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First published online March 20, 2009; 10.1105/tpc.108.061457 The Plant Cell 21:719-735 (2009) © 2009 American Society of Plant Biologists OPEN ACCESS ARTICLE
SHALLOT-LIKE1 Is a KANADI Transcription Factor That Modulates Rice Leaf Rolling by Regulating Leaf Abaxial Cell Development[W],[OA]
a State Key Laboratory of Rice Biology, China National Rice Research Institute, Hangzhou 310006, Zhejiang, China 2 Address correspondence hwxue{at}sibs.ac.cn.
As an important agronomic trait, rice (Oryza sativa L.) leaf rolling has attracted much attention from plant biologists and breeders. Moderate leaf rolling increases the photosynthesis of cultivars and hence raises grain yield. However, the relevant molecular mechanism remains unclear. Here, we show the isolation and functional characterization of SHALLOT-LIKE1 (SLL1), a key gene controlling rice leaf rolling. sll1 mutant plants have extremely incurved leaves due to the defective development of sclerenchymatous cells on the abaxial side. Defective development can be functionally rescued by expression of SLL1. SLL1 is transcribed in various tissues and accumulates in the abaxial epidermis throughout leaf development. SLL1 encodes a SHAQKYF class MYB family transcription factor belonging to the KANADI family. SLL1 deficiency leads to defective programmed cell death of abaxial mesophyll cells and suppresses the development of abaxial features. By contrast, enhanced SLL1 expression stimulates phloem development on the abaxial side and suppresses bulliform cell and sclerenchyma development on the adaxial side. Additionally, SLL1 deficiency results in increased chlorophyll and photosynthesis. Our findings identify the role of SLL1 in the modulation of leaf abaxial cell development and in sustaining abaxial characteristics during leaf development. These results should facilitate attempts to use molecular breeding to increase the photosynthetic capacity of rice, as well as other crops, by modulating leaf development and rolling.
The three-dimensional structure of the plant leaf is crucial for its functions, including light capture, carbon fixation, and gas exchange for photosynthesis (Govaerts et al., 1996
As a polymorphic crop, rice varieties and mutants exhibit several types of leaf rolling, including inward or outward rolling, and these various phenotypes are regulated by complicated developmental processes, including pattern formation, polarity establishment, and cell differentiation (Micol and Hake, 2003
Due to its importance, many studies have been performed to characterize the genes controlling rice leaf rolling. Up to now, 11 rice mutants with rolled leaves (rl) have been characterized, for which six recessive genes (rl1-rl6) were mapped on rice chromosomes 1, 4, 12, 3, or 7 by morphological markers (Kinoshita, 1984
In Arabidopsis thaliana, mutants with differently curved leaves have been extensively described, including hyponastic leaves1 (Lu and Fedoroff, 2000
Other key regulators of leaf polarity include a group of functional homologs, including PHANTASTICA (PHAN) in Antirrhinum majus, ROUGH SHEATH2 in maize (Zea mays), and ASYMMETRIC LEAVES1 (AS1) in Arabidopsis. All are MYB domain–containing transcription factors (Waites et al., 1998
Posttranscriptional and posttranslational regulation are essential for proper leaf patterning (Xu et al., 2007
The adaxial-abaxial pattern of the monocot leaf is different from that of dicot plants. In dicots, the internal mesophyll cells are polarized; the closely packed palisade cells are adjacent to the adaxial epidermis, and loosely packed spongy cells border the abaxial epidermis (McConnell and Barton, 1998
In the rice lamina, programmed cell death (PCD) occurs throughout the formation of sclerenchymatous cells, including tracheid and vessel elements in xylem and sclerenchyma tissues surrounding the vascular bundle (Lu et al., 1982
The sclerenchymatous cells are lignified dead cells with thickened secondary cell walls. PCD is involved in the transdifferentiation of mesophyll cells to sclerenchymatous cells. This differentiation consists of three stages: dedifferentiation (stage I), conversion of mesophyll cells to TE precursor cells (procambium cells and immature xylem cells) (stage II), and TE-specific secondary wall thickening followed by lignification and cell death–related events (stage III) (Fukuda, 2000 Here, we report the isolation and functional characterization of a rice gene, SHALLOT-LIKE1 (SLL1), that regulates rice leaf rolling. SLL1 deficiency leads to the flawed formation of sclerenchymatous cells on the abaxial side of the leaf and results in extremely inwardly rolled leaves. SLL1 is crucial in polarity formation and helps to direct the development of the leaf abaxial cell layer. In addition, it is involved in the transdifferentiation of mesophyll cells to sclerenchymatous cells through the modulation of PCD, highlighting a possible mechanism underlying leaf rolling in monocot plants.
