Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-94fs2 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-16T17:30:27.536Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Mechanically induced localisation of SECONDARY WALL INTERACTING bZIP is associated with thigmomorphogenic and secondary cell wall gene expression

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  03 May 2024

Joshua H. Coomey
Affiliation:
Biology Department, University of Massachusetts, Amherst, MA, USA Plant Biology Graduate Program, University of Massachusetts, Amherst, MA, USA
Kirk J.-M. MacKinnon
Affiliation:
Biology Department, University of Massachusetts, Amherst, MA, USA Molecular and Cellular Biology Graduate Program, University of Massachusetts, Amherst, MA, USA
Ian W. McCahill
Affiliation:
Biology Department, University of Massachusetts, Amherst, MA, USA Plant Biology Graduate Program, University of Massachusetts, Amherst, MA, USA
Bahman Khahani
Affiliation:
Biology Department, University of Massachusetts, Amherst, MA, USA Plant Biology Graduate Program, University of Massachusetts, Amherst, MA, USA
Pubudu P. Handakumbura
Affiliation:
Biology Department, University of Massachusetts, Amherst, MA, USA Plant Biology Graduate Program, University of Massachusetts, Amherst, MA, USA
Gina M. Trabucco
Affiliation:
Biology Department, University of Massachusetts, Amherst, MA, USA Molecular and Cellular Biology Graduate Program, University of Massachusetts, Amherst, MA, USA
Jessica Mazzola
Affiliation:
Biology Department, University of Massachusetts, Amherst, MA, USA
Nicole A. Leblanc
Affiliation:
Biology Department, University of Massachusetts, Amherst, MA, USA
Rithany Kheam
Affiliation:
Biology Department, University of Massachusetts, Amherst, MA, USA
Miriam Hernandez-Romero
Affiliation:
Biology Department, University of Massachusetts, Amherst, MA, USA Plant Biology Graduate Program, University of Massachusetts, Amherst, MA, USA
Kerrie Barry
Affiliation:
US Department of Energy Joint Genome Institute, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Berkeley, CA, USA
Lifeng Liu
Affiliation:
US Department of Energy Joint Genome Institute, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Berkeley, CA, USA
Ji E. Lee
Affiliation:
US Department of Energy Joint Genome Institute, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Berkeley, CA, USA
John P. Vogel
Affiliation:
US Department of Energy Joint Genome Institute, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Berkeley, CA, USA
Ronan C. O’Malley
Affiliation:
US Department of Energy Joint Genome Institute, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Berkeley, CA, USA
James J. Chambers
Affiliation:
Institute for Applied Life Science, University of Massachusetts, Amherst, MA, USA
Samuel P. Hazen*
Affiliation:
Biology Department, University of Massachusetts, Amherst, MA, USA Plant Biology Graduate Program, University of Massachusetts, Amherst, MA, USA Molecular and Cellular Biology Graduate Program, University of Massachusetts, Amherst, MA, USA
*
Corresponding author: Samuel P. Hazen; Email: [email protected]

Abstract

Plant growth requires the integration of internal and external cues, perceived and transduced into a developmental programme of cell division, elongation and wall thickening. Mechanical forces contribute to this regulation, and thigmomorphogenesis typically includes reducing stem height, increasing stem diameter, and a canonical transcriptomic response. We present data on a bZIP transcription factor involved in this process in grasses. Brachypodium distachyon SECONDARY WALL INTERACTING bZIP (SWIZ) protein translocated into the nucleus following mechanostimulation. Classical touch-responsive genes were upregulated in B. distachyon roots following touch, including significant induction of the glycoside hydrolase 17 family, which may be unique to grass thigmomorphogenesis. SWIZ protein binding to an E-box variant in exons and introns was associated with immediate activation followed by repression of gene expression. SWIZ overexpression resulted in plants with reduced stem and root elongation. These data further define plant touch-responsive transcriptomics and physiology, offering insights into grass mechanotranduction dynamics.

