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Letters to Nature
Nature 411, 706-709 (7 June 2001) | doi:10.1038/35079629; Received 22 December 2000; Accepted 18 April 2001
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KANADI regulates organ polarity in Arabidopsis
Randall A. Kerstetter, Krista Bollman, R. Alexandra Taylor, Kirsten Bomblies & R. Scott Poethig
- University of Pennsylvania, Department of Biology, Plant Science Institute, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19104-6018, USA
Correspondence to: R. Scott Poethig Correspondence and requests for materials should be addressed to R.S.P. (e-mail: Email: spoethig@sas.upenn.edu). The cDNA sequence for KAN is deposited in GenBank under accession number AY030192.
Abstract
Leaves and floral organs are polarized along their adaxial–abaxial (dorsal–ventral) axis. In Arabidopsis, this difference is particularly obvious in the first two rosette leaves, which possess trichomes (leaf hairs) on their adaxial surface but not their abaxial surface1, 2, 3. Mutant alleles of KANADI (KAN) were identified in a screen for mutants that produce abaxial trichomes on these first two leaves. kan mutations were originally identified as enhancers of the mutant floral phenotype of crabs claw (crc), a gene that specifies abaxial identity in carpels4, 5. Here we show that KAN is required for abaxial identity in both leaves and carpels, and encodes a nuclear-localized protein in the GARP family of putative transcription factors. The expression pattern of KAN messenger RNA and the effect of ectopically expressing KAN under the regulation of the cauliflower mosaic virus (CAMV) 35S promoter indicate that KAN may also specify peripheral identity in the developing embryo.
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