Project description:In multicellular systems changes to the patterning of gene expression drive modifications in cell function and trait evolution. One striking example is found in more than sixty plant lineages where compartmentation of photosynthesis between cell types allowed evolution of the efficient C4 pathway from the ancestral C3 state. The molecular events enabling this transition are unclear. We used single nuclei sequencing to generate a cell level expression atlas for C3 rice and C4 sorghum during photomorphogenesis. In both species a conserved cistrome was identified for each cell type and initiation of photosynthesis gene expression was conditioned by cell identity. Photosynthesis genes switching expression from mesophyll in rice to bundle sheath in sorghum acquire hallmarks of bundle sheath identity. The sorghum bundle sheath has also acquired gene networks associated with C3 guard cells. We conclude C4 photosynthesis is based on rewiring in cis that exapts cell identity networks of C3 plants.
2023-12-05 | GSE248919 | GEO
Project description:RNA-SEQ of rice bundle sheath strand and mesophyll cells
Project description:Zea mays is a C4 plant that utilizes two distinct cell types, mesophyll (M) and bundle sheath (BS), to cooperatively fix carbon. Regulation of M and BS cell differentiation is poorly understood. Here, we explore the transcriptional networks of M and BS cells by microarray analysis. The maize mutant bundle sheath defective2 lacks the accumulation of Rubisco small and large subunits (Roth et al 1996; Brutnell et al 1999) and cannot perform the Calvin Cycle (Smith et al 1998). Therefore, this mutant provides an opportunity to study M and BS cell differentiation in a perturbed BS background, potentially revealing regulons important to cell identity. M and BS cells were independently isolated from mutant and wild-type siblings. Transcriptional profiling was then performed in a cell specific manner between mutant and wild-type.
Project description:The comparison of the cell-specific transcriptomes of bundle sheath (BS) and mesophyll (M) cells from successive developmental stages of maize leafs reveals that the number of genes preferentially transcribed in one cell type or the other varies considerably from the sink-source transition to mature photosynthetic stages. The number of differentially expressed (DE) genes is maximal at a stage well prior to full maturity, including those that encode key functions for C4 photosynthesis. The developmental dynamics of BS/M differential expression can be used to identify candidates for other C4-related functions and to simplify the identification of specific pathways members from otherwise complex gene families. The candidates for C4-related transcription factors identified with this developmental DE strategy overlap with those identified in studies using alternative strategies.
2014-05-18 | GSE54272 | GEO
Project description:Analysis of translation in mesophyll and bundle sheath enriched fractions of maize
| PRJNA667075 | ENA
Project description:Mesophyll and bundle sheath enriched RNA sequencing for five tribe Paniceae grasses.
Project description:The biotrophic fungus Ustilago maydis causes smut disease on maize (Zea mays L.), which is characterized by immense plant tumours. To establish disease and reprogram organ primordia to tumours, U. maydis deploys effector proteins in an organ-specific manner. However, the cellular contribution to leaf tumours remains unknown. We investigated leaf tumour formation on the tissue- and cell type-specific level. Cytology and metabolite analysis were deployed to understand the cellular basis for tumourigenesis. Laser-capture microdissection was performed to gain a cell-type specific transcriptome of U. maydis during tumour formation. In-vivo visualization of plant DNA synthesis identified bundle sheath cells as the origin of hyperplasic tumour cells, while mesophyll cells become hypertrophic tumour cells. Cell type specific transcriptome profiling of U. maydis revealed tailored expression of fungal effector genes. Moreover, U. maydis See1 was identified the first cell type specific fungal effector, being required for induction of cell cycle reactivation in bundle sheath cells. Identification of distinct cellular mechanisms in two different leave cell types, and See1 as an effector for induction of proliferation of bundle-sheath cells, are major steps in understanding U. maydis-induced tumor formation. Moreover, the cell-type specific U. maydis transcriptome data is a valuable resource to the scientific community.