Abstract

Root hairs play vital roles in plant growth since they enable the efficient absorption of water and nutrients from the soil. Recent advances in Arabidopsis research have provided a deeper understanding of the molecular genetic mechanisms underlying root hair differentiation. CAPRICE (CPC) and its four homologs, which belong to the CPC gene family and encode R3 MYB transcription factors, play central roles in root hair differentiation. In this study, to better understand the functional specificity and contribution of these five CPC family genes, we conducted phenotypic and expression analyses of the CPC family proteins in a cpc mutant background. As a result, ENHANCER OF TRY AND CPC1 (ETC1) and ETC3 were found to complement the hairless root phenotype of the cpc mutant, as did CPC, whereas TRIPTYCHON (TRY) and ETC2 did not rescue the cpc phenotype. Protein expression analysis revealed that GFP fluorescence was nearly undetectable in pCPC::TRY:GFP/cpc and pCPC::ETC2:GFP/cpc plants, supporting the incapability of root hair formation in these plants. Interestingly, the fluorescence intensity of the CPC:GFP fusion protein was weaker than that of ETC1:GFP and ETC3:GFP fusion proteins. These results were inconsistent with the result of the phenotypic analysis, in which the three genes promoted root hair formation to almost the same degree in the cpc mutant background. We further discuss the discrepancy between the root hair phenotypes and the expression levels of CPC family proteins.

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