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First published online August 29, 2008; 10.1105/tpc.108.059709

The Plant Cell 20:2073-2087 (2008)
© 2008 American Society of Plant Biologists

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The milkweed pod1 Gene Encodes a KANADI Protein That Is Required for Abaxial/Adaxial Patterning in Maize Leaves[W]

Héctor Candelaa,b, Robyn Johnstonc, Abigail Gerholda,b, Toshi Fosterc and Sarah Hakea,b,1

a Plant Gene Expression Center, U.S. Department of Agriculture–Agricultural Research Service, Albany, California 94710
b Plant and Microbial Biology Department, University of California, Berkeley, California 94720
c The Horticulture and Food Research Institute of New Zealand, Private Bag 11 030, Palmerston North, New Zealand

1 Address correspondence to maizesh{at}nature.berkeley.edu.

Leaf primordia initiate from the shoot apical meristem with inherent polarity; the adaxial side faces the meristem, while the abaxial side faces away from the meristem. Adaxial/abaxial polarity is thought to be necessary for laminar growth of leaves, as mutants lacking either adaxial or abaxial cell types often develop radially symmetric lateral organs. The milkweed pod1 (mwp1) mutant of maize (Zea mays) has adaxialized sectors in the sheath, the proximal part of the leaf. Ectopic leaf flaps develop where adaxial and abaxial cell types juxtapose. Ectopic expression of the HD-ZIPIII gene rolled leaf1 (rld1) correlates with the adaxialized regions. Cloning of mwp1 showed that it encodes a KANADI transcription factor. Double mutants of mwp1-R with a microRNA-resistant allele of rld1, Rld1-N1990, show a synergistic phenotype with polarity defects in sheath and blade and a failure to differentiate vascular and photosynthetic cell types in the adaxialized sectors. The sectored phenotype and timing of the defect suggest that mwp1 is required late in leaf development to maintain abaxial cell fate. The phenotype of mwp1; Rld1 double mutants shows that both genes are also required early in leaf development to delineate leaf margins as well as to initiate vascular and photosynthetic tissues.




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