1 / 12

Stomata – Development

Stomata – Development. Philipp Gerke PCDU-Seminar 16.12.2015. Stomata Development – Cell State Transition. MYB transcription factors: Part of the cell cycle machinery MYB88 Four lips (FLP) Counterpart of FAMA. bHLHs = basic helix-loop-helix Transcription factors

mgrimmer
Télécharger la présentation

Stomata – Development

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Stomata – Development Philipp Gerke PCDU-Seminar 16.12.2015

  2. Stomata Development – Cell State Transition MYB transcription factors: Part of the cell cycle machinery MYB88 Four lips (FLP) Counterpart of FAMA • bHLHs • = • basic helix-loop-helix • Transcription factors • SPCH, MUTE, FAMA • Are key switches • partial expressed • SCREAMs/ICEs • Maintenance for development • Consecutive expressed SLGC

  3. Stomata Patterning – One Cell Spacing Rule • SLGC are dividing away from existing stomata • Two misplaced meristemoids next to each other divides away from each other SLGC SLGC One cell spacing rule cell-cell communication via short distance signals

  4. Leucin Rich Repeat Receptor Like Kinases (LRR-RLK) • Over 200 members in Plants • Single pass trans membrane proteins • Forms functional homo- and heterodimers • Members involved in stomatal development: • ERECTA expressed in protodermal cells • ERL1 • expressed in meristemoids GMCs and young GCs • ERL2 • TMM expressed across the stomatal lineage • lacking the kinase domain Ligand binding domain Kinase domain

  5. Epidermal Patterning Factor Like (EPFL) Family • 11 members in this family • Secreted cysteine-rich peptides • ~50-90 amino acid • Characteristic intramolecular disulfid bonds • Members involved in stomatal development: • EPF1 secreted by late meristemoids and GMCs • EPF2 secreted by MMCs and early meristemoids • EPFL9 (Stomagen) secreted by mesophyll tissue obove the epidermis

  6. Receptor Ligand Interaction Treatment with Arrested meristemoids Only pavement cells EPF2/ERECTA prevents surrounding protodermal cells to perform a entry division EPF1/ERL1 promotes a the correct spacing and repress meristemoids differentiation

  7. Receptor Ligand Interaction Mesophyll tissue Stomagen has a positive influence on stomata development

  8. Signal transduction from the cell membrane to the nucleus Surrounding epidermis cells Phytohormones Photosynthetic tissue • MAPK Cascade: • Also present in yeast and animals • Activation by sequential phosphorylation • of 3 kinase modules • Deactivation of SPCH via phosphorylation HIC proteins ? Temperature CO2 MAPK Cascade is an integration point of other developing signals

  9. Asymmetric cell division and division polarity Problems … no recognizable homologs of animal or fungal polarity genes ! … the mechanical restrictions of the cell wall Plant specific polarity genes were identified BASL and POLAR

  10. Conclusion • Stomata are produced through a characteristic series of divisions controlled via the coordinated activities of transcription factors that can directly regulate core cell-cycle genes. • Correct stomatal patterning and initiation requires intercellular communication through the activity of secreted peptide ligands, receptor kinases, and MAPK signaling modules. • Environmental conditions impact the production of stomata in developing leaves via a long-distance signal initiated in mature leaves. MAPK modules may provide a common integration point among multiple environmental inputs. • Polarity localized proteins (BASL and POLAR) provide the first examples polarity factors in plants.

  11. References • Facette, Michelle R.; Smith, Laurie G. (2012): Division polarity in developing stomata. In: Current Opinion in Plant Biology 15 (6), S. 585–592. DOI: 10.1016/j.pbi.2012.09.013. • Lau, On Sun; Bergmann, Dominique C. (2012): Stomatal development: a plant's perspective on cell polarity, cell fate transitions and intercellular communication. In: Development (Cambridge, England) 139 (20), S. 3683–3692. DOI: 10.1242/dev.080523. • Pillitteri, Lynn Jo; Torii, Keiko U. (2012): Mechanisms of stomatal development. In: Annual Review of Plant Biology 63, S. 591–614. DOI: 10.1146/annurev-arplant-042811-105451. • Simmons, Abigail R.; Bergmann, Dominique C. (2015): Transcriptional control of cell fate in the stomatal lineage. In: Current Opinion in Plant Biology 29, S. 1–8. DOI: 10.1016/j.pbi.2015.09.008. • Torii, Keiko U. (2012): Mix-and-match: ligand-receptor pairs in stomatal development and beyond. In: Trends in Plant Science 17 (12), S. 711–719. DOI: 10.1016/j.tplants.2012.06.013.

More Related