Department of Cell and Developmental Biology, John Innes Centre, Norwich NR4 7UH, UK
*Author for correspondence (e-mail: Liam.Dolan{at}bbsrc.ac.uk)
Accepted 8 October 2001
![]() |
SUMMARY |
---|
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
---|
Key words: Epidermal pattern, Radial pattern, Cell specification, Katanin, ectopic root hair3, Arabidopsis thaliana
![]() |
INTRODUCTION |
---|
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
---|
Mutants in which the spatial arrangement of epidermal cell identities is defective have been instructive in defining a molecular mechanism for epidermal cell development. GLABRA2 (GL2) encodes a homedomain protein that is expressed in A/N cells and promotes A/N fate (Masucci et al., 1996). WEREWOLF (WER) is a Myb-related transcription factor that is expressed in N cells and promotes N fate by positively regulating GL2 expression (Lee and Schiefelbein, 1999). TRANSPARENT TESTA GLABRA (TTG) is a WD40-repeat-containing protein that is also required for GL2 transcription (Walker et al., 1999). CAPRICE (CPC) theoretically acts as a positive regulator of H cell identity as cpc mutants lack root hairs (Wada et al., 1997). Since CPC is a Myb-related protein that lacks a transcriptional activation domain (Wada et al., 1997), it is assumed that CPC acts by negatively regulating the expression of the N cell promoting gene GL2. It has been proposed that WER and CPC compete for the same binding sequences in promoters of target genes. Because of the similarity between CPC and WER and given the opposite role played by each in the development of the epidermis, a model has been proposed in which the ratio of WER to CPC determines the fate of any individual epidermal cell. A cell with a high level of WER relative to CPC will develop as an N cell while one with higher levels of CPC will develop as an H cell (Lee and Schiefelbein, 1999).
It has been reported that erh3-1 mutants develop H cells in the N position indicating that ERH3 is required for a process during position-dependent cell differentiation in the root epidermis (Schneider et al., 1997). Here we show that ERH3 is required for the differentiation of cells in both the H and N positions. Furthermore we show that ERH3 encodes a katanin p60 catalytic subunit, a protein that severs microtubules (McNally and Vale, 1993). In other systems katanin activity is correlated with increased microtubule dynamics (Quarmby, 2000). Katanin has recently been shown to be required for the formation of the cell wall in plants fra2 mutants have defects in the composition of their cell walls (Burk et al., 2001). FRA2 encodes the p60 katanin and is therefore identical to ERH3 (Burk et al., 2001). We suggest that the katanin-mediated microtubule reorganisation is central to the stability of cell identities in the Arabidopsis root.
![]() |
MATERIALS AND METHODS |
---|
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
---|
Growth conditions
The seeds were surface sterilised in 5% bleach for 10 minutes, rinsed three times in sterile distilled water then pipetted onto the surface of growth medium in Petri dishes. The growth medium was 0.5% (w/v) phytagel, 1% (w/v) sucrose and MS salts at pH 5.8. The seeds were stratified at 4°C for 2 days in the dark and then incubated at 25°C (±2°C) under continuous illumination. The plates were inclined at an angle of 80 degrees to allow the roots to grow along the surface of the medium. The roots were observed after 4 to 5 days incubation.
Seed stocks
The enhancer trap lines J0481, J0571, J0671 and J2301 were obtained from J. Haseloff (Department of Plant Science, Cambridge, UK). John Schiefelbein, University of Michigan, USA kindly provided wer and GL2::GUS lines. Other mutant seed were provided by the Nottingham Arabidopsis Stock Centre (NASC).
Histochemical localisation of ß-glucuronidase (GUS)
The expression pattern of the GL2 promoter::GUS fusion gene was visualised using the following GUS protocol. Four- to five-day old seedlings were incubated in GUS staining solution pH 7.0 (0.1 M NaPO4 buffer, pH 7.0; 1 mM K3Fe(CN)6, pH 7.0; 1 mM K4Fe(CN)6.3H2O, pH 7.0; 1 mM X-glucuronide; 0.08 mM EDTA, pH 8.0) at 21°C for 3 hours. The seedlings were transferred to 70% ethanol to stop the reaction.
