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DIX Domain Polymerization Drives Assembly of Plant Cell Polarity Complexes
Author(s) -
Maritza van Dop,
Marc Fiedler,
Sumanth Mutte,
Jeroen de Keijzer,
Lisa H Olijslager,
Catherine Albrecht,
CheYang Liao,
Marcel E. Janson,
Mariann Bienz,
Dolf Weijers
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
cell
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 26.304
H-Index - 776
eISSN - 1097-4172
pISSN - 0092-8674
DOI - 10.1016/j.cell.2020.01.011
Subject(s) - dishevelled , biology , multicellular organism , polarity (international relations) , cell polarity , microbiology and biotechnology , guard cell , arabidopsis , signal transduction , wnt signaling pathway , frizzled , cell , genetics , gene , mutant
Cell polarity is fundamental for tissue morphogenesis in multicellular organisms. Plants and animals evolved multicellularity independently, and it is unknown whether their polarity systems are derived from a single-celled ancestor. Planar polarity in animals is conferred by Wnt signaling, an ancient signaling pathway transduced by Dishevelled, which assembles signalosomes by dynamic head-to-tail DIX domain polymerization. In contrast, polarity-determining pathways in plants are elusive. We recently discovered Arabidopsis SOSEKI proteins, which exhibit polar localization throughout development. Here, we identify SOSEKI as ancient polar proteins across land plants. Concentration-dependent polymerization via a bona fide DIX domain allows these to recruit ANGUSTIFOLIA to polar sites, similar to the polymerization-dependent recruitment of signaling effectors by Dishevelled. Cross-kingdom domain swaps reveal functional equivalence of animal and plant DIX domains. We trace DIX domains to unicellular eukaryotes and thus show that DIX-dependent polymerization is an ancient mechanism conserved between kingdoms and central to polarity proteins.

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