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Coordination of apical and basal embryo development revealed by tissue-specific GNOM functions
37
Citations
52
References
2010
Year
Basal Embryo DevelopmentOrgan DevelopmentReproductive BiologyCellular PhysiologyEmbryologyPlant DevelopmentPlant CytologyMorphogenesisTissue-specific Gnom FunctionsBasic Body OrganizationEmbryonic DevelopmentCell BiologyBasal Embryo OrganizationBiologyPattern FormationDevelopmental BiologyVertebrate DevelopmentFlowering-plant EmbryogenesisCell Fate DeterminationMedicinePlant Physiology
Flowering-plant embryogenesis generates the basic body organization, including the apical and basal stem cell niches, i.e. shoot and root meristems, the major tissue layers and the cotyledon(s). gnom mutant embryos fail to initiate the root meristem at the early-globular stage and the cotyledon primordia at the late globular/transition stage. Tissue-specific GNOM expression in the gnom mutant embryo revealed that both apical and basal embryo organization depend on GNOM provascular expression and a functioning apical-basal auxin flux: GNOM provascular expression in gnom mutant background resulted in non-cell-autonomous reconstitution of apical and basal tissues which could be linked to changes in auxin responses in those tissues, stressing the importance of apical-basal auxin flow for overall embryo organization. Although reconstitution of apical-basal auxin flux in gnom results in the formation of single cotyledons (monocots), only additional GNOM epidermal expression is able to induce wild-type apical patterning. We conclude that provascular expression of GNOM is vital for both apical and basal tissue organization, and that epidermal GNOM expression is required for radial-to-bilateral symmetry transition of the embryo. We propose GNOM-dependent auxin sinks as a means to generate auxin gradients across tissues.
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