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GDSL-domain proteins have key roles in suberin polymerization and degradation

Authors :
Robertas, Ursache
Cristovāo, De Jesus Vieira Teixeira
Valérie, Dénervaud Tendon
Kay, Gully
Damien, De Bellis
Emanuel, Schmid-Siegert
Tonni, Grube Andersen
Vinay, Shekhar
Sandra, Calderon
Sylvain, Pradervand
Christiane, Nawrath
Niko, Geldner
Joop E M, Vermeer
Source :
Nature plants. 7(3)
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Plant roots acquire nutrients and water while managing interactions with the soil microbiota. The root endodermis provides an extracellular diffusion barrier through a network of lignified cell walls called Casparian strips, supported by subsequent formation of suberin lamellae. Whereas lignification is thought to be irreversible, suberin lamellae display plasticity, which is crucial for root adaptative responses. Although suberin is a major plant polymer, fundamental aspects of its biosynthesis and turnover have remained obscure. Plants shape their root system via lateral root formation, an auxin-induced process requiring local breaking and re-sealing of endodermal lignin and suberin barriers. Here, we show that differentiated endodermal cells have a specific, auxin-mediated transcriptional response dominated by cell wall remodelling genes. We identified two sets of auxin-regulated GDSL lipases. One is required for suberin synthesis, while the other can drive suberin degradation. These enzymes have key roles in suberization, driving root suberin plasticity.

Details

ISSN :
20550278
Volume :
7
Issue :
3
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature plants
Accession number :
edsair.pmid..........f566315261b04d6f9615cb2d3c651973