sll1, a Rice Mutant with Shallot-Like Leaves, Displays Abnormal Sclerenchymatous Cell Development in the Abaxial Cell Layers, Altered Mesophyll Cell Distribution, Increased Amounts of Chlorophyll, and Enhanced Photosynthesis To investigate the molecular mechanisms of rice leaf rolling, a rice mutant population (Oryza sativa L. ssp. japonica variety Nipponbare) generated by ethyl methanesulphonate mutagenesis was screened. Two allelic mutants with extremely incurved leaves were identified, designated as sll1-1 and sll1-2 (Figure 1A ). Phenotypic observation showed that sll1 mutant plants had narrow, extremely rolled and dark-green leaves, which appeared during the seedling stage. These leaves became more evident during plant growth. Observation of the cross section revealed enlarged clear cells in the midrib of sll1 plants (Figure 1A, bottom panel).
In contrast with the wild type, mature sll1 leaves display altered mesophyll cell differentiation and distribution. sll1 does not form abaxial sclerenchymatous cells in the small veins of lateral region (Figure 1B), where the leaf starts to roll; however, the midrib region and the margin of the blade demonstrate cellular organization similar to the wild type (Figure 1C), indicating the modulated differentiation of sclerenchymatous cells in sll1. Bulliform cells, which are normally found in the adaxial epidermis, were found in abaxial surfaces of sll1-1 leaves (Figure 1B). Furthermore, the differences in abaxial sclerenchymatous specification can be observed in young leaves with curved leaf sheathes (plastochron 5), appearing after the mesophyll cells begin to differentiate. The mesophyll cells in abaxial layers do not differentiate to become sclerenchymatous cells in sll1-1 (Figure 1D). In wild-type leaf blades, the mesophyll cells on both adaxial and abaxial sides are interrupted by sclerenchymatous cells connecting vascular bundles and epidermis, while those on the abaxial side of sll1-1 leaves were replaced by mesophyll cells (Figure 2A , top panel). Leaves were a deeper green on the abaxial side (Figure 2A, bottom panel), indicating increased numbers of mesophyll cells. We also measured the chlorophyll in wild-type, sll11-1, sll1-2, or transgenic sll1-2 plants with complemented expression of SLL1. Measurements were performed on the same area of the plant (at the middle part of the second leaf from the top of the plant) at same growth stage. Chlorophyll measurements indicated that the increased numbers of mesophyll cells resulted in a corresponding increase in the amount of chlorophyll in sll1-1 and sll1-2 plants, and the complemented expression of SLL1 in sll1-2 plants restores normal chlorophyll levels (Figure 2B).
Measurement of the quantum yield of photosystem II (PSII) and the maximal quantum yield of PSII (Fv/Fm) showed that both were slightly increased in sll1-1 or sll1-2 (Table 1 ), indicating increased photosynthesis due to the increased numbers of mesophyll cells and elevated chlorophyll content of the leaves.
SLL1 Encodes a SHAQKYF Class MYB Transcription Factor Genetic analysis of reciprocal crosses between the sll1-1, sll1-2, and wild-type plants revealed that the abnormal character of sll1 was controlled by a single recessive gene. To isolate the relevant mutant gene, SLL1 was mapped to the long arm of rice chromosome 9 between markers RM1896 and RM3700. This conclusion is based on analysis of the F2 population from a cross between sll1-2 and Nanjing 6 (Figure 3A ). A large F2 mapping population was then generated, allowing the fine-mapping of SLL1 to a 29.57-kb region, using the sequence tagged site and simple sequence repeat markers (Figure 3A; see Supplemental Table 1 online). Three annotated candidate genes, encoding a hypothetical protein, an En/Spm-like transposon, and a transcription factor containing a MYB-like domain, respectively, were located in this region (The Institute for Genomic Research; http://rice.plantbiology.msu.edu/). Further amplification of the relevant DNA fragments and sequence comparison revealed differences in sll1-1 and sll1-2 alleles in the gene encoding the transcription factor containing the MYB-like domain. The sll1 allele carried a single base substitution (G to A) in the intron splicing site of both sll1-1 (the first intron) and sll1-2 (the third intron), resulting in altered mRNA splicing and premature termination of the encoded protein (Figure 3B). To verify this, primers located in the two open reading frames (ORFs) flanking the mutation site were used to amplify the relevant fragments. The longer mRNA molecules were indeed amplified in sll1-1 and sll1-2 (Figure 3C), confirming the altered splicing of sll1 transcripts.