Imaging
Confocal microscopy: Seedlings (4- to 5-day old) were stained with either 1 mg/ml or 200 µg/ml propidium iodide (PI) solution for 5-60 minutes. Roots were imaged with a Leica TC5 SP confocal microscope using the 488 nm excitation and 590-765 nm emission lines for PI. The 488 nm excitation and 510-550 nm emission lines were used to image GFP expression in the enhancer trap lines. Images were processed using NIH image (http://rsb.info.nih.gov/nih-image/) and assembled using Adobe Photoshop 5.
Tissue fixation and embedding
Roots (4- to 5-day old) were fixed for 1 hour in 2% (w/v) glutaraldehyde in 50 mM sodium cacodylate buffer, pH 6.8. The roots were placed on a thin slab of 1% (w/v) agarose and covered with agarose for easier handling. These root-agarose sandwiches were refixed in 2% (w/v) glutaraldehyde overnight. Samples were washed twice in water for 5 minutes, dehydrated in an ethanol series (25%, 50%, 75% and 95%) for 10 minutes each and infiltrated with 50% (w/v) LR white (medium grade plus 0.5% benzoin methyl ether): 50% ethanol and twice in 100% resin for at least 2 hours each. The samples were transferred to resin-filled capsules and polymerised at 60°C for 24 hours. The sections were cut on a Reichert Jung Ultracut Microtome. For light microscopy, 0.5 µm thick sections were collected on glass slides and viewed on a Nikon E800 microscope.
Genetic mapping
The ERH3 gene was cloned using a map based cloning strategy. A segregating F2 family was made from a cross between an erh3-3 homozygote in the Columbia background and wild-type Landsberg erecta. The rough map position of erh3-3 was obtained using SSLP and CAPS markers by analysing DNA from 107 F2 erh3-3 mutants of the mapping population. For fine mapping, DNA polymorphism Cereon Genomics database (http://www.arabidopsis.org/Cereon/index.html) was used to generate SSLP markers. The following primers were used for the fine mapping: CER449943, 5'-CCGAGCTTAGCAACCGCCC-3' and 5'-CATCGTCACATTT-ATGAAGC-3'; CER461145, 5'-CAAGAACCTCATACCTTGC-3' and 5'-GACTCTCCCACCACCACACG-3'; CER464737, 5'-CCTTGAACAGAATCCACGGC-3' and 5'-GTTGTGTTGCCCTTACAGAG-3'; AAA1, 5'-CAATTTCTTCAAGCCCTAAGC-3' and 5'-CGTCAAGGGTGTTTAAATGC-3'. DNAs from 267 F2 erh3-3 mutants from the mapping population were analysed using these primers.
Sequencing of mutant alleles
To identify mutations in the erh3 alleles, the ERH3 coding region was amplified from wild-type and mutant plant DNAs by PCR using a mix of Taq polymerase (Gibco BRL) and Pfu polymerase (Promega). Primers have been designed based on the wild-type sequence. The amplification conditions were as follows: 3 minutes at 94°C, followed by 35 cycles of 30 seconds at 94°C, 30 seconds at 55°C, 1 minute at 72°C, then a final extension at 72°C for 10 minutes. After purification, PCR products were used directly for sequencing. Sequencing was carried out using Big Dye Terminator Sequencing Kit (Perkin-Elmer) in conjunction with the Applied Biosystems 3700 DNA Sequencer.
Sequence analysis
The BLAST search programme (Altschul et al., 1997) was used for sequence analysis and comparisons in the GenBank, EMBL, and swissProt databases. Multiple sequence alignments and relationship tree based on Neighbour-Joining method was done with CLUSTAL X (Thompson et al., 1997) and TreeView programmes. All the sequences of the AAA domain-containing proteins can be retrieved from the web site server (http://yeamob.pci.chemie.uni-tuebingen.de/Default.html).
RT-PCR analysis
First-strand DNA synthesis was carried out from 4 µg of A. thaliana total RNA, using a Superscript First strand DNA Preamplification Kit (Gibco-BRL) with an oligo(dT) primer. Specific primers for RT-PCR amplification of ERH3 transcripts, flanking an intron sequence, were designed: 5'-GATGCCCGAATACTTTCAGG-3' and 5'-CAGATTGATATTGATAAGAGCC-3'. These primers give a 501 bp fragment with cDNA as template and a 830 bp fragment using genomic DNA as template. PCR reactions were done using 1 µl of RT reaction products as a template in a 50 µl PCR reaction according to the following conditions: 5 minutes at 94°C, followed by 35 cycles of 30 seconds at 94°C, 30 seconds at 50°C and 1 minute at 72°C. RT-PCR products were loaded on a 2% (w/v) agarose gel and visualised by ethidium bromide fluorescence. The specificity of the amplification was checked by sequencing of the PCR products. The reproducibility of the results was tested by repeating the experiment with both the same reverse transcripts and with a different batch of reverse transcripts prepared from the same total RNAs.
