MtWOX2 and MtWOX9-1 Effects on the Embryogenic Callus Transcriptome in Medicago truncatula .
Elizaveta Y KrasnoperovaVarvara E TvorogovaKirill V SmirnovElena P EfremovaElina A PotsenkovskaiaAnastasia M ArtemiukZakhar S KonstantinovVeronika Y SimonovaAnna V BrynchikovaDaria V YakovlevaDaria B PavlovaLudmila A LutovaPublished in: Plants (Basel, Switzerland) (2023)
WOX family transcription factors are well-known regulators of plant development, controlling cell proliferation and differentiation in diverse organs and tissues. Several WOX genes have been shown to participate in regeneration processes which take place in plant cell cultures in vitro, but the effects of most of them on tissue culture development have not been discovered yet. In this study, we evaluated the effects of MtWOX2 gene overexpression on the embryogenic callus development and transcriptomic state in Medicago truncatula . According to our results, overexpression of MtWOX2 leads to an increase in callus weight. Furthermore, transcriptomic changes in MtWOX2 overexpressing calli are, to a large extent, opposite to the changes caused by overexpression of MtWOX9-1 , a somatic embryogenesis stimulator. These results add new information about the mechanisms of interaction between different WOX genes and can be useful for the search of new regeneration regulators.