Comparison with the corresponding genomic sequence revealed that the SLL1 gene consists of six exons and five introns. The gene encodes a 377–amino acid MYB family transcription factor (Figure 3B). Homologous analysis showed that SLL1 shares high similarity with the KAN family members in Arabidopsis (Table 2 ). The Arabidopsis KAN1 is involved in the polarity regulation of lateral organs, and three other KAN genes (KAN2, KAN3, and KAN4) also redundantly specify abaxial fate (Eshed et al., 1999
Although both mutant alleles show rolled leaves, leaf rolling index (LRI) analysis showed that sll1-1 has more severe rolling (Figure 4C), which is consistent with the fact that mutation of sll1-1 affects the GARP domain, while that of sll1-2 does not (Figure 4B). These phenotypic differences indicate the importance of the GARP domain to the function of SLL1, probably because of its central role regulating gene transcription.
The Expression Pattern of SLL1
To assess the expression pattern comprehensively, β-glucuronidase (GUS) activity was examined histochemically in transgenic plants carrying an SLL1 promoter-GUS reporter gene. Results showed that SLL1 was transcribed in stem (Figure 5B, panels 1 and 2), anthers of young or mature flowers (Figure 5B, panels 3 to 5), pistil tip (Figure 5B, panel 6), glume (Figure 5B, panel 7), vascular tissues of mature seeds (Figure 5B, panels 8 and 9), coleoptile and embryonic root of germinating seedlings (Figure 5B, panel 10), and root vascular tissues (Figure 5B, panel 11). In addition, SLL1 is highly transcribed in leaf veins and leaf sheath (Figure 5C, panels 1 to 3), guard cells, and tracheal elements (Figure 5C, panels 4 and 5). We further examined the spatial and temporal localization of SLL1 during leaf development by in situ hybridization analysis. The mRNA expression of SLL1 was detected throughout the young leaf primordium (plastochrons 1 to 3) and was more intense in abaxial cell layer through leaf development (plastochrons 4 and 5) (Figure 5D, panel 2). However, the SLL1 transcript did not demonstrate apical/basal polarity and did not accumulate at the apex of the meristem (Figure 5D, panel 3). Cross-section analysis of the shoot apex showed that SLL1 was more highly expressed in the abaxial cell layer, including the epidermis and vasculature of the early leaf blade (Figure 5D, panels 5 and 6). In the mature leaf, SLL1 mainly accumulated at the abaxial epidermis, abaxial mesophyll cells, and vasculature (Figure 5D, panels 8 and 9). In contrast with the sense probe (Figure 5D, panels 4 and 7), SLL1 was transcribed at a relatively low level throughout other leaf positions including the adaxial epidermis (Figure 5D, panels 5 and 6).
Complemented Expression of SLL1 Rescued the Rolled Leaves of sll1
SLL1 Modulates Leaf Rolling by Regulating Abaxial Mesophyll Cell PCD Defective formation of sclerenchymatous cells in the curve region of sll1 leaves (Figure 1C) suggested that loss of mechanical strength in abaxial sclerenchymatous cells leads to inward rolling and that SLL1 is required for the normal formation of sclerenchymatous cells. Previous studies have shown the involvement of PCD in the differentiation of sclerenchymatous cells and that multiple genes are involved in this process. We performed qRT-PCR analysis to determine the expression of rice genes that share high homology with TE-PCD marker genes in Zinnia or other species. These genes include TED2, C4H, CP, PI, PAL, 4CL, and Dirigent-1 (involved in lignin assembly rather than as a marker gene of the TE-PCD process, as determined by the finding that proteins harboring arrays of monolignol radical binding sites are involved in macromolecular lignin assembly; Davin and Lewis, 2005
sll1 Leaves Showed Adaxialized Trends in Abaxial Epidermis, while Enhanced SLL1 Expression Suppresses the Adaxial Characteristics and Stimulates Abaxial Leaf Features As mentioned above, a distinguishing characteristic of the monocot leaf is that microhairs or ligules are present only at the adaxial surface. In sll1-1, the microhairs can be observed on both epidermal surfaces of some plants (Figure 8A ), and the ligules exist on the abaxial side of the joint (Figure 8B). This suggests an adaxialized trend in the abaxial epidermis of sll1-1 and indicates the involvement of SLL1 in the development of polarity throughout the leaf abaxial epidermis.
