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Single-cell transcriptomics unveils xylem cell development and evolution

Chia-Chun Tung, Shang‐Che Kuo, Chia-Ling Yang, Jhong‐He Yu, Chia-En Huang, Pin‐Chien Liou, Ying‐Hsuan Sun, Peng Shuai, Jung‐Chen Su, Chuan Ku, Ying‐Chung Jimmy Lin

2023Genome biology88 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Xylem, the most abundant tissue on Earth, is responsible for lateral growth in plants. Typical xylem has a radial system composed of ray parenchyma cells and an axial system of fusiform cells. In most angiosperms, fusiform cells comprise vessel elements for water transportation and libriform fibers for mechanical support, while both functions are performed by tracheids in other vascular plants such as gymnosperms. Little is known about the developmental programs and evolutionary relationships of these xylem cell types. RESULTS: Through both single-cell and laser capture microdissection transcriptomic profiling, we determine the developmental lineages of ray and fusiform cells in stem-differentiating xylem across four divergent woody angiosperms. Based on cross-species analyses of single-cell clusters and overlapping trajectories, we reveal highly conserved ray, yet variable fusiform, lineages across angiosperms. Core eudicots Populus trichocarpa and Eucalyptus grandis share nearly identical fusiform lineages, whereas the more basal angiosperm Liriodendron chinense has a fusiform lineage distinct from that in core eudicots. The tracheids in the basal eudicot Trochodendron aralioides, an evolutionarily reversed trait, exhibit strong transcriptomic similarity to vessel elements rather than libriform fibers. CONCLUSIONS: This evo-devo framework provides a comprehensive understanding of the formation of xylem cell lineages across multiple plant species spanning over a hundred million years of evolutionary history.

Topics & Concepts

BiologyXylemTracheidBotanyEudicotsEvolutionary biologySecondary cell wallTaxonomy (biology)Plant Molecular Biology ResearchPolysaccharides and Plant Cell WallsTree Root and Stability Studies