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1.
New Phytol ; 229(1): 460-468, 2021 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32696978

ABSTRACT

Roots have played a pivotal role in the conquest of land by vascular plants, yet their origin has remained enigmatic. Palaeobotanical evidence suggests that roots may have originated from subterranean shoots in some lycophyte species. If this hypothesis is correct, it would follow that the roots and shoots of extant lycophytes share fundamental developmental mechanisms. We tracked meristem dynamics in root and shoot apices of Lycopodium clavatum using a thymidine analogue and expression patterns of histone H4, respectively. Then we compared the meristem dynamics of roots and shoots to identify developmental similarities. Both apical meristems contained a quiescent tissue characterised by a low frequency of cell division. Actively dividing cells appeared in the quiescent tissue during dichotomous branching of both roots and shoots. As a result, the parental meristem divides into two daughter meristems, which give rise to new root or shoot apices. These striking similarities in meristem dynamics provide new neobotanical data that support the shoot-origin hypothesis of lycophyte roots. Although Lycopodium roots may have originated from subterranean shoots of Devonian lycophytes, these shoots may have changed into root-bearing axes in other extant lycophyte lineages.


Subject(s)
Lycopodium , Meristem , Cell Division , Plant Roots , Plant Shoots
2.
J Plant Res ; 133(3): 291-296, 2020 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32002717

ABSTRACT

The independent origin of roots in lycophytes and euphyllophytes has been proposed, mainly based on paleobotanical records. However, the question of how roots evolved within these lineages remains unresolved. Root apical meristem (RAM) organization in lycophytes would provide a clue toward understanding the early evolution of roots. Recently, we examined RAM organization in lycophytes (Lycopodiaceae, Isoetaceae, and Selaginellaceae) in terms of cell division activity and anatomy, comparing RAM among vascular plants. Lycophyte RAM exhibited four organization types (I, II, III, and apical); thus, RAM organization in extant lycophytes was more diverse than expected. Type I RAM contained a region with very low cell division frequency, reminiscent of the quiescent center (QC) in seed plant RAM. Although some euphyllophyte RAMs were structurally similar to types II and III and apical cell-type RAM, lycophyte RAM of types II and III had no QC-like area. These results support the paleobotanical predictions that roots evolved several times in lycophytes, as well as in euphyllophytes. In this review, we also introduce recent findings on RAM organization in extant lycophytes and discuss the origin of roots in vascular plants.


Subject(s)
Lycopodiaceae/growth & development , Meristem/cytology , Plant Roots/cytology , Biological Evolution , Cell Division , Lycopodiaceae/cytology
3.
Methods Mol Biol ; 2094: 91-99, 2020.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31797294

ABSTRACT

The organization of the root apical meristem (RAM) provides insights into the evolution of roots in vascular plants. The RAM of seed plants has a quiescent center (QC), in which the cells divide infrequently and function to maintain neighboring stem cells. However, the existence of a QC and the mechanisms of RAM maintenance in non-seed plants are poorly understood. We analyzed the RAM organization of lycophytes focusing on cell division activity using the EdU labeling method and showed that the RAM of Lycopodium species has a region with a very low cell division frequency, which was named the QC-like region. Here, we describe an in situ EdU labeling method for the RAM of growing roots in nature.


Subject(s)
Deoxyuridine/analogs & derivatives , Lycopodium/cytology , Meristem/cytology , Plant Roots/cytology , Staining and Labeling/methods , Cell Division/physiology , Deoxyuridine/chemistry , Deoxyuridine/metabolism , Lycopodium/metabolism , Meristem/metabolism , Microscopy, Fluorescence/instrumentation , Microscopy, Fluorescence/methods , Microscopy, Phase-Contrast/instrumentation , Microscopy, Phase-Contrast/methods , Plant Roots/metabolism , Staining and Labeling/instrumentation
4.
J Plant Res ; 132(4): 521-529, 2019 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31115708