Furthermore, transgenic rice lines overexpressing SLL1 genomic DNA (driven by its own native promoter) were generated on a wild-type background (Figure 9A , top panel). Observations of leaf growth showed that SLL1 overexpression resulted in dwarf plants with twisted and abnormal inner rolled leaves (Figure 9A, bottom panel). We also observed enlarged phloem in the midrib as well as large and small veins (Figure 9B, Table 3 ), revealing the enhanced abaxial features of leaves following SLL1 overexpression.
Our observations of the bulliform cells formed on the adaxial epidermis revealed the loss of the normal fan-shaped anatomical structure. The adaxial sclerenchymatous cells proximal to the vascular bundle were defective in some transgenic lines (Figure 9C), indicating the suppression of adaxial characteristics and demonstrating that SLL1 is important in controlling the specification of abaxial epidermis.
SLL1 Controls Multiple Developmental Processes
Sclerenchymatous tissues present different characteristic distributions in C3 and C4 plants. This study expands our knowledge of rice leaf development, especially the roles of leaf sclerenchymatous cells. Although the rice plant has an equifacial leaf, our results support independent regulation of differentiation in the adaxial and abaxial mesophyll cell layers. This modulates the shape of rice leaves as well as photosynthesis efficiency by regulating the development of polarity.
SLL1 Arrests Normal Sclerenchymatous Cell Formation and Controls Leaf Rolling In wild-type rice plants, the specification of mesophyll cells occurs during the early stages of leaf development, when the young leaf remains wrapped inside the sheath in a crimped state. At plastochron 5, the differentiation of sclerenchymatous cells is visible; however, the mechanical strength is not yet developed, requiring the initiation of PCD and thickening of the secondary cell walls. These processes progress gradually, which is crucial for leaf flattening. The defective differentiation of sclerenchymatous cells in sll1 results in deficient mechanical strength and, hence, the rolled leaf. Throughout tissue differentiation, SLL1 accumulates in the abaxial cell layer (plastochrons 4 and 5). This pattern of expression is more distinct during the early stages of leaf development (plastochrons 1 to 3), consistent with the role of SLL1 in the differentiation of sclerenchymatous cells. The structure, number, and distribution of sclerenchymatous cells differ between C3 and C4 plants, and sclerenchyma is critical to determining leaf form in both C3 and C4 plants. The maize leaf shows polarization of a few sclerenchymatous cells on the abaxial side, while rice has sclerenchymatous cells on both the abaxial and adaxial sides (corresponding to vascular positions). Notably, mutants with defective abaxial/adaxial patterning show varying sclerenchyma specification. We compared two abaxial specification defective mutants (rld1 and sll1). Maize RLD1 promotes adaxial identity, and the abaxial misexpression of which results in ectopic switch sclerenchyma cells extending from the abaxial side to the adaxial side along a subset of veins (due to the partially reversed D/V patterning). By contrast, sll1 forms sclerenchyma cells on the adaxial sides, but these plants exhibit defective abaxial sclerenchyma development, indicating defective abaxial specification or partially abaxialized development without reverse D/V patterning. These findings suggest the possibility of differential roles for sclerenchymatous cells in the control of leaf development in C3 compared with C4 plants. When the effects of SLL1 are compared with the effects of the maize MWP1 (the closest KANADI protein to SLL1, involved in the abaxial-adaxial patterning of leaves), both sll1 and mwp1 show adaxialized sectors of cells in the sheath. However, it is not yet clear whether the phenotypic differences between sll1 and mwp1 are due to the difference between the influence of KANADI proteins on C3 and C4 leaf anatomies or because different KANADI proteins have different functions in determining abaxial polarity of different cell types in different species. There are five KANADI proteins in rice, and it is possible that other KANADI proteins contribute to the polarity determination of rice leaves, and SLL1 has a specialized role in schlerenchyma formation.
