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Cited 18 time in webofscience Cited 17 time in scopus
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A non-cell-autonomous mechanism for the control of plant architecture and epidermal differentiation involves intercellular trafficking of BREVIPEDICELLUS protein

Authors
Rim, YeonggilJung, Jin-HeeChu, HyosubCho, Won KyongKim, Seon-WonHong, Jong ChanJackson, DavidDatla, RajuKim, Jae-Yean
Issue Date
Mar-2009
Publisher
Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organization Publishing
Keywords
BREVIPEDICELLUS; KNAT1; KNOTTED1; KNOX; plasmodesmata; protein trafficking
Citation
Functional Plant Biology, v.36, no.3, pp 280 - 289
Pages
10
Indexed
SCIE
SCOPUS
Journal Title
Functional Plant Biology
Volume
36
Number
3
Start Page
280
End Page
289
URI
https://scholarworks.gnu.ac.kr/handle/sw.gnu/27155
DOI
10.1071/FP08243
ISSN
1445-4408
1445-4416
Abstract
Intercellular trafficking of maize KNOTTED1 and its homologous KNOTTED1-related homeobox (KNOX) proteins has been reported; however, little is known about the functional significance of KNOX trafficking in plant development. In this study, we showed that intercellular movement of BREVIPEDICELLUS (BP or KNAT1), the closest Arabidopsis homologue of KNOTTED1, is tissue-specific and takes place through a selective pathway. When BP was fused to a red fluorescent mCherry construct, it could move from the mesophyll to epidermal cells of leaves, although it could not move out from the cortex/endodermis of roots. Using a trichome rescue-trafficking assay, we also showed that BP fusion could confer gain-of-trafficking function to the cell-autonomous GLABROUS1 (GL1) protein. In the wild type, BP transcripts are expressed in the sub-epidermal cortical cell layers of the in florescence stem and pedicel. However, bp mutant phenotypes include defects in epidermal cell differentiation suggesting a non-cell-autonomous function. Expression of a GFP: BP fusion under the control of a BP promoter specific to the stem cortex layers resulted in epidermal GFP fluorescence suggesting its movement from subepidermis to epidermis. Here, we provide evidence from complementation analyses using cell autonomous or non-cell-autonomous BP fusions that the intercellular trafficking of BP protein is important for plant architecture and epidermal differentiation.
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