![]() |
RESULTS |
---|
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
---|
|
|
Cell files in the wild-type epidermis are arranged in a brickwork pattern where T/H cells are morphologically distinguishable from A/N cells (Fig. 2E). The majority of divisions in the epidermis are transverse in orientation, adding more cells to each row (Berger et al., 1998b). The orientation of walls is abnormal in the epidermis of erh3-2 mutant roots many of the new walls are oblique and not transverse (Fig. 2F). This indicates that ERH3 is required to orient cell plates during cytokinesis.
The pattern of epidermal cell differentiation is defective in erh3 roots
We showed previously that hairs form on a subset of cells in the N position on 4-day-old erh3-1 seedlings (Schneider et al., 1997). We have called these misplaced hair bearing cells "ectopic hair cells". We determined the location of hair and non-hair cells in 4-day-old erh3-2 roots (in which the mutant phenotype is not yet severe). Hairs formed on 23% of cells located in the N position. In addition 16% of cells in the H position remained hairless, i.e. they were ectopic non-hair cells (Table 1). Lower numbers of ectopic hairs and non-hairs were seen in the erh3-1 and erh3-3 mutants, consistent with their weaker allelic strengths. The presence of both ectopic hairs and non-hairs suggests that ERH3 is required for the specification of cell identity in both N and H locations.
|
To determine when ERH3 is required for the specification of epidermal cells, we examined the expression of marker genes that are preferentially expressed in atrichoblasts. The GL2 promoter::GUS fusion gene (Masucci et al., 1996) is strongly expressed in A/N cells in the root meristem of wild type plants (Fig. 3A). The pattern of GL2 expression is altered in patches along the roots of 4-day-old erh3-2 mutants, resulting in breakdown of atrichoblast stripes. Cells in the T/H position express GL2 and occasionally cells in the A/N position fail to express the marker indicating a requirement of ERH3 function for the A/N-specific patterning of GL2 expression (Fig. 3B). J2301 is an enhancer trap line that expresses GFP in the A/N cells of the wild-type epidermis (Fig. 3C) (Berger et al., 1998c). The pattern of J2301 expression is also defective in patches along the 4-day-old erh3-2 epidermis. GFP is visible in cells in the T/H position and expression is often absent from cells in the A/N position (Fig. 3D). This indicates that cell specification is defective in the erh3-2 mutant epidermis from a very early stage in development and supports the view that ERH3 is required for cell specification in the root epidermis.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
ERH3 encodes a p60 katanin-like protein
The AAA1-ERH3 gene is organised in 7 exons and encodes a predicted polypeptide of 523 amino acids. The analysis of the deduced amino acid sequence showed that this protein is a member of the large AAA (ATPases Associated with various cellular Activities) protein superfamily, and has an AAA domain between positions 231 to 466 (Fig. 8B). The most similar proteins to AAA1-ERH3 are the p60 subunits of katanin proteins from Drosophila melanogaster, Homo sapiens (McNally and Vale, 1993), Mus musculus (Syu and Saltiel, 1999), Xenopus laevis, Strongylocentrotus purpuratus (Hartman et al., 1998), Caenorhabditis elegans (Clark-Maguire and Mains, 1994) and Chlamydomonas reinhardtii (Lohret et al., 1999) (Fig. 8C). These proteins all share a similar organisation (size, AAA domain position) and alignment analysis shows that several regions are conserved between ERH3/AAA1 and other p60 katanin proteins (data not shown). The percentage identities between ERH3/AAA1 and the p60 katanin range from 48 to 51% throughout the whole protein and from 64 to 66% within the AAA domain.
ERH3/AAA1 expression was examined by RT-PCR analysis. This showed that ERH3/AAA1 is expressed throughout the wild-type plant. Signal was detected in leaves, roots, stems, flowers and siliques (Fig. 8D). Normal levels of AAA1-ERH3 mRNA was observed in seedlings homozygous for each mutant allele, implying that these mutations alter the protein function but not the transcript synthesis or stability.
