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WUSCHEL-related homeobox family genes in rice control lateral root primordium size.

Tsubasa KawaiKyosuke ShibataRyosuke AkahoshiShunsaku NishiuchiHirokazu TakahashiMikio NakazonoTakaaki KojimaMisuzu Nosaka-TakahashiYutaka SatoAtsushi ToyodaNonawin Lucob-AgustinMana Kano-NakataRoel R SuraltaJonathan M NionesYinglong ChenKadambot H M SiddiqueAkira YamauchiYoshiaki Inukai
Published in: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (2022)
The development of a plastic root system is essential for stable crop production under variable environments. Rice plants have two types of lateral roots (LRs): S-type (short and thin) and L-type (long, thick, and capable of further branching). LR types are determined at the primordium stage, with a larger primordium size in L-types than S-types. Despite the importance of LR types for rice adaptability to variable water conditions, molecular mechanisms underlying the primordium size control of LRs are unknown. Here, we show that two WUSCHEL-related homeobox ( WOX ) genes have opposing roles in controlling LR primordium (LRP) size in rice. Root tip excision on seminal roots induced L-type LR formation with wider primordia formed from an early developmental stage. QHB/OsWOX5 was isolated as a causative gene of a mutant that is defective in S-type LR formation but produces more L-type LRs than wild-type (WT) plants following root tip excision. A transcriptome analysis revealed that OsWOX10 is highly up-regulated in L-type LRPs. OsWOX10 overexpression in LRPs increased the LR diameter in an expression-dependent manner. Conversely, the mutation in OsWOX10 decreased the L-type LR diameter under mild drought conditions. The qhb mutants had higher OsWOX10 expression than WT after root tip excision. A yeast one-hybrid assay revealed that the transcriptional repressive activity of QHB was lost in qhb mutants. An electrophoresis mobility shift assay revealed that OsWOX10 is a potential target of QHB. These data suggest that QHB represses LR diameter increase, repressing OsWOX10 Our findings could help improve root system plasticity under variable environments.
Keyphrases
  • wild type
  • climate change
  • genome wide
  • minimally invasive
  • oxidative stress
  • machine learning
  • dna methylation
  • big data
  • electronic health record
  • diabetic rats
  • heat shock
  • optical coherence tomography