| Literature DB >> 30903397 |
Michitaro Shibata1, Keiko Sugimoto2.
Abstract
Root hairs play important roles for the acquisition of nutrients, microbe interaction and plant anchorage. In addition, root hairs provide an excellent model system to study cell patterning, differentiation and growth. Arabidopsis root hairs have been thoroughly studied to understand how plants regulate cell fate and growth in response to environmental signals. Accumulating evidence suggests that a multi-layered gene regulatory network is the molecular secret to enable the flexible and adequate response to multiple signals. In this review, we describe the key transcriptional regulators controlling cell fate and/or cell growth of root hairs. We also discuss how plants integrate phytohormonal and environmental signals, such as auxin, ethylene and phosphate availability, and modulate the level of these transcriptional regulators to tune root hair development.Entities:
Keywords: Cell fate; Cell growth; Gene regulatory network; Root hair; Transcription factor
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30903397 PMCID: PMC7082380 DOI: 10.1007/s10265-019-01100-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Plant Res ISSN: 0918-9440 Impact factor: 2.629
Fig. 1Root hair development is regulated by phytohormones. Arabidopsis seedlings grown on half strength Murashige-Skoog (MS) media with or without phytohormones. Control plants are grown on half strength MS medium without phytohormones. Root hairs are patterned and formed in accordance with the developmental program. Ethylene (100 nM 1-aminocyclopropane-1-1carboxylic acid, ACC) produces ectopic root hairs from non-hair cell files and enhances root hair growth. Auxin (10 nM indole acetic acid, IAA) enhances root hair growth without affecting the cell fate. 50 µM abscisic acid (ABA) inhibits root hair growth. Scale bar = 1 mm
Fig. 2Root hair development is affected by environmental conditions. Phosphate concentration in the media affects root hair development. Scale bar = 500 µm
Fig. 3Gene regulatory network to control root hair development. Root hair development is a flexible response to developmental and environmental signals due to the gene network consisting of transcription factors. Exogenous and endogenous signals are transduced by distinct regulators. a In non-hair cells, a protein complex consisting of WER, GL3 and TTG1 induces GL2 expression. GL2 suppresses a set of transcription factors to prevent root hair formation. In addition, the WER-GL3-TTG1 complex induces CPC which moves to a hair cell. Although ZFP5 is dominantly expressed in hair cells and protein mobility is not characterized, ZFP5 is categorized in non-hair cell because ZFP5 directly regulates CPC. For the same reason, WRKY75 and AL6 are categorized in non-hair cell. b In hair cells, exogenous and endogenous signals are integrated into RSL2, RSL4 and LRL3 to change cell growth. Whether PHR1 regulates root hair growth directly or indirectly is not clear. GTL1 suppresses hair growth both directly and indirectly. Transcriptional activation and repression are indicated by arrows and blunted lines, respectively. The proteins marked in blue and red show positive and negative, respectively, regulators for root hair development. The circles containing blue and red show that they work both positively and negatively for root hair development. For two protein complexes of WER-GL3-TTG1 and CPC-GL3-TTG1, redundant proteins are not shown in the model. Note that protein mobility is not reflected in this model
Fig. 4The RSL4-GTL1 module in the gene regulatory network for root hair development. Both environmental signals and developmental signals affect RSL4 expression. Whether environmental signals affect GTL1 expression is not clear but GTL1 is induced by programed developmental signals. RSL4 promotes expression of its own, GTL1 and genes involved in root hair growth. GTL1 counteracts with RSL4 by suppressing expression of RSL4, expression of its own and its downstream targets. This RSL4-GTL1 module might function as a modulator that integrates developmental signals and environmental signals to coordinate root hair growth. Transcriptional activation and repression are indicated by arrows and blunted lines, respectively
Transcription factors involved in root hair development
| Gene name | AGI | Type | Function | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| At2g46410 | MYB | Cell fate | Wada et al. ( | |
| At5g53200 | MYB | Cell fate | Schellmann et al. ( | |
| At1g01380 | MYB | Cell fate | Simon et al. ( | |
| At5g40330 | MYB | Cell fate | Kang et al. ( | |
| At5g14750 | MYB | Cell fate | Lee and Schiefelbein ( | |
| At1g63650 | bHLH | Cell fate | Bernhardt et al. ( | |
| At5g41315 | bHLH | Cell fate | Bernhardt et al. ( | |
| At2g37260 | WRKY | Cell fate | Johnson et al. ( | |
| At1g79840 | HD-ZIP | Cell fate | Masucci et al. ( | |
| At1g10480 | C2H2 | Hormone response | An et al. ( | |
| ETHYLENE INSENSITIVE 3 (EIN3) | At3g20770 | EIL | Hormone response | Song et al. ( |
| EIN3-LIKE1 (EIL1) | At2g27050 | EIL | Hormone response | Song et al. ( |
| AUXIN REPONSE FACTORs (ARFs) | – | ARF | Hormone response | Mangano et al. ( |
| At4g28610 | MYB | Phosphate response | Bustos et al. ( | |
| At5g29000 | MYB | Phosphate response | Bustos et al. ( | |
| At2g02470 | Homeodomain protein | Phosphate response | Chandria et al. | |
| At5g13080 | WRKY | Phosphate response | Devaiah et al. ( | |
| At3g25710 | bHLH | Phosphate response | Chen et al. ( | |
| At1g66470 | bHLH | Hair growth | Masucci and Schiefelbein ( | |
| At5g37800 | bHLH | Hair growth | Menand et al. ( | |
| At4g33880 | bHLH | Hair growth | Yi et al. ( | |
| At2g14760 | bHLH | Hair growth | Bruex et al. ( | |
| At1g27740 | bHLH | Hair growth | Yi et al. ( | |
| At5g43175 | bHLH | Hair growth | Pires et al. ( | |
| At2g24260 | bHLH | Cell fate & Hair growth | Karas et al. ( | |
| At4g30980 | bHLH | Cell fate & Hair growth | Karas et al. ( | |
| At5g58010 | bHLH | Hair growth | Karas et al. ( | |
| At1g03040 | bHLH | Hair growth | Bruex et al. ( | |
| At4g02590 | bHLH | Hair growth | Bruex et al. ( | |
| At5g45420 | MYB | Hair growth | Slabaugh et al. ( | |
| At1g73360 | HD-ZIP | Hair growth | Xu et al. ( | |
| At5g60850 | Dof | Hair growth | Rymen et al. ( | |
| At1g33240 | Trihelix | Hair growth | Shibata et al. ( | |
| At1g76880 | Trihelix | Hair growth | Shibata et al. ( |