SLL1 Controls the Establishment of Rice Leaf Polarity
In dicots, KANADI and YABBY are two primary determinants in establishing abaxial identity (Sawa et al., 1999a
Although rice YAB1 and YAB2 are both expressed in precursor cells of certain specific cell types, including abaxial sclerenchyma, which suggests that these genes may be involved in leaf cell differentiation (Toriba et al., 2007 Although the PCD process during sclerenchyma differentiation is altered in sll1, we suggest that SLL1 functions primarily as a key factor in specifying polarity during adaxial/abaxial patterning. Abnormal sclerenchyma formation resulted in defective PCD, affecting adaxial/abaxial patterning; thus, SLL1 probably regulates PCD indirectly. In addition, the monocot mesophyll cells show a uniform configuration without polarization, in contrast with the adaxial-palisade cells or abaxial-spongy mesophyll cells in dicots, indicating differential controls for the establishment of leaf polarity. In dicots, altered adaxial-abaxial pattern formation often results in rolled leaves; while the leaf rolling of sll1 is due to the defective differentiation of sclerenchymatous cells at the abaxial surface. However, the differentiation of sclerenchymatous cells on the adaxial surface is unaffected in sll1. These findings not only indicate the specific role of SLL1 in controlling abaxial identity and determining abaxial mesophyll cell fate in rice but also suggest that the mesophyll cells of monocot plants do not really have isobilateral mesophyll and, in fact, have polarity. Alternatively, the specification of mesophyll cells on either the adaxial or the abaxial side may rely on distinct signals.
SLL1 Modulates Photosynthesis by Regulating Cell Fate Because leaf rolling may be subject to mechanical regulation (the maintenance of longitudinal rolling requires a continuous mechanical force), the modulation of sclerenchymatous cell formation will provide new insights into the regulation of leaf rolling. Our studies elucidate the control of leaf polarity establishment. This information may help to increase area yield by increasing the number of photosynthetic cells in the leaf and thus enhancing overall photosynthesis.
Plant Material and Growth Conditions The sll1 rice mutant was isolated from the population of Oryza sativa L. ssp. japonica cultivar Nipponbare treated with a 1% ethyl methanesulfonate solution. Nipponbare plants represent the wild type. Mutant sll1 was crossed with an indica rice variety, Nanjing6 (with flat leaf); the resultant F1 plants were selfed to produce the F2 seeds for constructing the F2 mapping population. Rice plants were cultivated in an experimental field at the China National Rice Research Institute under natural growing conditions; field management adhered to normal agricultural practice. For transgenic rice growth, rice seeds were germinated in sterilized water and then grown in pots in a phytotron with a 12-h-light (26°C) and 12-h-dark (18°C) cycle.
Map-Based Cloning of SLL1 To define molecular lesions, 29.57-kb genomic DNA from the sll1 and relevant wild-type variety (Nipponbare) were amplified by PCR. All PCR products were sequenced and the candidate gene was amplified from both sll1 and Nipponbare genomic DNAs using different primers (see Supplemental Table 2 online). Obtained sequences were analyzed with DNAMAN software (version 5.2.2).
Histology and Microscopy Observation Leaves at certain developmental stages were sampled for resin sectioning, intenerated by hydrofluoric acid, fixed in 2.5% glutaraldehyde (16 to 48 h, 48°C), and dehydrated through a graded ethanol series. The samples were embedded in Epon812 resin (Fluka) and polymerized at 60°C. Sections (3 µm) were cut and stained with filtered 1% toluidine blue, microscopically examined (Leica DMR), and photographed. Area measurements of vascular elements were performed using Leica Qwin software. FDA was used to determine the viability of pollen grains. Mature flowers before opening were harvested, and picked anthers were crushed into a fine powder and treated with FDA solution (10 mg FDA dissolved in 1 mL acetone as stock, diluted with 7% sucrose to a concentration of 100 µg/mL for use) for 5 min and then observed under UV light (Leica DMR). Pollen grains emitting green fluorescence were regarded as viable pollen.
Measurement of Chlorophyll Content in Leaves, Photosynthetic Efficiency, and Leaf Rolling Index
The middle part of the 8th to 10th rice leaves in wild-type, sll1-1, and sll1-2 plants at the tilling stage were collected and used to measure the photosynthetic efficiency. The TEACHIG-PAM-2100 chlorophyll fluorometer was used to detect the quantum yield of PSII and the maximal quantum yield of PSII, Fv/Fm, through the RUN1 and RUN2 programs (Schreiber, 1997 The widths of 4th to 5th or 10th to 11th leaves in 40-d-old or 75-d-old sll1-1 and sll1-2 plants were measured under either the natural (Ln) or unfolding state (Lw). The LRI was calculated as LRI = (Lw – Ln)/Lw.
