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1.
New Phytol ; 209(2): 705-20, 2016 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26358624

ABSTRACT

The phytohormones cytokinin and auxin orchestrate the root meristem development in angiosperms by determining embryonic bipolarity. Ferns, having the most basal euphyllophyte root, form neither bipolar embryos nor permanent embryonic primary roots but rather an adventitious root system. This raises the questions of how auxin and cytokinin govern fern root system architecture and whether this can tell us something about the origin of that root. Using Azolla filiculoides, we characterized the influence of IAA and zeatin on adventitious fern root meristems and vasculature by Nomarski microscopy. Simultaneously, RNAseq analyses, yielding 36,091 contigs, were used to uncover how the phytohormones affect root tip gene expression. We show that auxin restricts Azolla root meristem development, while cytokinin promotes it; it is the opposite effect of what is observed in Arabidopsis. Global gene expression profiling uncovered 145 genes significantly regulated by cytokinin or auxin, including cell wall modulators, cell division regulators and lateral root formation coordinators. Our data illuminate both evolution and development of fern roots. Promotion of meristem size through cytokinin supports the idea that root meristems of euphyllophytes evolved from shoot meristems. The foundation of these roots was laid in a postembryonically branching shoot system.


Subject(s)
Cytokinins/metabolism , Meristem/metabolism , Plant Roots/metabolism , Polypodiaceae/cytology , Polypodiaceae/metabolism , Cell Wall/metabolism , Cytokinins/pharmacology , Gene Expression Regulation, Plant/drug effects , Indoleacetic Acids/metabolism , Indoleacetic Acids/pharmacology , Plant Proteins/genetics , Plant Proteins/metabolism , Plant Roots/cytology , Plant Roots/drug effects , Plant Shoots/growth & development , Polypodiaceae/drug effects , Polypodiaceae/genetics , Xylem/growth & development , Xylem/metabolism , Zeatin/metabolism
2.
Genome Biol Evol ; 7(9): 2602-7, 2015 Aug 29.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26319575

ABSTRACT

Eukaryotic organelles depend on nuclear genes to perpetuate their biochemical integrity. This is true for mitochondria in all eukaryotes and plastids in plants and algae. Then how do kleptoplasts, plastids that are sequestered by some sacoglossan sea slugs, survive in the animals' digestive gland cells in the absence of the algal nucleus encoding the vast majority of organellar proteins? For almost two decades, lateral gene transfer (LGT) from algae to slugs appeared to offer a solution, but RNA-seq analysis, later supported by genome sequencing of slug DNA, failed to find any evidence for such LGT events. Yet, isolated reports continue to be published and are readily discussed by the popular press and social media, making the data on LGT and its support for kleptoplast longevity appear controversial. However, when we take a sober look at the methods used, we realize that caution is warranted in how the results are interpreted. There is no evidence that the evolution of kleptoplasty in sea slugs involves LGT events. Based on what we know about photosystem maintenance in embryophyte plastids, we assume kleptoplasts depend on nuclear genes. However, studies have shown that some isolated algal plastids are, by nature, more robust than those of land plants. The evolution of kleptoplasty in green sea slugs involves many promising and unexplored phenomena, but there is no evidence that any of these require the expression of slug genes of algal origin.


Subject(s)
Evolution, Molecular , Gastropoda/genetics , Plastids/genetics , Animals , Gene Transfer, Horizontal , Photosynthesis/genetics
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