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Mobile MUTE specifies subsidiary cells to build physiologically improved grass stomata.

Author
Abstract
:

Plants optimize carbon assimilation while limiting water loss by adjusting stomatal aperture. In grasses, a developmental innovation-the addition of subsidiary cells (SCs) flanking two dumbbell-shaped guard cells (GCs)-is linked to improved stomatal physiology. Here, we identify a transcription factor necessary and sufficient for SC formation in the wheat relative Unexpectedly, the transcription factor is an ortholog of the stomatal regulator , which defines GC precursor fate in The novel role of in specifying lateral SCs appears linked to its acquisition of cell-to-cell mobility in Physiological analyses on SC-less plants experimentally support classic hypotheses that SCs permit greater stomatal responsiveness and larger range of pore apertures. Manipulation of SC formation and function in crops, therefore, may be an effective approach to enhance plant performance.

Year of Publication
:
2017
Journal
:
Science (New York, N.Y.)
Volume
:
355
Issue
:
6330
Number of Pages
:
1215-1218
Date Published
:
2017
ISSN Number
:
0036-8075
URL
:
http://www.sciencemag.org/cgi/pmidlookup?view=long&pmid=28302860
DOI
:
10.1126/science.aal3254
Short Title
:
Science
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