Knockout of the tomato HAIRY MERISTEM 4 alters phloem-characteristics and impairs development

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Abstract

The HAIRY MERISTEM (HAM) gene family encodes Type I and II GRAS domain transcription factors in plants. Type II HAMs, predominantly expressed in meristems and regulated by microRNA171, are essential for maintaining undifferentiated meristems, a role conserved across various species. Conversely, the functions of Type I HAMs have been less characterized. In this study, we investigated the role of SlHAM4, a Type I HAM in tomato. Using publicly available expression data and a GUS reporter gene driven by the native SlHAM4 promoter, we determined that SlHAM4 is predominantly expressed in phloem tissues. CRISPR-induced SlHAM4 loss-of- function mutations ( slham4 CR ) resulted in a range of shoot and fruit abnormalities, which were fully reversed by reintroducing SlHAM4 under its native promoter in the mutant background. Mutant abnormalities included increased anthocyanin pigmentation in the leaf and sepal primordia, reminiscent of the phenotypes observed in certain Arabidopsis mutants with compromised phloem, and development of simpler leaves, which was associated with reduction in external phloem area in the leaf rachis. In addition, slham4 CR plants produced significantly smaller fruits of which a fraction of them exhibited catface-like scars, attributed to tears which occurred in the pericarp of mutant ovaries following fruit set. Transcriptome analysis of the wild-type looking mutant ovaries at anthesis revealed specific downregulation of genes implicated in phloem development and functions, in particular those expressed in companion cells (CC). We propose that SlHAM4 is necessary for proper phloem function in part by regulating the expression of a suite of CCs genes that encode essential phloem proteins.

One-sentence summary

SlHAM4 is predominantly expressed in the phloem and its knockout alters phloem- characteristics and impair development highlighting its requirement for proper phloem functionality.

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