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1.
New Phytol ; 212(1): 42-50, 2016 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27441727

ABSTRACT

The regulatory effect auxin has on its own transport is critical in numerous self-organizing plant patterning processes. However, our understanding of the molecular mechanisms linking auxin signal transduction and auxin transport is still fragmentary, and important regulatory genes remain to be identified. To track a key link between auxin signaling and auxin transport in development, we established an Arabidopsis thaliana genetic background in which fundamental patterning processes in both shoot and root were essentially abolished and the expression of PIN FORMED (PIN) auxin efflux facilitators was dramatically reduced. In this background, we demonstrate that activating a steroid-inducible variant of the auxin response factor (ARF) MONOPTEROS (MP) is sufficient to restore patterning and PIN gene expression. Further, we show that MP binds to distinct promoter elements of multiple genetically defined PIN genes. Our work identifies a direct regulatory link between central, well-characterized genes involved in auxin signal transduction and auxin transport. The steroid-inducible MP system directly demonstrates the importance of this molecular link in multiple patterning events in embryos, shoots and roots, and provides novel options for interrogating the properties of self-regulated auxin-based patterning in planta.


Subject(s)
Arabidopsis Proteins/genetics , Arabidopsis/genetics , DNA-Binding Proteins/metabolism , Genes, Plant , Meristem/genetics , Organogenesis/genetics , Plant Roots/metabolism , Plant Shoots/metabolism , Transcription Factors/metabolism , Arabidopsis/metabolism , Arabidopsis Proteins/metabolism , Biological Transport , DNA-Binding Proteins/genetics , Gene Expression Regulation, Plant , Indoleacetic Acids/metabolism , Meristem/growth & development , Meristem/metabolism , Plant Roots/growth & development , Plant Shoots/growth & development , Protein Binding/genetics , Signal Transduction , Transcription Factors/genetics
2.
New Phytol ; 204(3): 556-566, 2014 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25274430

ABSTRACT

In vitro regeneration of complete organisms from diverse cell types is a spectacular property of plant cells. Despite the great importance of plant regeneration for plant breeding and biotechnology, its molecular basis is still largely unclear and many important crop plants have remained recalcitrant to regeneration. Hormone-exposure protocols to trigger the de novo formation of either roots or shoots from callus tissue demonstrate the importance of auxin and cytokinin signaling pathways, and genetic differences in these pathways may contribute to the highly divergent responsiveness of plant species to regeneration protocols. In this study, we show that signaling through MONOPTEROS (MP)/AUXIN RESPONSE FACTOR 5 is necessary for the formation of shoots from Arabidopsis calli. Most strikingly, an irrepressible variant of MP, MPΔ, is sufficient for promoting de novo shoot formation through pathways involving the genetically downstream functions of SHOOT MERISTEMLESS (STM) and CYTOKININ RESPONSE FACTOR2 (CRF2). We conclude that the MPΔ genotype can promote de novo shoot formation and can be used to probe corresponding signaling pathways.


Subject(s)
Arabidopsis Proteins/metabolism , DNA-Binding Proteins/metabolism , Gene Expression Regulation, Plant/physiology , Plant Shoots/growth & development , Transcription Factors/metabolism , Arabidopsis Proteins/genetics , DNA-Binding Proteins/genetics , Mutation , Real-Time Polymerase Chain Reaction , Reverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain Reaction , Signal Transduction , Stem Cells , Tissue Culture Techniques , Transcription Factors/genetics
3.
Front Plant Sci ; 5: 235, 2014.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24966861

ABSTRACT

Self-regulatory patterning mechanisms capable of generating biologically meaningful, yet unpredictable cellular patterns offer unique opportunities for obtaining mathematical descriptions of underlying patterning systems properties. The networks of higher-order veins in leaf primordia constitute such a self-regulatory system. During the formation of higher-order veins, vascular precursors are selected from a homogenous field of subepidermal cells in unpredictable positions to eventually connect in complex cellular networks. Auxin transport routes have been implicated in this selection process, but understanding of their role in vascular patterning has been limited by our inability to monitor early auxin transport dynamics in vivo. Here we describe a live-imaging system in emerging Arabidopsis thaliana leaves that uses a PIN1:GFP reporter to visualize auxin transport routes and an Athb8:YFP reporter as a marker for vascular commitment. Live-imaging revealed common features initiating the formation of all higher-order veins. The formation of broad PIN1 expression domains is followed by their restriction, leading to sustained, elevated PIN1 expression in incipient procambial cells files, which then express Athb8. Higher-order PIN1 expression domains (hPEDs) are initiated as freely ending domains that extend toward each other and sometimes fuse with them, creating connected domains. During the restriction and specification phase, cells in wider hPEDs are partitioned into vascular and non-vascular fates: Central cells acquire a coordinated cell axis and express elevated PIN1 levels as well as the pre-procambial marker Athb8, while edge cells downregulate PIN1 and remain isodiametric. The dynamic nature of the early selection process is underscored by the instability of early hPEDs, which can result in dramatic changes in vascular network architecture prior to Athb8 expression, which is correlated with the promotion onto vascular cell fate.

4.
Plant Signal Behav ; 7(8): 1027-30, 2012 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22827953

ABSTRACT

The molecularly well-characterized auxin signal transduction pathway involves two evolutionarily conserved families interacting through their C-terminal domains III and IV: the Auxin Response Factors (ARFs) and their repressors the Aux/IAAs, to control auxin-responsive genes, among them genes involved in auxin transport. ( 1) (,) ( 2) We have developed a new genetic tool to study ARF function. Using MONOPTEROS (MP)/ARF5, we have generated a truncated version of MP (MPΔ), ( 3) which has lost the target domains for repression by Aux/IAA proteins. Besides exploring genetic interactions between MP and Aux/IAAs, we used this construct to trace MP's role in vascular patterning, a previously characterized auxin dependent process. ( 4) (,) ( 5) Here we summarize examples of naturally occurring truncated ARFs and summarize potential applications of truncated ARFs as analytical tools.


