patterns of developmental potential are established early on2,3. Here we show that in Arabidopsis the initiation of radial growth occurs around early protophloem-sieve-element cell files of the root procambial tissue. In this domain, cytokinin signalling promotes the expression of a pair of mobile transcription factors-PHLOEM EARLY DOF 1 (PEAR1) and PHLOEM EARLY DOF 2 (PEAR2)-and their four homologues (DOF6, TMO6, OBP2 and HCA2), which we collectively name PEAR proteins. The PEAR proteins form a short-range concentration gradient that peaks at protophloem sieve elements, and activates gene expression that promotes radial growth. The expression and function of PEAR proteins are antagonized by the HD-ZIP III proteins, well-known polarity transcription factors4-the expression of which is concentrated in the more-internal domain of radially non-dividing procambial cells by the function of auxin, and mobile miR165 and miR166 microRNAs. The PEAR proteins locally promote transcription of their inhibitory HD-ZIP III genes, and thereby establish a negative-feedback loop that forms a robust boundary that demarks the zone of cell division. Taken together, our data establish that during root procambial development there exists a network in which a module that links PEAR and HD-ZIP III transcription factors integrates spatial information of the hormonal domains and miRNA gradients to provide adjacent zones of dividing and more-quiescent cells, which forms a foundation for further radial growth.Entities:
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Year: 2019 PMID: 30626969 DOI: 10.1038/s41586-018-0839-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nature ISSN: 0028-0836 Impact factor: 49.962