SHORT ROOT and INDETERMINATE DOMAIN family members govern PIN-FORMED expression to regulate minor vein differentiation in rice.
Qiming LiuShouzhen TengChen DengSuting WuHaoshu LiYanwei WangJinxia WuXuean CuiZhiguo ZhangWilliam Paul QuickThomas P BrutnellXuehui SunTiegang LuPublished in: The Plant cell (2023)
C3 and C4 grasses directly and indirectly provide the vast majority of calories to the human diet, yet our understanding of the molecular mechanisms driving photosynthetic productivity in grasses is largely unexplored. Ground meristem cells divide to form mesophyll or vascular initial cells early in leaf development in C3 and C4 grasses. Here we define a genetic circuit composed of SHR (SHORT ROOT), IDD (INDETERMINATE DOMAIN), and PIN (PIN-FORMED) family members that specifies vascular identify and ground cell proliferation in leaves of both C3 and C4 grasses. Ectopic expression and loss-of-function mutant studies of SHR paralogs in the C3 plant Oryza sativa (rice) and the C4 plant Setaria viridis (green millet) revealed the roles of these genes in both minor vein formation and ground cell differentiation. Genetic and in vitro studies further suggested that SHR regulates this process through its interactions with IDD12 and 13. We also revealed direct interactions of these IDD proteins with a putative regulatory element within the auxin transporter gene PIN5c. Collectively, these findings indicate that a SHR-IDD regulatory circuit mediates auxin transport by negatively regulating PIN expression to modulate minor vein patterning in the grasses.
Keyphrases
- poor prognosis
- induced apoptosis
- genome wide
- cell proliferation
- single cell
- binding protein
- endothelial cells
- copy number
- transcription factor
- physical activity
- dna methylation
- long non coding rna
- gene expression
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- climate change
- oxidative stress
- cell cycle
- case control
- induced pluripotent stem cells