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The RWP-RK Factor GROUNDED Promotes Embryonic Polarity by Facilitating YODA MAP Kinase Signaling

Authors :
Travis M. Palmer
Sangho Jeong
Wolfgang Lukowitz
Source :
Current Biology. 21:1268-1276
Publication Year :
2011
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2011.

Abstract

Summary Background The division of plant zygotes is typically asymmetric, generating daughter cells with different developmental fates. In Arabidopsis , the apical daughter cell produces the proembryo, whereas the basal daughter cell forms the mostly extraembryonic suspensor. Establishment of apical and basal fates is known to depend on the YODA ( YDA ) mitogen-associated protein (MAP) kinase cascade and WUSCHEL-LIKE HOMEOBOX ( WOX ) homeodomain transcription factors. Results Mutations in GROUNDED ( GRD ) cause anatomical defects implying a partial loss of developmental asymmetry in the first division. Subsequently, suspensor-specific WOX8 expression disappears while proembryo-specific ZLL expression expands in the mutants, revealing that basal fates are confounded. GRD encodes a small nuclear protein of the RWP-RK family and is broadly transcribed in the early embryo. Loss of GRD eliminates the dominant effects of hyperactive YDA variants, indicating that GRD is required for YDA-dependent signaling in the embryo. However, GRD function is not regulated via direct phosphorylation by MAP kinases, and forced expression of GRD does not suppress the effect of yda mutations. In a strong synthetic interaction, grd;wox8;wox9 triple mutants arrest as zygotes or one-cell embryos lacking apparent polarity. Conclusions The predicted transcription factor GRD acts cooperatively with WOX homeodomain proteins to establish embryonic polarity in the first division. Like YDA , GRD promotes zygote elongation and basal cell fates. GRD function is required for YDA-dependent signaling but apparently not regulated by the YDA MAP kinase cascade. Similarity of GRD to Chlamydomonas MID suggests a conserved role for small RWP-RK proteins in regulating the transcriptional programs of generative cells and the zygote.

Details

ISSN :
09609822
Volume :
21
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Current Biology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....f57bfeba38446a0a732bda6f55212950
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cub.2011.06.049