A Member of the PLEIOTROPIC DRUG RESISTANCE Family of ATP Binding Cassette Transporters Is Required for the Formation of a Functional Cuticle in <i>Arabidopsis</i>

Michael Bessire(University of Lausanne), Sandra Borel(University of Lausanne), Guillaume Fabre(University of Lausanne), Luis Pedro Veiga Carraca(University of Lausanne), Nadia Efremova(Max Planck Institute for Plant Breeding Research), Alexander Yephremov(Max Planck Institute for Plant Breeding Research), Yan Cao(University of British Columbia), Reinhard Jetter(University of British Columbia), Anne-Claude Jacquat(University of Fribourg), Jean‐Pierre Métraux(University of Fribourg), Christiane Nawrath(University of Lausanne)
The Plant Cell
May 1, 2011
Cited by 199Open Access
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Abstract

Although the multilayered structure of the plant cuticle was discovered many years ago, the molecular basis of its formation and the functional relevance of the layers are not understood. Here, we present the permeable cuticle1 (pec1) mutant of Arabidopsis thaliana, which displays features associated with a highly permeable cuticle in several organs. In pec1 flowers, typical cutin monomers, such as ω-hydroxylated fatty acids and 10,16-dihydroxypalmitate, are reduced to 40% of wild-type levels and are accompanied by the appearance of lipidic inclusions within the epidermal cell. The cuticular layer of the cell wall, rather than the cuticle proper, is structurally altered in pec1 petals. Therefore, a significant role for the formation of the diffusion barrier in petals can be attributed to this layer. Thus, pec1 defines a new class of mutants. The phenotypes of the pec1 mutant are caused by the knockout of ATP BINDING CASSETTEG32 (ABCG32), an ABC transporter from the PLEIOTROPIC DRUG RESISTANCE family that is localized at the plasma membrane of epidermal cells in a polar manner toward the surface of the organs. Our results suggest that ABCG32 is involved in the formation of the cuticular layer of the cell wall, most likely by exporting particular cutin precursors from the epidermal cell.


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