Litcius/Paper detail

DIX Domain Polymerization Drives Assembly of Plant Cell Polarity Complexes

Maritza van Dop, Marc Fiedler, Sumanth Mutte, Jeroen de Keijzer, Lisa H Olijslager, Catherine Albrecht, Che‐Yang Liao, Marcel E. Janson, Mariann Bienz, Dolf Weijers

2020Cell83 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Cell polarity is fundamental for tissue morphogenesis in multicellular organisms. Plants and animals evolved multicellularity independently, and it is unknown whether their polarity systems are derived from a single-celled ancestor. Planar polarity in animals is conferred by Wnt signaling, an ancient signaling pathway transduced by Dishevelled, which assembles signalosomes by dynamic head-to-tail DIX domain polymerization. In contrast, polarity-determining pathways in plants are elusive. We recently discovered Arabidopsis SOSEKI proteins, which exhibit polar localization throughout development. Here, we identify SOSEKI as ancient polar proteins across land plants. Concentration-dependent polymerization via a bona fide DIX domain allows these to recruit ANGUSTIFOLIA to polar sites, similar to the polymerization-dependent recruitment of signaling effectors by Dishevelled. Cross-kingdom domain swaps reveal functional equivalence of animal and plant DIX domains. We trace DIX domains to unicellular eukaryotes and thus show that DIX-dependent polymerization is an ancient mechanism conserved between kingdoms and central to polarity proteins.

Topics & Concepts

DishevelledBiologyMulticellular organismPolarity (international relations)Cell polarityCell biologyGuard cellArabidopsisSignal transductionWnt signaling pathwayFrizzledCellGeneticsGeneMutantPlant Molecular Biology ResearchPlant Reproductive BiologyPolysaccharides and Plant Cell Walls