Type
Original Research Article
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution and reproduction, provided the original article is properly cited.
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2024. Published by Cambridge University Press in association with John Innes Centre

1. Introduction

Forces both internal and external to a cell - influence growth. Turgor pressure in conjunction with anisotropic cell wall dynamics directs plant cell shape and expansion. Force perception between neighbouring cells is critical in the development and maintenance of tissue form and function, such as the interlocking pavement cells on the leaf epidermis, or the developmental hotspots in the apical meristem (Bidhendi et al., Reference Bidhendi, Altartouri, Gosselin and Geitmann2019; Hamant et al., Reference Hamant, Heisler, Jönsson, Krupinski, Uyttewaal, Bokov, Corson, Sahlin, Boudaoud and Meyerowitz2008; Uyttewaal et al., Reference Uyttewaal, Burian, Alim, Landrein, Borowska-Wykręt, Dedieu, Peaucelle, Ludynia, Traas and Boudaoud2012). Specific inter-cell forces result in dynamic remodelling of the cortical cytoskeleton, with subsequent changes in cellulose microfibril alignment and alterations to other cell wall components such as pectin methyl esterification (Altartouri et al., Reference Altartouri, Bidhendi, Tani, Suzuki, Conrad, Chebli, Liu, Karunakaran, Scarcelli and Geitmann2019; Bidhendi et al., Reference Bidhendi, Altartouri, Gosselin and Geitmann2019; Bidhendi & Geitmann, Reference Bidhendi and Geitmann2018; Hamant et al., Reference Hamant, Heisler, Jönsson, Krupinski, Uyttewaal, Bokov, Corson, Sahlin, Boudaoud and Meyerowitz2008; Uyttewaal et al., Reference Uyttewaal, Burian, Alim, Landrein, Borowska-Wykręt, Dedieu, Peaucelle, Ludynia, Traas and Boudaoud2012). The classic hallmarks of touch-responsive growth, or thigmomorphogenesis, include reduced plant height, increased radial growth in plants with a cambial meristem, increased branching and delayed flowering time (Biro et al., Reference Biro, Hunt, Erner and Jaffe1980; Braam, Reference Braam2004; Jaffe, Reference Jaffe1973; Jaffe et al., Reference Jaffe, Biro and Bridle1980). These attributes have been leveraged by farmers for hundreds of years. As early as 1680, records show Japanese farmers tread on young wheat and barley seedlings to elicit increased branching, spikes per plant and grain weight per plant, along with stronger roots (Iida, Reference Iida2014). This practice, known as mugifumi, continues today with mechanised rollers. Thigmomorphogenesis in belowground tissues has also been studied to some extent, with the impact of stiffer substrates eliciting changes in root length and straightness, with the implication of hormonal signalling pathways in mediating this response (Lee et al., Reference Lee, Kim, Park, Cho and Jeon2019; Lourenço et al., Reference Lourenço, Serra, Cordeiro, Swanson, Gilroy, Saibo and Oliveira2015; Nam et al., Reference Nam, Park, Gil, Kim, Kim and Park2020).

Mechanical stimulus can significantly remodel gene expression (Braam, Reference Braam2004; Braam & Davis, Reference Braam and Davis1990; Lee et al., Reference Lee, Polisensky and Braam2005). The so-called TOUCH (TCH) genes in Arabidopsis thaliana, encode calmodulin (AtTCH1/AtCaM2), calmodulin-like proteins (AtTCH2/AtCML24, AtTCH3/CML12) and a xyloglucan endotransglucosylase/hydrolase (AtTCH4/AtXTH22) (Braam & Davis, Reference Braam and Davis1990). Touch-responsive gene expression patterns often overlap with other stimuli such as dark, cold and hormone treatment (Lee et al., Reference Lee, Polisensky and Braam2005; Polisensky & Braam, Reference Polisensky and Braam1996). In addition to calcium binding and signalling, genes related to cell wall modification and a variety of transcription factors and kinases are regulated by mechanical stimulus, as well as genes involved in hormone homeostasis and signalling.