Subject(s)
Gene Expression Regulation, Plant , Indoleacetic Acids/metabolism , Plant Proteins/genetics , Plant Proteins/metabolism , Amino Acid Sequence , Evolution, Molecular , Molecular Sequence Data , Plant Proteins/chemistry , Plant Vascular Bundle/growth & development , Plant Vascular Bundle/metabolism , Sequence Deletion
5.
New Phytol ; 194(2): 391-401, 2012 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22320407

ABSTRACT

Combinatorial interactions of AUXIN RESPONSE FACTORs (ARFs) and auxin/indole acetic acid (Aux/IAA) proteins through their common domains III and IV regulate auxin responses, but insight into the functions of individual proteins is still limited. As a new tool to explore this regulatory network, we generated a gain-of-function ARF genotype by eliminating domains III and IV from the functionally well-characterized ARF MONOPTEROS(MP)/ARF5. This truncated version of MP, termed MPΔ, conferred complementing MP activity, but also displayed a number of semi-dominant traits affecting auxin signaling and organ patterning. In MPΔ, the expression levels of many auxin-inducible genes, as well as rooting properties and vascular tissue abundance, were enhanced. Lateral organs were narrow, pointed and filled with parallel veins. This effect was epistatic over the vascular hypotrophy imposed by certain Aux/IAA mutations. Further, in MPΔ leaves, failure to turn off the procambium-selecting gene PIN1 led to the early establishment of oversized central procambial domains and very limited subsequent lateral growth of the leaf lamina. We conclude that MPΔ can selectively uncouple a single ARF from regulation by Aux/IAA proteins and can be used as a genetic tool to probe auxin pathways and explore leaf development.


Subject(s)
Arabidopsis Proteins/chemistry , Arabidopsis Proteins/metabolism , Arabidopsis/embryology , Body Patterning , DNA-Binding Proteins/chemistry , DNA-Binding Proteins/metabolism , Indoleacetic Acids/metabolism , Plant Leaves/embryology , Plant Vascular Bundle/embryology , Sequence Deletion/genetics , Transcription Factors/chemistry , Transcription Factors/metabolism , Alleles , Arabidopsis Proteins/genetics , DNA-Binding Proteins/genetics , Genetic Complementation Test , Green Fluorescent Proteins/metabolism , Models, Biological , Phenotype , Plant Leaves/anatomy & histology , Protein Structure, Tertiary , Signal Transduction , Structure-Activity Relationship , Transcription Factors/genetics , Transgenes/genetics
6.
Methods Mol Biol ; 495: 11-20, 2009.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19085150

ABSTRACT

The phytohormone auxin plays a pivotal role in plant development, regulating a myriad of processes including embryo patterning, root patterning, organ initiation, and vein patterning. Auxin is unique among the plant hormones as it is actively transported from cell to cell in a polar fashion. It has recently been discovered that polar auxin transport generates dynamic, local auxin gradients within plant tissues that appear to provide positional information in patterning processes. Visualization of apparent auxin transport patterns has largely been facilitated by the recent creation of translational fusions of GFP to members of the Arabidopsis (At)PIN family of auxin efflux associated proteins. Confocal visualization of these fusion products (PIN:GFPs) enables the tracking of apparent auxin transport patterns in a huge number of samples. This visualization method can be combined with experimental interference, such as local auxin application and inhibition of auxin transport, to deduce possible self-organizing auxin-dependent patterning mechanisms and to make them amenable to mathematical modeling.


Subject(s)
Arabidopsis/growth & development , Biological Transport/physiology , Indoleacetic Acids/metabolism , Plant Leaves/growth & development , Arabidopsis Proteins/genetics , Arabidopsis Proteins/metabolism , Gene Expression Regulation, Plant/physiology , Membrane Transport Proteins , Microscopy, Confocal
7.
Genes Dev ; 20(8): 1015-27, 2006 Apr 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16618807

ABSTRACT

The formation of the leaf vascular pattern has fascinated biologists for centuries. In the early leaf primordium, complex networks of procambial cells emerge from homogeneous subepidermal tissue. The molecular nature of the underlying positional information is unknown, but various lines of evidence implicate gradually restricted transport routes of the plant hormone auxin in defining sites of procambium formation. Here we show that a crucial member of the AtPIN family of auxin-efflux-associated proteins, AtPIN1, is expressed prior to pre-procambial and procambial cell fate markers in domains that become restricted toward sites of procambium formation. Subcellular AtPIN1 polarity indicates that auxin is directed to distinct "convergence points" in the epidermis, from where it defines the positions of major veins. Integrated polarities in all emerging veins indicate auxin drainage toward pre-existing veins, but veins display divergent polarities as they become connected at both ends. Auxin application and transport inhibition reveal that convergence point positioning and AtPIN1 expression domain dynamics are self-organizing, auxin-transport-dependent processes. We derive a model for self-regulated, reiterative patterning of all vein orders and postulate at its onset a common epidermal auxin-focusing mechanism for major-vein positioning and phyllotactic patterning.


Subject(s)
Arabidopsis/growth & development , Indoleacetic Acids/metabolism , Plant Leaves/growth & development , Arabidopsis/genetics , Arabidopsis Proteins/genetics , Arabidopsis Proteins/metabolism , Base Sequence , Biological Transport , DNA Primers , Membrane Transport Proteins/genetics , Membrane Transport Proteins/metabolism , Subcellular Fractions/metabolism
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