Login / Signup

Specification of basal region identity after asymmetric zygotic division requires mitogen-activated protein kinase 6 in rice.

Kiyoe IshimotoShino SohonahraMitsuko Kishi-KaboshiJun-Ichi ItohKen-Ichiro HibaraYutaka SatoTsuneaki WatanabeKiyomi AbeAkio MiyaoMisuzu Nosaka-TakahashiTakamasa SuzukiNhung Kim TaSae Shimizu-SatoTakamasa SuzukiAtsushi ToyodaHirokazu TakahashiMikio NakazonoYasuo NagatoHirohiko HirochikaYutaka Sato
Published in: Development (Cambridge, England) (2019)
Asymmetric cell division is a key step in cellular differentiation in multicellular organisms. In plants, asymmetric zygotic division produces the apical and basal cells. The mitogen-activated protein kinase (MPK) cascade in Arabidopsis acts in asymmetric divisions such as zygotic division and stomatal development, but whether the effect on cellular differentiation of this cascade is direct or indirect following asymmetric division is not clear. Here, we report the analysis of a rice mutant, globular embryo 4 (gle4). In two- and four-cell-stage embryos, asymmetric zygotic division and subsequent cell division patterns were indistinguishable between the wild type and gle4 mutants. However, marker gene expression and transcriptome analyses showed that specification of the basal region was compromised in gle4 We found that GLE4 encodes MPK6 and that GLE4/MPK6 is essential in cellular differentiation rather than in asymmetric zygotic division. Our findings provide a new insight into the role of MPK in plant development. We propose that the regulation of asymmetric zygotic division is separate from the regulation of cellular differentiation that leads to apical-basal polarity.
Keyphrases
  • gene expression
  • single cell
  • wild type
  • solid state
  • cell therapy
  • stem cells
  • dna methylation
  • mesenchymal stem cells
  • transcription factor