![]() |
DISCUSSION |
---|
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
---|
Katanin proteins have been extensively characterised in sea urchins and Caenorhabditis elegans (McNally, 1998; Srayko et al., 2000). Katanins are heterodimeric proteins comprising a p60 subunit that severs microtubules and a p80 subunit that is required for the targeting of the katanin protein complex to its site of action within the cell (Hartman et al., 1998; McNally, 1998; McNally and Vale, 1993). Since katanin-mediated severing of microtubules increases the number of MT ends at which polymerisation or depolymerisation can take place, the dynamic state of mitotic microtubules may be at least in part dependent on katanin activity.
Defects in katanin activity result in the formation of abnormal spindles in Caenorhabditis elegans (Clark-Maguire and Mains, 1994; Srayko et al., 2000). The catalytic subunit p60 is encoded by mei1, and mei2 encodes the p80 subunit. Dominant mutations in mei1 result in the appearance of p60 katanin protein in mitotic cells, where the protein is normally absent. Spindles in these cells are shorter than wild type suggesting that the extra katanin activity in these cells results in the severing of the microtubules that constitute the spindle (Clark-Maguire and Mains, 1994). In addition, misexpression of mei1 (katanin p60) and its partner mei2 (p80) results in a reduction in the length of microtubules in HeLa cells (Srayko et al., 2000). Together these data suggest that katanins are active in severing of microtubules in a diverse range of animal cell types.
The defect in the pattern of epidermal cell differentiation in Arabidopsis erh3 mutants suggests that the katanin complex is required during the specification of cell fate in the root epidermis. The altered GL2::GUS expression pattern in erh3 mutants and the epistatic nature of the double mutant phenotypes suggests that ERH3 is active early and is required for the correct positioning of cues for cell identity. Mutations in katanin p60 have recently been isolated in Arabidopsis (Bichet et al., 2001; Burk et al., 2001). These alleles of erh3 (botero1 (bot1) and fragile fibre2 (fra2)) have not been characterised for defective specification of cell identities. As might be expected, the organisation of microtubules is altered in these mutants compared to wild type. Plants homozygous for the fra2 mutation are slow to reorganise microtubules during cell elongation (Burk et al., 2001). As wild-type root cells elongate, perinuclear microtubules disappear and a largely transverse cortical array develops. This reorganisation is delayed in the fra2 mutants and the resulting cortical arrays show defective cortical microtubule arrangements. The cell walls of fra2 mutants are drastically different from those of wild type and contain little cellulose and hemicellulose (Burk et al., 2001). These microtubule and wall defects suggest that the katanin p60 is required for the reorganisation of the microtubule cytoskeleton, which is in turn necessary for the formation of the cell wall during cellular morphogenesis.
The defects in cell identity observed in erh3 mutants indicate that katanin-dependent processes are involved in cell specification in the root. We can rule out the possibility that this mis-specification is a secondary consequence resulting from misalignment of cell walls in mutant roots: patches of cells with normal patterns of cell organisation occasionally form on mutant roots and exhibit the cell specification defects (see Table 2). It has previously been postulated, on the basis of clonal analysis and laser microsurgical experiments, that positional information directing cell fate in the root epidermis is organised in the cell wall with strict boundaries (Berger et al., 1998a). Since erh3/fra2/bot1 mutants have been shown to have defective cell walls, it is formally possible that a katanin-dependent cell wall biosynthetic process is required for the stable fixation of positional cues that specify cell identity. According to this model, molecules conferring positional information would be incorporated into the wall in a spatially regulated manner that depends on the integrity of cell wall structure. Disruption in this structure results in mislocalisation of positional cues and consequent defects in the spatial pattern of cellular differentiation. Changes in the expression of marker genes in erh3 mutants indicates that the p60 katanin requiring process is active in the specification of identities in other cell types including the lateral root cap, cortex and endodermis. It is therefore likely that positional cues specifying cell identity in these cell types are also located in the wall and that the defects in cellular specification result from a defective spatial organisation of the signals in the erh3 mutant roots.
