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Stress-associated developmental reprogramming in moss protonemata by synthetic activation of the common symbiosis pathway.

Published version
Peer-reviewed

Type

Article

Change log

Authors

Kleist, Thomas J 
Bortolazzo, Anthony 
Keyser, Zachary P 
Perera, Adele M 
Irving, Thomas B 

Abstract

Symbioses between angiosperms and rhizobia or arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi are controlled through a conserved signaling pathway. Microbe-derived, chitin-based elicitors activate plant cell surface receptors and trigger nuclear calcium oscillations, which are decoded by a calcium/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase (CCaMK) and its target transcription factor interacting protein of DMI3 (IPD3). Genes encoding CCaMK and IPD3 have been lost in multiple non-mycorrhizal plant lineages yet retained among non-mycorrhizal mosses. Here, we demonstrated that the moss Physcomitrium is equipped with a bona fide CCaMK that can functionally complement a Medicago loss-of-function mutant. Conservation of regulatory phosphosites allowed us to generate predicted hyperactive forms of Physcomitrium CCaMK and IPD3. Overexpression of synthetically activated CCaMK or IPD3 in Physcomitrium led to abscisic acid (ABA) accumulation and ectopic development of brood cells, which are asexual propagules that facilitate escape from local abiotic stresses. We therefore propose a functional role for Physcomitrium CCaMK-IPD3 in stress-associated developmental reprogramming.

Description

Keywords

Developmental biology, Mycology, Plant biology

Journal Title

iScience

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

2589-0042
2589-0042

Volume Title

25

Publisher

Elsevier BV