ABSTRACT

Shoots of the aquatic eudicot family, Podostemaceae, exhibit unusual organogenesis with mixed leaf and stem identities. New shoots arise at the base of the older shoot with shoot apical meristem (SAM) identity but the entire SAM differentiates into a "leaf" as it develops in the Podostemoideae subfamily. The "leaves" are tightly arranged in a zigzag manner to form an apparent distichous shoot as a whole. Although previous studies have suggested that Podostemoideae shoots have evolved by modifying the ancestral sympodial branching system in the basal Tristichoideae subfamily, this evolutionary scenario requires elucidation at the molecular level. To confirm that the shoots arise as axillary shoots, in the present study, we examined gene expression patterns in plumular shoots of Zeylanidium tailichenoides using CUP-SHAPED COTYLEDON 3 (CUC3) and SHOOT MERISTEMLESS (STM) orthologs, which are involved in the determination of axils and meristem formation in model plants. Expression of the CUC3 ortholog was detected at the adaxial base of cotyledons and parental shoots where the new shoots are initiated, while STM ortholog was expressed at the initiation site and in the young shoot primordia throughout early shoot development. The results demonstrate that each Z. tailichenoides shoot arises as an axillary bud in a manner similar to axillary meristem formation in model plants involving CUC3 and STM genes. Considering that each of the two cotyledons produces an axillary bud that in turn continues to form its own axillary bud independently, the apparent distichous shoot in Z.tailichenoides is not a single shoot, but a composite of two sympodially branched shoots.


Subject(s)
Arabidopsis Proteins/physiology , Malpighiales/metabolism , Plant Proteins/metabolism , Plant Shoots/metabolism , Transcription Factors/physiology , Arabidopsis Proteins/genetics , Gene Expression Regulation, Plant , In Situ Hybridization , Malpighiales/growth & development , Meristem/growth & development , Meristem/metabolism , Phylogeny , Plant Proteins/genetics , Plant Proteins/physiology , Plant Shoots/growth & development , Sequence Homology , Transcription Factors/genetics
5.
New Phytol ; 215(3): 1210-1220, 2017 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28585243

ABSTRACT

Root apical meristem (RAM) organization in lycophytes could be a key to understanding the early evolution of roots, but this topic has been insufficiently explored. We examined the RAM organization of lycophytes in terms of cell division activities and anatomies, and compared RAMs among vascular plants. RAMs of 13 species of lycophytes were semi-thin-sectioned and observed under a light microscope. Furthermore, the frequency of cell division in the RAM of species was analyzed using thymidine analogs. RAMs of lycophytes exhibited four organization types: type I (Lycopodium and Diphasiastrum), II (Huperzia and Lycopodiella), III (Isoetes) and RAM with apical cell (Selaginella). The type I RAM found in Lycopodium had a region with a very low cell division frequency, reminiscent of the quiescent center (QC) in angiosperm roots. This is the first clear indication that a QC-like region is present in nonseed plants. At least four types of RAM are present in extant lycophytes, suggesting that RAM organization is more diverse than expected. Our results support the paleobotanical hypothesis that roots evolved several times in lycophytes, as well as in euphyllophytes.


Subject(s)
Extinction, Biological , Magnoliopsida/physiology , Meristem/physiology , Cell Division , Cell Proliferation , Fluorescence , Magnoliopsida/cytology , Meristem/cytology , Species Specificity , Staining and Labeling
6.
Am J Bot ; 102(6): 848-59, 2015 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26101411

ABSTRACT

PREMISE OF THE STUDY: Podostemaceae is a unique family of aquatic angiosperms that grow in swift-running water on rock surfaces in the tropics. Their plant bodies show a remarkable adaptation: the main plant body is mostly creeping or flattened, or in extreme cases foliose, functioning as an adhering and photosynthetic organ. In the subfamily Podostemoideae, the root is foliose, whereas in the subfamily Tristichoideae, the shoot is foliose. An evolutionary scenario for the foliose root has already been proposed, but that for the foliose shoot remains to be addressed. METHODS: Shoots of Indodalzellia gracilis and Dalzellia ubonensis (subfamily Tristichoideae) were observed using light microscopy and scanning electron microscopy. Gene expression patterns of orthologs of marker genes for the shoot apical meristem, i.e., SHOOT MERISTEMLESS and WUSCHEL, in D. ubonensis were analyzed. KEY RESULTS: When very young, the phyllotaxis is tristichous in both genera: a set of one dorsal and two marginal leaves forms. When the shoot branches, extra-axillary buds of two subsequent marginal leaves form as new (lateral) shoots, and the original shoot stops growing; this growth pattern is called sympodial branching. Due to zonal growth in the common zone just below the original and lateral shoot apices, flattened or foliose shoots result. The expression patterns of DuSTM and DuWUS in the shoot apices of Dalzellia were similar to those published for Terniopsis. CONCLUSIONS: The foliose shoots of Indodalzellia and Dalzellia evolved as a result of congenital fusion among several original and lateral branches, each of which grows separately in other Tristichoideae.


