Dosage-Sensitive Function of RETINOBLASTOMA RELATED and Convergent Epigenetic Control Are Required during the Arabidopsis Life Cycle
Dosage-Sensitive Function of RETINOBLASTOMA RELATED and Convergent Epigenetic Control Are Required during the Arabidopsis Life Cycle
The plant life cycle alternates between two distinct multi-cellular generations, the reduced gametophytes and the dominant sporophyte. Little is known about how generation-specific cell fate, differentiation, and development are controlled by the core regulators of the cell cycle. In Arabidopsis, RETINOBLASTOMA RELATED (RBR), an evolutionarily ancient cell cycle regulator, controls cell proliferation, differentiation, and regulation of a subset of Polycomb Repressive Complex 2 (PRC2) genes and METHYLTRANSFERASE 1 (MET1) in the male and female gametophytes, as well as cell fate establishment in the male gametophyte. Here we demonstrate that RBR is also essential for cell fate determination in the female gametophyte, as revealed by loss of cell-specific marker expression in all the gametophytic cells that lack RBR. Maintenance of genome integrity also requires RBR, because diploid plants heterozygous for rbr (rbr/RBR) produce an abnormal portion of triploid offspring, likely due to gametic genome duplication. While the sporophyte of the diploid mutant plants phenocopied wild type due to the haplosufficiency of RBR, genetic analysis of tetraploid plants triplex for rbr (rbr/rbr/rbr/RBR) revealed that RBR has a dosage-dependent pleiotropic effect on sporophytic development, trichome differentiation, and regulation of PRC2 subunit genes CURLY LEAF (CLF) and VERNALIZATION 2 (VRN2), and MET1 in leaves. There were, however, no obvious cell cycle and cell proliferation defects in these plant tissues, suggesting that a single functional RBR copy in tetraploids is capable of maintaining normal cell division but is not sufficient for distinct differentiation and developmental processes. Conversely, in leaves of mutants in sporophytic PRC2 subunits, trichome differentiation was also affected and expression of RBR and MET1 was reduced, providing evidence for a RBR-PRC2-MET1 regulatory feedback loop involved in sporophyte development. Together, dosage-sensitive RBR function and its genetic interaction with PRC2 genes and MET1 must have been recruited during plant evolution to control distinct generation-specific cell fate, differentiation, and development.
PLoS Genetics, 6 (6)
ISSN:1553-7390
ISSN:1553-7404
- ETH Zurich Switzerland
- Institute of Plant Genetics and Crop Plant Research Germany
- Leibniz Association Germany
- Indian Institute of Technology Madras India
- University of Zurich Switzerland
2716 Genetics (clinical), Ploidies, Arabidopsis, Gene Dosage, Retinoblastoma, Cell Differentiation, 580 Plants (Botany), QH426-470, Epigenesis, Genetic, 1105 Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics, 10126 Department of Plant and Microbial Biology, 1311 Genetics, Mutation, 1312 Molecular Biology, Genetics, 1306 Cancer Research, Cell Lineage, 10211 Zurich-Basel Plant Science Center, Germ Cells, Plant, Genome, Plant, Research Article
2716 Genetics (clinical), Ploidies, Arabidopsis, Gene Dosage, Retinoblastoma, Cell Differentiation, 580 Plants (Botany), QH426-470, Epigenesis, Genetic, 1105 Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics, 10126 Department of Plant and Microbial Biology, 1311 Genetics, Mutation, 1312 Molecular Biology, Genetics, 1306 Cancer Research, Cell Lineage, 10211 Zurich-Basel Plant Science Center, Germ Cells, Plant, Genome, Plant, Research Article
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