An alternative view is that microtubules are directly active in the specification of cell identity in the root and that disruption of the microtubules in erh3 mutants results in the development of defective identities. The specification of cell identity and polarity has been shown to involve microtubules in a range of animal systems [for reviews see Gotta and Ahringer (Gotta and Ahringer, 2001) and Doe and Bowerman (Doe and Bowerman, 2001)]. For example, sperm asters play a critical role in the establishment of anterior-posterior polarity in the nematode zygote (OConnell et al., 2000; Wallenfang and Seydoux, 2000). Disruption of normal aster formation results in the symmetrical distribution of proteins such as PAR-2 which are normally located in the posterior region of the embryo. This results in mis-specification of the anterior-posterior embryo axis. Similar mechanisms operate in the polarization of mammalian epithelial cells and the development of neuroblasts in insects [for review see Doe and Bowerman (Doe and Bowerman 2001)]. The mispecification of cell identities in erh3 mutants suggests that an analogous mechanism involving microtubules may operate in plant cells.
![]() |
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
---|
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
---|
![]() |
REFERENCES |
---|
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
---|
Altschul, S. F., Madden, T. L., Schaffer, A. A., Zhang, J., Zhang, Z., Miller, W. and Lipman, D. J. (1997). Gapped BLAST and PSI-BLAST: a new generation of protein database search programs. Nucleic Acids Res. 25, 3389-3402.
Bell, C. J. and Ecker, J. R. (1994). Assignment of 30 microsatellite loci to the linkage map of Arabidopsis. Genomics 19, 137-144.[Medline]
Berger, F., Haseloff, J., Schiefelbein, J. and Dolan, L. (1998a). Positional information in root epidermis is defined during embryogenesis and acts in domains with strict boundaries. Curr. Biol. 8, 421-430.[Medline]
Berger, F., Hung, C. Y., Dolan, L. and Schiefelbein, J. (1998b). Control of cell division in the root epidermis of Arabidopsis thaliana. Dev. Biol. 194, 235-245.[Medline]
Berger, F., Linstead, P., Dolan, L. and Haseloff, J. (1998c). Stomata patterning on the hypocotyl of Arabidopsis thaliana is controlled by genes involved in the control of root epidermis patterning. Dev. Biol. 194, 226-234.[Medline]
Bichet, A., Desnos, T., Turner, S., Grandjean, O. and Hofte, H. (2001). BOTERO1 is required for normal orientation of cortical microtubules and anisotropic cell expansion in Arabidopsis. Plant J. 25, 137-148.[Medline]
Burk, D. H., Liu, B., Zhong, R., Morrison, W. H. and Ye, Z. H. (2001). A katanin-like protein regulates normal cell wall biosynthesis and cell elongation. Plant Cell 13, 807-828.
Clark-Maguire, S. and Mains, P. E. (1994). mei-1, a gene required for meiotic spindle formation in Caenorhabditis elegans, is a member of a family of ATPases. Genetics 136, 533-546.
Cnops, G., Wang, X., Linstead, P., Van Montagu, M., Van Lijsebettens, M. and Dolan, L. (2000). TORNADO1 and TORNADO2 are required for the specification of radial and circumferential pattern in the Arabidopsis root. Development 127, 3385-3394.
Doe, C. Q. and Bowerman, B. (2001). Asymmetric cell division: fly neuroblast meets worm zygote. Curr. Opin. Cell Biol. 13, 68-73.[Medline]
Dolan, L., Janmaat, K., Willemsen, V., Linstead, P., Poethig, S., Roberts, K. and Scheres, B. (1993). Cellular organisation of the Arabidopsis thaliana root. Development 119, 71-84.