Subject(s)
Biological Evolution , Magnoliopsida/anatomy & histology , Magnoliopsida/growth & development , Plant Shoots/anatomy & histology , Plant Shoots/growth & development , Gene Expression Regulation, Plant , Magnoliopsida/genetics , Magnoliopsida/ultrastructure , Molecular Sequence Data , Plant Leaves/anatomy & histology , Plant Proteins/genetics , Plant Proteins/metabolism , Plant Shoots/genetics , Plant Shoots/ultrastructure , Seedlings/anatomy & histology , Sequence Homology, Amino Acid
7.
J Plant Res ; 124(5): 601-5, 2011 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21120679

ABSTRACT

Plants of the Podostemoideae, a subfamily of the unique aquatic angiosperm family Podostemaceae, which are found in rapids and waterfalls of the tropics and subtropics, have two different sizes of chloroplasts in their epidermis. These small and large chloroplasts are located separately in each epidermal cell along its upper and inner tangential walls, respectively. This is the first case of the chloroplast dimorphism in a single epidermal cell of angiosperms. While the large chloroplasts have well developed starch grains, the small chloroplasts have a normal granal ultrastructure but very few starch grains. This suggests that the small chloroplasts mainly function in CO(2) uptake for photosynthesis from torrential water.


Subject(s)
Chloroplasts/ultrastructure , Ferns/ultrastructure , Magnoliopsida/ultrastructure , Japan , Photosynthesis , Plant Epidermis/ultrastructure , Plant Leaves/ultrastructure , Plant Roots/ultrastructure
8.
J Plant Res ; 122(5): 551-8, 2009 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19533269

ABSTRACT

The developmental morphology of Terniopsis malayana, an unusual aquatic angiosperm from Thailand, was examined. A unique vegetative structure called the "ramulus" arises endogenously in the root tissue. The ramulus has an actively growing apical meristem. The ramulus branches several times to form a "ramulus complex" consisting of up to six ramuli, which are distichously arranged in almost a single plane. In a ramulus complex, the new ramulus (ramulus branch) is initiated on the adaxial side of the first (the basalmost) scale in the first ramulus, but at a site lateral to the first scale in later ramuli, suggesting that the new ramulus arises from axillary or extra-axillary buds of the immediately older ramulus. Ramulus growth is terminated in association with the loss of the apical meristem, and its axillary or extra-axillary buds begin to grow to form the next new ramulus instead. The flower occurs in place of the youngest ramulus, when reproductive. It seems likely that the Terniopsis ramulus and its scale are comparable to the shoot and leaf, and thus a ramulus complex is interpreted as a sympodially branched shoot.


Subject(s)
Biological Evolution , Body Patterning , Magnoliopsida/anatomy & histology , Magnoliopsida/embryology , Magnoliopsida/cytology , Magnoliopsida/ultrastructure , Plant Roots/anatomy & histology , Plant Roots/cytology , Plant Roots/ultrastructure
9.
Am J Bot ; 93(5): 682-92, 2006 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21642132

ABSTRACT

In the unusual aquatic Podostemaceae, the root is the leading organ of the plant body and is variously compressed and submerged as it adheres to rock surfaces in rapid water. In an anatomical comparison of the root apical meristems and root caps of 33 species that represent the major lineages of the family, the dorsiventrality of root meristems varied and was classified into four patterns: (1) The root cap is produced outward from a nearly radially symmetrical meristem. (2) The meristem and root cap are markedly dorsiventral; the outermost cells of the hood-shaped cap are acroscopic derivatives from bifacial initials on the ventral side, while the pattern on the dorsal side is similar to pattern 1. (3) Bifacial initials are on both the dorsal and ventral sides. (4) No root cap is present. An evolutionary polarity may be evident from pattern 1 to 2 and then to 3. Pattern 2 arose in the early evolution of the subfamily Podostemoideae and subsequently, pattern 3 arose in species with crustose roots, while the least specialized pattern 1 is retained in Tristichoideae and Weddellinoideae. Pattern 4 characterized by caplessness may have appeared recurrently in Tristichoideae and Podostemoideae. These evolutionary changes in the meristem preceded the specialization of external root morphologies.

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