A suberized exodermis is required for tomato drought tolerance

Publication date

2024-01

Authors

Cantó-Pastor, Alex
Kajala, KaisaORCID 0000-0001-6483-7473ISNI 0000000492896421
Shaar-Moshe, Lidor
Manzano, Concepción
Timilsena, Prakash
De Bellis, Damien
Gray, Sharon
Holbein, Julia
Yang, He
Mohammad, Sana

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Document Type

Article
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cc_by

Abstract

Plant roots integrate environmental signals with development using exquisite spatiotemporal control. This is apparent in the deposition of suberin, an apoplastic diffusion barrier, which regulates flow of water, solutes and gases, and is environmentally plastic. Suberin is considered a hallmark of endodermal differentiation but is absent in the tomato endodermis. Instead, suberin is present in the exodermis, a cell type that is absent in the model organism Arabidopsis thaliana. Here we demonstrate that the suberin regulatory network has the same parts driving suberin production in the tomato exodermis and the Arabidopsis endodermis. Despite this co-option of network components, the network has undergone rewiring to drive distinct spatial expression and with distinct contributions of specific genes. Functional genetic analyses of the tomato MYB92 transcription factor and ASFT enzyme demonstrate the importance of exodermal suberin for a plant water-deficit response and that the exodermal barrier serves an equivalent function to that of the endodermis and can act in its place.

Keywords

Plant Science

Citation

Cantó-Pastor, A, Kajala, K, Shaar-Moshe, L, Manzano, C, Timilsena, P, De Bellis, D, Gray, S, Holbein, J, Yang, H, Mohammad, S, Nirmal, N, Suresh, K, Ursache, R, Mason, G A, Gouran, M, West, D A, Borowsky, A T, Shackel, K A, Sinha, N, Bailey-Serres, J, Geldner, N, Li, S, Franke, R B & Brady, S M 2024, 'A suberized exodermis is required for tomato drought tolerance', Nature Plants, vol. 10, no. 1, pp. 118-130. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41477-023-01567-x