Tissue Specificity and Evolution of Meristematic WOX3 Function
Autor: | Patrick S. Schnable, Jiabing Ji, Kazuhiro Ohtsu, Michael J. Scanlon, Eric Kelsey, Rena Shimizu |
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Rok vydání: | 2008 |
Předmět: |
DNA
Plant Physiology Meristem Molecular Sequence Data Mutant Arabidopsis Plant Science Evolution Molecular Transcription (biology) Ribose-Phosphate Pyrophosphokinase Genetics Promoter Regions Genetic Gene Homeodomain Proteins biology Arabidopsis Proteins fungi food and beverages Promoter biology.organism_classification Mutation Subfunctionalization Homeobox Transcription Factors Research Article |
Zdroj: | Plant Physiology. 149:841-850 |
ISSN: | 1532-2548 |
Popis: | The WUSCHEL-related homeobox (WOX) gene PRESSED FLOWER1 (PRS1) performs a conserved function during lateral organ development in Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana). Expressed in the periphery of the shoot meristem, PRS1 recruits founder cells that form lateral domains of vegetative and floral organs. Null mutations in PRS1 cause the deletion of lateral stipules from leaves and of lateral sepals and stamens from flowers. Although PRS1 expression is described in the L1 layer, PRS1 recruits founder cells from all meristem layers. The mechanism of non-cell autonomous PRS1 function and the evolution of disparate WOX gene functions are investigated herein. Meristem layer-specific promoters reveal that both L1 and L1-L2 expression of PRS1 fail to fully rescue PRS1 function, and PRS1 protein does not traffic laterally or transversely between shoot meristem layers. PRS1 protein accumulates within all meristematic cell layers (L1-L2-L3) when expressed from the native promoter, presumably due to low-level transcription in the L2 and L3 layers. When driven from the PRS1 promoter, full rescue of vegetative and floral prs1 mutant phenotypes is provided by WUSCHEL1 (WUS1), which is normally expressed in the stem cell organizing center of shoot meristems. The data reveal that WUS1 and PRS1 can engage in equivalent protein-protein interactions and direct transcription of conserved target genes, suggesting that their subfunctionalization has evolved primarily via diverse promoter specificity. Unexpectedly, these results also suggest that meristematic stem cells and lateral organ founder cells are intrinsically similar and formed via equivalent processes such that their ultimate fate is dependent upon stage-specific and domain-specific positional signaling. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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