Group I bZIPs are also implicated in mechanosensing. VIRE2-INTERACTING PROTEIN 1 (AtVIP1) and related Group I bZIP proteins translocate from the cytoplasm to the nucleus in response to a variety of biotic and abiotic stimuli, including hypo-osmotic conditions (Tsugama et al., Reference Tsugama, Liu and Takano2012, Reference Tsugama, Liu and Takano2014, Reference Tsugama, Liu and Takano2016). The Group I bZIP Nt REPRESSOR OF SHOOT GROWTH (NtRSG) in tobacco plays a role in maintaining GA homeostasis, wherein it translocates to the nucleus in response to cellular bioactive GA levels (Fukazawa et al., Reference Fukazawa, Nakata, Ito, Yamaguchi and Takahashi2010; Igarashi et al., Reference Igarashi, Ishida, Fukazawa and Takahashi2001; Ishida et al., Reference Ishida, Yuasa, Nakata and Takahashi2008; Ito et al., Reference Ito, Ishida, Oe, Fukazawa and Takahashi2017). Translocation appears to be dependent on protein phosphorylation, either from MITOGEN ACTIVATED PROTEIN KINASE 3 during pathogen invasion, or via calcium-dependent protein kinases. When phosphorylated, Group I bZIPs associate with 14–3–3 proteins in the cytoplasm until phosphatase activity releases them for nuclear translocation (Ishida et al., Reference Ishida, Fukazawa, Yuasa and Takahashi2004; Ito et al., Reference Ito, Nakata, Fukazawa, Ishida and Takahashi2014, Reference Ito, Ishida, Oe, Fukazawa and Takahashi2017; Tsugama et al., Reference Tsugama, Liu, Fujino and Takano2018; Van Leene et al., Reference Van Leene, Blomme, Kulkarni, Cannoot, De Winne, Eeckhout, Persiau, Van De Slijke, Vercruysse and Vanden Bossche2016).

Secondary cell walls deposited between the plasma membrane and primary cell wall provide mechanical strength in vascular and structural tissues. Secondary walls are made of crystalline cellulose, hemicelluloses and phenolic lignin polymers. Although functionally similar, secondary walls in monocotyledonous plants have key differences from eudicots, including distinct hemicellulose chemistry and differences in lignin biosynthesis. Grasses also produce mixed-linkage glucans (MLGs), a wall polysaccharide that is rarely found outside the commelinid monocots (Coomey et al., Reference Coomey, Sibout and Hazen2020). A tightly controlled network of feed-forward loops regulates the transcription of wall synthesising enzymes, with NAC family transcription factors activating wall synthesis genes as well as MYB family and other transcription factors that further promote secondary wall synthesis (McCahill & Hazen, Reference McCahill and Hazen2019). These networks are similar between grasses and eudicots, with some components in each that have yet to be described in the other (Coomey et al., Reference Coomey, Sibout and Hazen2020). There are currently no bZIP family members in any secondary wall regulatory model.

Grasses employ a fundamentally different growth mechanism than eudicots, as they lack a cambium layer, and thus no lateral meristem. Stem elongation comes from division and elongation in a discrete series of intercalary meristems, called nodes, with one internode region elongating and pushing up subsequent nodes. Detailed studies of thigmomorphogenesis have been conducted almost exclusively in eudicots. However, recent work in the model cereal grass Brachypodium distachyon shows general overlap with conventional eudicot thigmomorphogenesis but with no change in stem diameter and increased time to flower (Gladala-Kostarz et al., Reference Gladala-Kostarz, Doonan and Bosch2020).

Thigmomorphogenesis is a widely observed phenomenon that results in reduced height, increased radial growth and increased branching. The mechanisms behind this form of growth are not yet fully understood, but involve aspects of hormone regulation, Ca2+ signalling, Group I bZIP intracellular translocation and changes in gene expression. Here we describe the transcriptional response to mechanical stimulation and the function of a B. distachyon bZIP transcription factor, SECONDARY WALL ASSOCIATED bZIP (Bradi1g17700) and its role in touch response and cell wall biosynthesis.