Phylogenetic Analysis
Promoter-Reporter Gene Fusion Studies
In Situ Hybridization Analysis
Confirmation of SLL1 Mutation in sll1-1 and sll1-2 Plants
Constructs and Rice Transformation
Real-Time qRT-PCR Analysis Total RNA was extracted using TRIzol solution and reverse-transcribed according to the manufacturer's instructions (SuperScript preamplification system) and then quantitatively analyzed on the Rotor-Gene real-time thermocycler R3000 (Corbett Research) with real-time PCR Master Mix (Toyobo). For the analysis, a linear standard curve was generated using a series of dilutions for each PCR product; the levels of the transcript in all unknown samples were determined according to the standard curve. The rice ACTIN gene (Os03g50890, amplified by primers 5'-TCCATCTTGGCATCTCTCAG-3' and 5'-GTACCCGCATCAGGCATCTG-3') was amplified and used as an internal standard to normalize the expression of SLL1 and the other tested genes. To test the expressions of the PCD-related genes and rice YAB genes, leaf samples were collected from the middle part of the 7th leaf from different lines. Each sample was duplicated independently to ensure validity with biological replicates. All experiments were repeated three times; the data were statistically analyzed and presented as means plus SD. The primers used to test the expression of SLL1 were as follows: in various tissues, 5'-CAGGTGTCCAACCATGAGC-3' and 5'-GCCTCTGTGATTGCCATCTAAT-3'; in transgenic plants, 5'-CTCTTCAGGGCCGGCGGA-3' and 5'-TGAGGAGTTGCTCCACCT-3'. To test the expression of PCD-related genes, the following genes were examined: Dirigent1 (Os11g42500, 5'-CCTACAGTTGTACAGATGCAATCG-3' and 5'-GATGGAGGAATGGATTGATGGT-3'), PI (Os05g06780, 5'-ATCAAGCCGGAGGTCGCCATC-3' and 5'-CAAGGCAGCGTGTAATCTCC-3'), TED2 (Os10g41170, 5'-AAAGCAATCCAAGCAGCCGAAGACG-3' and 5'-CCACGCGGCATCAGACACTCCATTG-3'), PAL (Os05g35290, 5'-TACACCGACCACCTCACCCACA-3' and 5'-CGAGCCTCTTCGCCTCCTTCAT-3'), C4H (Os05g25640, 5'-GGCGAGATCAACCACGACAACG-3' and 5'-GCAACCGCAGCGTCTCCTTCA-3'), 4CL (Os06g44620, 5'-GTCGTCGCCCTCCCTTACTCCT-3' and 5'-AACAGCGGCAGCAAGCACAGC-3'), and CP (Os08g44270, 5'-CCAACAGGTTCGCCGACCTCAC-3' and 5'-CCGCACGAGCCTTGGTCCTTGA-3'). To test the expression of Os YAB genes, the primers used were as follows: Os YAB1 (Os07g06620, 5'-GCCAACCAGTCAGCAGCAAGTGTCA-3' and 5'-CAAAATGGAGCCGGGGAAGATGAG-3'), Os YAB2 (Os03g44710, 5'-CGGCGCCGGAGCATGTGTG-3' and 5'-TGGCCACAACGGACGGTCACGA-3'), and Os YAB6 (Os12g42610, 5'-GCCTCCTGCTGCTGCTGCCATGG-3' and 5'-AATGGATGTTTGGATAATGT-3').
Scanning Electron Microscopy
Accession Numbers
Supplemental Data
The study was supported by the State Key Project of Basic Research (2005CB120803 and 2006AA10A102), the National Science Foundation of China (30425034 and 30623006), and the National Key Laboratory of Plant Molecular Genetics. We thank Shu-Ping Xu for help with rice transformation, Wei Huang for in situ hybridization, and Hui-Qiong Zheng and Xiao-Yan Gao for the leaf cross-section technique.
1 These authors contributed equally to this work. The authors responsible for distribution of materials integral to the findings presented in this article in accordance with the policy described in the Instructions for Authors (www.plantcell.org) are: Qian Qian (qianqian188{at}hotmail.com) and Hong-Wei Xue (hwxue{at}sibs.ac.cn).
[W] Online version contains Web-only data.
[OA] Open Access articles can be viewed online without a subscription. www.plantcell.org/cgi/doi/10.1105/tpc.108.061457 Received June 13, 2008; Revision received February 10, 2009. accepted February 27, 2009.
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