In plants, sugars are the key source of energy and metabolic building blocks. The systemic transport of sugars is essential for plant growth and morphogenesis. Plants evolved intricate molecular networks to effectively distribute sugars.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFOriented cell divisions establish plant tissue and organ patterning and produce different cell types; this is particularly true of the highly organized Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) root meristem. Mutant alleles of INFLORESCENCE AND ROOT APICES RECEPTOR KINASE (IRK) exhibit excess cell divisions in the root endodermis. IRK is a transmembrane receptor kinase that localizes to the outer polar domain of these cells, suggesting that directional signal perception is necessary to repress endodermal cell division.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiological membranes play a crucial role in actively hosting, modulating and coordinating a wide range of molecular events essential for cellular function. Membranes are organized into diverse domains giving rise to dynamic molecular patchworks. However, the very definition of membrane domains has been the subject of continuous debate.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPolarity of plasma membrane proteins is essential for cell morphogenesis and control of cell division and, thus, influences organ and whole plant development. In Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) root endodermal cells, 2 transmembrane kinases, INFLORESCENCE AND ROOT APICES RECEPTOR KINASE (IRK) and KINASE ON THE INSIDE (KOIN), accumulate at opposite lateral domains. Their polarization is tightly linked to their activities regulating cell division and ground tissue patterning.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCell polarity is intimately linked to numerous biological processes, such as oriented plant cell division, particular asymmetric division, cell differentiation, cell and tissue morphogenesis, and transport of hormones and nutrients. Cell polarity is typically initiated by a polarizing cue that regulates the spatiotemporal dynamic of polarity molecules, leading to the establishment and maintenance of polar domains at the plasma membrane. Despite considerable progress in identifying key polarity regulators in plants, the molecular and cellular mechanisms underlying cell polarity formation have yet to be fully elucidated.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRoot-knot nematodes (Meloidogyne spp., RKN) are responsible for extensive crop losses worldwide. During infection, they penetrate plant roots, migrate between plant cells, and establish feeding sites, known as giant cells, near the root vasculature.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn plants, cell polarity plays key roles in coordinating developmental processes. Despite the characterization of several polarly localized plasma membrane proteins, the mechanisms connecting protein dynamics with cellular functions often remain unclear. Here, we introduce a polarized receptor, KOIN, that restricts cell divisions in the Arabidopsis root meristem.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHow protein dynamics contribute to developmental processes is a critical biological question. In this issue of Developmental Cell, Ju et al. show that subcellular localization of NORTIA in the female gametophyte is required for pollen reception.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMethods Mol Biol
January 2022
The development of multicellular organisms requires coordinated cell divisions for the production of diverse cell types and body plan elaboration and growth. There are two main types of cell divisions: proliferative or symmetric divisions, which produce more cells of a given type, and formative or asymmetric divisions, which produce cells of different types. Because plant cells are surrounded by cell walls, the orientation of plant cell divisions is particularly important in cell fate specification and tissue or organ morphology.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFGene-editing tools such as CRISPR-Cas9 have created unprecedented opportunities for genetic studies in plants and animals. We designed a course-based undergraduate research experience (CURE) to train introductory biology students in the concepts and implementation of gene-editing technology as well as develop their soft skills in data management and scientific communication. We present two versions of the course that can be implemented with twice-weekly meetings over a 5-week period.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInvasive or penetrative growth is critical for developmental and reproductive processes (e.g., pollen tube penetration of pistils) and disease progression (e.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRatiometric reporter systems enable comparisons of the abundance of a protein of interest, or "target," relative to a reference protein. Both proteins are encoded on a single transcript but are separated during translation. This arrangement bypasses the potential for discordant expression that can arise when the target and reference proteins are encoded by separate genes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDevelopment of multicellular organisms requires coordination of cell division and differentiation across tissues. In plants, directional signaling, and implicitly cell polarity, is proposed to participate in this coordination; however, mechanistic links between intercellular signaling, cell polarity, and cellular organization remain unclear. Here, we investigate the localization and function of INFLORESCENCE AND ROOT APICES RECEPTOR KINASE (IRK) in root development.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWithin living systems, striking juxtapositions in symmetry and asymmetry can be observed and the superficial appearance of symmetric organization often gives way to cellular asymmetries at higher resolution. It is frequently asymmetry and polarity that fascinate and challenge developmental biologists. In multicellular eukaryotes, cell polarity and asymmetry are essential for diverse cellular, tissue, and organismal level function and physiology and are particularly crucial for developmental processes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPlasticity in plant form is achieved through differential elaboration of developmental pre-patterns during postembryonic organ development. A new report links the output of the root clock, an oscillatory transcriptional pre-patterning mechanism, with cell-type-specific production of the plant hormone auxin, and identifies a downstream component required for elaboration of the pre-pattern.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn plants, continuous formation of lateral roots (LRs) facilitates efficient exploration of the soil environment. Roots can maximize developmental capacity in variable environmental conditions through establishment of sites competent to form LRs. This LR prepattern is established by a periodic oscillation in gene expression near the root tip.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe establishment of a pre-pattern or competence to form new organs is a key feature of the postembryonic plasticity of plant development, and the elaboration of such pre-patterns leads to remarkable heterogeneity in plant form. In root systems, many of the differences in architecture can be directly attributed to the outgrowth of lateral roots. In recent years, efforts have focused on understanding how the pattern of lateral roots is established.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDevelopment of multicellular organisms requires specification of diverse cell types. In plants, development is continuous and because plant cells are surrounded by rigid cell walls, cell division and specification of daughter cell fate must be carefully orchestrated. During embryonic and postembryonic plant development, the specification of cell types is determined both by positional cues and cell lineage.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDevelopment is often coordinated by biologically active mobile compounds that move between cells or organs. Arabidopsis mutants with defects in the BYPASS1 (BPS1) gene overproduce an active mobile compound that moves from the root to the shoot and inhibits growth. Here, we describe two related Arabidopsis genes, BPS2 and BPS3.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMulticellular organisms depend on cell-to-cell communication to coordinate both development and environmental responses across diverse cell types. Intercellular signaling is particularly critical in plants because development is primarily postembryonic and continuous over a plant's life span. Additionally, development is impacted by restrictions imposed by a sessile lifestyle and limitations on relative cell positions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: The Arabidopsis bypass1 (bps1) mutant root produces a biologically active mobile compound that induces shoot growth arrest. However it is unknown whether the root retains the capacity to synthesize the mobile compound, or if only shoots of young seedlings are sensitive. It is also unknown how this compound induces arrest of shoot growth.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPlants and animals produce modular developmental units in a periodic fashion. In plants, lateral roots form as repeating units along the root primary axis; however, the developmental mechanism regulating this process is unknown. We found that cyclic expression pulses of a reporter gene mark the position of future lateral roots by establishing prebranch sites and that prebranch site production and root bending are periodic.
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