2. Results

2.1. SWIZ is a Group I bZIP transcription factor and candidate cell wall regulator

To identify genes involved in the regulation of secondary cell wall thickening, Trabucco et al. (Reference Trabucco, Matos, Lee, Saathoff, Priest, Mockler, Sarath and Hazen2013) measured transcript abundance in B. distachyon leaf, root and stem tissue. A gene annotated as a bZIP transcription factor, Bradi1g17700, was highly expressed in root and stem relative to leaf (Supplemental Figure S1A). Bradi1g17700 is also a member of a 112-gene coexpression network (Supplemental Table S1) that includes genes highly expressed in the peduncle (Sibout et al., Reference Sibout, Proost, Hansen, Vaid, Giorgi, Ho-Yue-Kuang, Legée, Cézart, Bouchabké-Coussa and Soulhat2017). Phylogenetic analysis of Bradi1g17700, hereinafter referred to as SECONDARY WALL INTERACTING bZIP (SWIZ), amino acid sequence shows it to be an ortholog of the A. thaliana Group I bZIPs (Dröge-Laser et al., Reference Dröge-Laser, Snoek, Snel and Weiste2018; Jakoby et al., Reference Jakoby, Weisshaar, Dröge-Laser, Vicente-Carbajosa, Tiedemann, Kroj and Parcy2002) and closely related to AtbZIP18 and AtbZIP52 (Supplemental Figure S1B, Supplemental File S1).

2.2. SWIZ translocates into the nucleus in response to mechanical stimulus

Group I bZIPs in A. thaliana translocate between the cytosol and nucleus in response to external cellular force. As an ortholog of these proteins, we hypothesised that SWIZ protein may similarly translocate within the cell in response to mechanical force. To test this, the roots of plants overexpressing either SWIZ fused to GFP (SWIZ:GFP-OE) or GFP alone (GFP-OE) were observed following a mechanical stimulus (Figure 1a, Supplemental Files 2 and 3). In control plants, GFP signal was both cytosolic and nuclear, which remained constant over the imaging period (Figure 1b). GFP signal was mostly observed in the cytosol in SWIZ:GFP-OE plants, but following mechanical stimulus, nuclear GFP signal increased substantially, peaking around 30 min post-stimulus and returned to near basal levels by ~60 min, while untouched plants showed no change in signal localisation (Figure 1b).

Figure 1. SWIZ translocates to the nucleus in response to mechanical stimulus, specifically in regions directly stimulated. (a) Image of SWIZ:GFP-OE and GFP-OE roots prior to stimulus and 30 min post-stimulus. Roots were observed immediately following mechanical perturbation. (b) Quantification of nuclear signal in control (purple) and touched (teal) conditions for GFP-OE (left) and SWIZ:GFP-OE (right). n = 14–20 nuclei. (c) SWIZ translocation occurred in the local area of the stimulus. At 30 min, stimulus was applied to an upper region of the root, while at 120 min it was applied to a lower region approximately 3 cm below. n = 109 and 184 nuclei, respectively, for upper and lower regions. Scale bar = 100 μm, (d) SWIZ:GFP-OE roots were imaged by confocal microscopy with stimulus applied in the field of view at 0, 90 and 180 min. n = 126 nuclei. (b–d) Images were taken every 2 min. Nuclear GFP signal was quantified in selected nuclei at each time point. The average nuclear GFP signal is represented by the line with error bars indicating the standard error of the mean. Scale bar = 100 μm. n = 4–6 plants per treatment.

After repeated stimulus in some systems, the plant touch response can become desensitised (Leblanc-Fournier et al., Reference Leblanc-Fournier, Martin, Lenne and Decourteix2014; Martin et al., Reference Martin, Leblanc-Fournier, Julien, Moulia and Coutand2010; Moulia et al., Reference Moulia, Coutand and Julien2015). To test if SWIZ translocation dynamics varied after repeated treatments, we applied mechanical force to SWIZ:GFP-OE roots at regular intervals. A second stimulus was given 90 min after the first, and a third at 180 min. Following each mechanical stimulation, SWIZ consistently translocated from cytoplasm to the nucleus (Figure 1d). This suggests that SWIZ translocation dynamics are not impacted by repeated stimulus events 90 min apart.

