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Conserved signalling components coordinate epidermal patterning and cuticle deposition in barley. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Plants develop a lipid-rich cuticle for protection against terrestrial threats, while stomata allow for gas exchange.
  • Researchers studied two genetic loci in barley linked to wax deficiency and misarranged stomata, identifying key genes responsible for these features.
  • The genes Cer-g/HvYDA1 and Cer-s/HvBRX-Solo play a crucial role in maintaining cuticular integrity, spacing of epidermal cells, and stomatal patterning, suggesting a coordinated system for adapting to environmental challenges.

Article Abstract

Faced with terrestrial threats, land plants seal their aerial surfaces with a lipid-rich cuticle. To breathe, plants interrupt their cuticles with adjustable epidermal pores, called stomata, that regulate gas exchange, and develop other specialised epidermal cells such as defensive hairs. Mechanisms coordinating epidermal features remain poorly understood. Addressing this, we studied two loci whose allelic variation causes both cuticular wax-deficiency and misarranged stomata in barley, identifying the underlying genes, Cer-g/ HvYDA1, encoding a YODA-like (YDA) MAPKKK, and Cer-s/ HvBRX-Solo, encoding a single BREVIS-RADIX (BRX) domain protein. Both genes control cuticular integrity, the spacing and identity of epidermal cells, and barley's distinctive epicuticular wax blooms, as well as stomatal patterning in elevated CO conditions. Genetic analyses revealed epistatic and modifying relationships between HvYDA1 and HvBRX-Solo, intimating that their products participate in interacting pathway(s) linking epidermal patterning with cuticular properties in barley. This may represent a mechanism for coordinating multiple adaptive features of the land plant epidermis in a cultivated cereal.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9561702PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41467-022-33300-1DOI Listing

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