Dolan, L., Duckett, C. M., Grierson, C., Linstead, P., Schneider, K., Lawson, E., Dean, C., Poethig, S. and Roberts, K. (1994). Clonal relationships and cell patterning in the root epidermis of Arabidopsis. Development 120, 2465-2474.[Abstract]
Gotta, M. and Ahlringer, J. (2001). Axis determination in C. elegans: initiating and transducing polarity. Curr. Opin. Genet. Dev. 11, 367-373.[Medline]
Hartman, J. J., Mahr, J., McNally, K., Okawa, K., Iwamatsu, A., Thomas, S., Cheesman, S., Heuser, J., Vale, R. D. and McNally, F. J. (1998). Katanin, a microtubule-severing protein, is a novel AAA ATPase that targets to the centrosome using a WD40-containing subunit. Cell 93, 277-287.[Medline]
Helariutta, Y., Fukaki, H., Wysocka-Diller, J., Nakajima, K., Jung, J., Sena, G., Hauser, M. T. and Benfey, P. N. (2000). The SHORT-ROOT gene controls radial patterning of the Arabidopsis root through radial signaling. Cell 101, 555-567.[Medline]
Konieczny, A. and Ausubel, F. M. (1993). A procedure for mapping Arabidopsis mutations using co-dominant ecotype-specific PCR-based markers. Plant J. 4, 403-410.[Medline]
Lee, M. M. and Schiefelbein, J. (1999). WEREWOLF, a MYB-related protein in Arabidopsis, is a position-dependent regulator of epidermal cell patterning. Cell 99, 473-483.[Medline]
Lohret, T. A., Zhao, L. and Quarmby, L. M. (1999). Cloning of Chlamydomonas p60 katanin and localization to the site of outer doublet severing during deflagellation. Cell Motil. Cytoskeleton 43, 221-231.[Medline]
Masucci, J. D. and Schiefelbein, J. W. (1994). The rhd6 mutation of Arabidopsis thaliana alters root-hair initiation through an auxin- and ethylene-associated process. Plant Physiol. 106, 1335-1346.
Masucci, J. D., Rerie, W. G., Foreman, D. R., Zhang, M., Galway, M. E., Marks, M. D. and Schiefelbein, J. W. (1996). The homeobox gene GLABRA2 is required for position-dependent cell differentiation in the root epidermis of Arabidopsis thaliana. Development 122, 1253-1260.
McNally, F. (1998). Purification and assay of the microtubule-severing protein katanin. Methods Enzymol. 298, 206-218.[Medline]
McNally, F. J. and Vale, R. D. (1993). Identification of katanin, an ATPase that severs and disassembles stable microtubules. Cell 75, 419-429.[Medline]
OConnell, K. F., Maxwell, K. N. and White, J. G. (2000). The spd-2 gene is required for the polarization of the anteroposterior axis and formation of the sperm asters in the Caenorhabditis elegans zygote. Dev. Biol. 222, 55-70.[Medline]
Quarmby, L. (2000). Cellular Samurai: katanin and the severing of microtubules. J. Cell Sci. 113, 2821-2827.
Schneider, K., Wells, B., Dolan, L. and Roberts, K. (1997). Structural and genetic analysis of epidermal cell differentiation in Arabidopsis primary roots. Development 124, 1789-1798.
Srayko, M., Buster, D. W., Bazirgan, O. A., McNally, F. J. and Mains, P. E. (2000). MEI-1/MEI-2 katanin-like microtubule severing activity is required for Caenorhabditis elegans meiosis. Genes. Dev. 14, 1072-1084.
Syu, L. J. and Saltiel, A. R. (1999). Lipotransin: a novel docking protein for hormone-sensitive lipase. Mol. Cell 4, 109-115.[Medline]
Thompson, J. D., Gibson, T. J., Plewniak, F., Jeanmougin, F. and Higgins, D. G. (1997). The CLUSTAL_X windows interface: flexible strategies for multiple sequence alignment aided by quality analysis tools. Nucleic Acids Res. 25, 4876-4882.
Wada, T., Tachibana, T., Shimura, Y. and Okada, K. (1997). Epidermal cell differentiation in Arabidopsis determined by a Myb homolog, CPC. Science 277, 1113-1116.
Wallenfang, M. R. and Seydoux, G. (2000) Polarization of the anterior-posterior axis of C. elegans is a microtubule directed process. Nature 408, 89-92.[Medline]
Walker, A. R., Davison, P. A., Bolognesi-Winfield, A. C., James, C. M., Srinivasan, N., Blundell, T. L., Esch, J. J., Marks, M. D. and Gray, J. C. (1999). The TRANSPARENT TESTA GLABRA1 locus, which regulates trichome differentiation and anthocyanin biosynthesis in Arabidopsis, encodes a WD40 repeat protein. Plant Cell 11, 1337-1350.
Wysocka-Diller, J. W., Helariutta, Y., Fukaki, H., Malamy, J. E. and Benfey, P. N. (2000). Molecular analysis of SCARECROW function reveals a radial patterning mechanism common to root and shoot. Development 127, 595-603.