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Plant-on-Chip: core morphogenesis processes in the tiny plant Wolffia australiana

Authors :
Feng Li
Jing-Jing Yang
Zong-Yi Sun
Lei Wang
Le-Yao Qi
Sina A
Yi-Qun Liu
Hong-Mei Zhang
Lei-Fan Dang
Shu-Jing Wang
Chun-Xiong Luo
Wei-Feng Nian
Seth O’Conner
Long-Zhen Ju
Wei-Peng Quan
Xiao-Kang Li
Chao Wang
De-Peng Wang
Han-Li You
Zhu-Kuan Cheng
Jia Yan
Fu-Chou Tang
De-Chang Yang
Chu-Wei Xia
Ge Gao
Yan Wang
Bao-Cai Zhang
Yi-Hua Zhou
Xing Guo
Sun-Huan Xiang
Huan Liu
Tian-Bo Peng
Xiao-Dong Su
Yong Chen
Qi Ouyang
Dong-Hui Wang
Da-Ming Zhang
Zhi-Hong Xu
Hong-Wei Hou
Shu-Nong Bai
Ling Li
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2022.

Abstract

A plant can be thought of as a colony comprising numerous growth buds, each developing to its own rhythm. Such lack of synchrony impedes efforts to describe core principles of plant morphogenesis, dissect the underlying mechanisms, and identify regulators. Here, we use the tiniest known angiosperm to overcome this challenge and provide an ideal model system for plant morphogenesis. We present a detailed morphological description of the monocot Wolffia australiana, as well as high-quality genome information. Further, we developed the Plant-on-Chip culture system and demonstrate the application of advanced technologies such as snRNA-seq, protein structure prediction, and gene editing. We provide proof-of-concept examples that illustrate how W. australiana can open a new horizon for deciphering the core regulatory mechanisms of plant morphogenesis.SignificanceWhat is the core morphogenetic process in angiosperms, a plant like a tree indeterminately growing, or a bud sequentially generating limited types of organs? Wolffia australiana, one of the smallest angiosperms in the world may help to make a distinction. Wolffia plantlet constitutes of only three organs that are indispensable to complete life cycle: one leaf, one stamen and one gynoecium. Before the growth tip is induced to flower, it keeps branching from the leaf axil and the branches separate from the main plantlet. Here we present a high-quality genome of W. australiana, detailed morphological description, a Plant-on-Chip cultural system, and some principle-proof experiments, demonstrating that W. australiana is a promising model system for deciphering core developmental program in angiosperms.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....2e4ab73935fa1776101534d97d7e4bf8
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1101/2022.04.16.488569