Transactivation of BARNASE under the AtLTP1 promoter affects the basal pole of the embryo and shoot development of the adult plant in Arabidopsis

Célia Baroux, Robert Blanvillain, Ian R. Moore, Patrick Gallois

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    Abstract

    Genetically controlled expression of a toxin provides a tool to remove a specific structure and consequently study its role during a developmental process. The availability of many tissue-specific promoters is a good argument for the development of such a strategy in plants. We have developed a conditional system for targeted toxin expression and demonstrated its use for generating embryo phenotypes that can bring valuable information about signalling during embryogenesis. The BARNASE gene was expressed in the Arabidopsis embryo under the control of two promoters, one from the cyclin AtCYCB1 gene and one from the AtLTP1 gene (Lipid Transfer Protein 1). One-hundred percent seed abortion was obtained with the cyclin promoter. Surprisingly however, the embryos displayed a range of lethal phenotypes instead of a single arrested stage as expected from this promoter. We also show that BARNASE expression under the control of the AtLTP1 promoter affects the basal pole of the globular embryo. Together with reporter expression studies, this result suggests a role of the epidermis in controlling the development of the lower tier of the embryo. This defect was not embryo-lethal and we show that the seedlings displayed a severe shoot phenotype correlated to epidermal defects. Therefore, the epidermis does not play an active role during organogenesis in seedlings but is important for the postgermination development of a viable plant.
    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)503-515
    Number of pages12
    JournalPlant Journal
    Volume28
    Issue number5
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 2001

    Keywords

    • Arabidopsis thaliana
    • BARNASE
    • Embryo patterning
    • Epidermis
    • Transactivation system

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