4.8 Article

An enhancer trap system to track developmental dynamics in Marchantia polymorpha

Journal

PLANT JOURNAL
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/tpj.16394

Keywords

Marchantia polymorpha; enhancer trap; Gemma; Rhizoid; Oil Cell; margin tissue; meristem; auxin; sporeling

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The liverwort Marchantia polymorpha is an ideal model system for studying plant biology due to its streamlined genetics, experimental tractability, and morphological simplicity compared to vascular plants. The authors developed a transformation vector to produce a library of enhancer trap lines for Marchantia, allowing the identification and characterization of novel marker lines. This system revealed the presence of substructures within the apical notch and provided insights into sporeling development in Marchantia. The enhancer trap system is a valuable resource for future research on Marchantia.
A combination of streamlined genetics, experimental tractability and relative morphological simplicity compared to vascular plants makes the liverwort Marchantia polymorpha an ideal model system for studying many aspects of plant biology. Here we describe a transformation vector combining a constitutive fluorescent membrane marker with a nuclear marker that is regulated by nearby enhancer elements and use this to produce a library of enhancer trap lines for Marchantia. Screening gemmae from these lines allowed the identification and characterization of novel marker lines, including markers for rhizoids and oil cells. The library allowed the identification of a margin tissue running around the thallus edge, highlighted during thallus development. The expression of this marker is correlated with auxin levels. We generated multiple markers for the meristematic apical notch region, which have different spatial expression patterns, reappear at different times during meristem regeneration following apical notch excision and have varying responses to auxin supplementation or inhibition. This reveals that there are proximodistal substructures within the apical notch that could not be observed otherwise. We employed our markers to study Marchantia sporeling development, observing meristem emergence as defining the protonema-to-prothallus stage transition, and subsequent production of margin tissue during the prothallus stage. Exogenous auxin treatment stalls meristem emergence at the protonema stage but does not inhibit cell division, resulting in callus-like sporelings with many rhizoids, whereas pharmacologically inhibiting auxin synthesis and transport does not prevent meristem emergence. This enhancer trap system presents a useful resource for the community and will contribute to future Marchantia research.

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