Molecular Biology, Cell Biology, and Biochemistry Department, Brown University, Providence, RI 02912, USA
Molecular, Cell, and Developmental Biology, University of California at Santa Cruz, Santa Cruz, CA 95064, USA
Description
GCN5 is a histone acetyltransferase that is well-conserved in eukaryotic species and has been shown to play roles in global histone modification and gene expression. The transcriptional coactivator ADA2 works with GCN5 and other regulators in these processes (Candau et al. 1997; Grant et al. 1997); in Arabidopsis thaliana the functional paralog is referred to as ADA2b (Hark et al. 2009). Pleiotropic phenotypes of plants with T-DNA insertions at these loci were first reported fifteen years ago (Vlachonasios et al. 2003; Bertrand et al. 2003). Since then, we and others have sought to understand the roles of GCN5 and ADA2b in specific developmental pathways. We recently reported that rosette leaf trichomes display altered ploidy and branching morphology in gcn5 and ada2b mutants (Kotak et al. 2018). This suggests that these chromatin factors impact later steps in trichome morphogenesis (Hulskamp 2004).
The data reported here suggest that GCN5 and ADA2b also affect trichome initiation. Using scanning electron microscopy to visualize trichomes on rosette leaves (Fig. 1A), we determined that the number of trichomes on the first true leaf is increased in ada2b-1 as well as gcn5 mutant backgrounds (Fig. 1B). On the second rosette leaf, a similar effect was seen in plants homozygous for the hypomorphic gcn5-1 allele while in gcn5-6 where the catalytic domain of GCN5 is disrupted, there was no distinguishable difference in trichome number (Fig. 1B). When looking at the second rosette leaf in ada2b-1 plants, trichome number was increased in the mutant background. However, counting total number of trichomes does not take into account leaf size. In cases in which we did not detect an obvious increase in total number of trichomes, there is a significant increase in trichome density (Fig. 1C).
Reagents
Arabidopsis thaliana plants were germinated in soil and grown at 22°C under continuous light conditions (140 µmoles/m2/sec). Plants were watered once a week with Hoagland’s solution and a second time weekly (or as needed) with deionized water. Plants were genotyped via PCR and leaves were prepared for scanning electron microscopy (SEM) as described previously (Kotak et al. 2018). Each leaf was examined under the SEM and the total number of trichomes per leaf was counted. ImageJ was used to measure each leaf’s surface area from an SEM image and the trichome density was then calculated. Statistical analyses of the data were made using Student’s t-test.
Acknowledgments
We would like to thank Dr. Konstantinos Vlachonasios (University of Thessaloniki, Greece) for helpful comments on this manuscript and for on-going collaboration.
References
Funding
We thank Muhlenberg College for support of this research.
Reviewed By
Neil OlszewskiHistory
Received: September 12, 2019Accepted: October 7, 2019
Published: October 17, 2019
Copyright
© 2019 by the authors. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0) License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.Citation
Kotak, J; Kendig, A; Cann, K; Shaffer, J; Hark, AT; McCain, ER (2019). Disruption of the histone acetyltransferase GCN5 and the transcriptional coactivator ADA2b affect trichome density in Arabidopsis thaliana. microPublication Biology. 10.17912/micropub.biology.000174.Download: RIS BibTeX