Expanded roles and divergent regulation of FAMA in Brachypodium and Arabidopsis stomatal development

Author:

McKown Katelyn H1ORCID,Anleu Gil M Ximena2ORCID,Mair Andrea23ORCID,Xu Shou-Ling4ORCID,Raissig Michael T2ORCID,Bergmann Dominique C23ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Genetics, Stanford School of Medicine , Stanford, California 94305 , USA

2. Biology Department, Stanford University , 371 Jane Stanford Way, Stanford, California 94305 , USA

3. Howard Hughes Medical Institute, Stanford University , 371 Jane Stanford Way, Stanford, California 94305 , USA

4. Department of Plant Biology, Carnegie Institution for Science , 260 Panama St., Stanford, California 94305 , USA

Abstract

AbstractStomata, cellular valves found on the surfaces of aerial plant tissues, present a paradigm for studying cell fate and patterning in plants. A highly conserved core set of related basic helix-loop-helix (bHLH) transcription factors regulates stomatal development across diverse species. We characterized BdFAMA in the temperate grass Brachypodium distachyon and found this late-acting transcription factor was necessary and sufficient for specifying stomatal guard cell fate, and unexpectedly, could also induce the recruitment of subsidiary cells in the absence of its paralogue, BdMUTE. The overlap in function is paralleled by an overlap in expression pattern and by unique regulatory relationships between BdMUTE and BdFAMA. To better appreciate the relationships among the Brachypodium stomatal bHLHs, we used in vivo proteomics in developing leaves and found evidence for multiple shared interaction partners. We reexamined the roles of these genes in Arabidopsis thaliana by testing genetic sufficiency within and across species, and found that while BdFAMA and AtFAMA can rescue stomatal production in Arabidopsis fama and mute mutants, only AtFAMA can specify Brassica-specific myrosin idioblasts. Taken together, our findings refine the current models of stomatal bHLH function and regulatory feedback among paralogues within grasses as well as across the monocot/dicot divide.

Funder

NIHGRI

Stanford University School of Medicine

Swiss National Science Foundation

Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation via Life Science Research Foundation

Carnegie Endowment Fund

HHMI

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Cell Biology,Plant Science

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