Abstract

DEFECTIVE KERNEL1 (DEK1) of higher plants plays an essential role in position-dependent signaling and consists of a large transmembrane domain (MEM) linked to a protease catalytic domain and a regulatory domain. Here, we show that the postulated sensory Loop of the MEM domain plays an important role in the developmental regulation of DEK1 activity in the moss Physcomitrella patens. Compared with P. patens lacking DEK1 (∆dek1), the dek1∆loop mutant correctly positions the division plane in the bud apical cell. In contrast with an early developmental arrest of ∆dek1 buds, dek1∆loop develops aberrant gametophores lacking expanded phyllids resulting from misregulation of mitotic activity. In contrast with the highly conserved sequence of the protease catalytic domain, the Loop is highly variable in land plants. Functionally, the sequence from Marchantia polymorpha fully complements the dek1∆loop phenotype, whereas sequences from maize (Zea mays) and Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) give phenotypes with retarded growth and affected phyllid development. Bioinformatic analysis identifies MEM as a member of the Major Facilitator Superfamily, membrane transporters reacting to stimuli from the external environment. Transcriptome analysis comparing wild-type and ∆dek1 tissues identifies an effect on two groups of transcripts connected to dek1 mutant phenotypes: transcripts related to cell wall remodeling and regulation of the AINTEGUMENTA, PLETHORA, and BABY BOOM2 (APB2) and APB3 transcription factors known to regulate bud initiation. Finally, sequence data support the hypothesis that the advanced charophyte algae that evolved into ancestral land plants lost cytosolic calpains, retaining DEK1 as the sole calpain in the evolving land plant lineage.

Highlights

  • DEFECTIVE KERNEL1 (DEK1) of higher plants plays an essential role in position-dependent signaling and consists of a large transmembrane domain (MEM) linked to a protease catalytic domain and a regulatory domain

  • Confirmation of CysPc-C2L as the effector molecule came from the observation that the dek1 mutant phenotypes of Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) and Physcomitrella patens can be fully complemented by expression of the CysPc-C2L domain alone (Johnson et al, 2008; Perroud et al, 2014) if certain conditions are met

  • We believe that the function of MSF proteins give important hints as to how DEK1 may function in positional signaling to be explored in future experiments

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Summary

Introduction

DEFECTIVE KERNEL1 (DEK1) of higher plants plays an essential role in position-dependent signaling and consists of a large transmembrane domain (MEM) linked to a protease catalytic domain and a regulatory domain. In the P. patens Ddek mutant complemented with the CysPc-C2L driven by the native DEK1 promoter or with full-length DEK1 complementary DNA (cDNA) driven by the 2x35S promoter, phenotypes ranging from wild type-like to stunted plants develop (Perroud et al, 2014) These observations all point to an important role for MEM and Arm in the proper regulation of CysPc-C2L activity during plant development. After the correct zygote division, subsequent cell divisions fail to occur in the oriented manner specified in wild-type embryos and the protoderm (the outermost cell layer of the globular embryo) fails to develop (Johnson et al, 2005; Lid et al, 2005) We interpret these data to suggest that the basic function of DEK1 in cell division plane orientation is conserved between mosses, one of the earliest diverging lineages of land plants, and angiosperms

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