To determine if the signal triggering SWIZ translocation is spread beyond the specifically stimulated region, two regions of the same SWIZ:GFP-OE root separated by 3 cm were simultaneously observed. The stimulated region showed typical SWIZ:GFP nuclear signal accumulation and in the region below no translocation was observed (Figure 1c). At 120 min, the treatments were reversed, with the lower root region receiving a stimulus while the upper region was unperturbed. The lower region showed SWIZ:GFP nuclear translocation while the upper region did not. Thus, SWIZ touch-mediated translocation is a local response at the mechanically stimulated region.

2.3. Root transcriptional response to touch

Having established the nuclear translocation of SWIZ in response to touch, we then investigated what effect touch and SWIZ overexpression during touch may have on gene expression. We measured transcript abundance by sequencing mRNA from wildtype and SWIZ-OE root tissue just before touch (0 min) and at 10, 30 and 60 min following touch treatment along the entire length of the root (Figure 2a, Supplemental Figure S2). Principal component analysis of transcript abundance shows the greatest amount of variance is attributed to the first principal component, 60%, where samples cluster based on genotype (Figure 2b). The second principal component, which accounts for 17% of the variance, distinguished between pre-touch and 10 min following touch, with the last two time points clustering similarly.

Figure 2. Transcriptome analysis of touch response in Brachypodium distachyon roots. (a) Root tissue was sampled just prior to touch (t = 0), and at 10, 30 and 60 min following touch treatment in wildtype and SWIZ-OE. (b) Principal component analysis of gene expression across samples shows the greatest difference corresponding to genotype and the second greatest corresponding to time after touch. (c) Venn diagram analysis of unique and overlapping differentially expressed genes in wildtype at 10, 30 and 60 min following touch treatment, relative to t = 0 min. (d) Venn diagram analysis of unique and overlapping differentially expressed genes in SWIZ-OE at 0, 10, 30 and 60 min following touch treatment, relative to wildtype at t = 0 min. (e) Heatmap depiction of hierarchical clustering of gene expression direction and magnitude in wildtype and SWIZ-OE at t = 0, 10, 30 and 60 min following touch treatment. Genes with zero-expression in any sample were excluded. Euclidean distance with complete clustering was used to generate the hierarchy, with k-means grouping to organise the boxes.

The wildtype transcriptome underwent significant remodelling in response to touch, with 8,902 transcripts differentially expressed (q < 0.1) at 10 min post-touch, 5,682 transcripts at 30 min and 7,672 transcripts at 60 min (Supplemental Tables S2–S4). SWIZ itself was strongly upregulated following touch in SWIZ-OE (Supplemental Figure S2). Before touch treatment, SWIZ-OE exhibited 11,488 differentially expressed genes compared to untouched wildtype roots. Furthermore, the SWIZ-OE transcriptome was substantially altered by touch relative to wildtype, with 5,757 transcripts differentially expressed at 10 min post-touch, 6,330 transcripts at 30 min and 5,320 transcripts at 60 min. The overlap between these groups is depicted in Figure 2c,d. Additionally, we compared differentially expressed genes in wildtype and SWIZ-OE both before and after touch (Figure 2e). Hierarchical clustering was employed to visualise the similarity between genotypes and time course samples. Genes in cluster 1 were generally upregulated in wildtype and downregulated in SWIZ-OE. Notably, wildtype at 10 min post-touch exhibited the greatest similarity to pre-touch SWIZ-OE and 10 min post-touch SWIZ-OE, indicating that the untreated SWIZ-OE displayed gene expression patterns akin to the early-touch response in wildtype. These three samples were similarly and uniquely downregulated in gene clusters 2 and 3, while gene cluster 4 was upregulated. These shifts correlated with the timing of SWIZ protein accumulation in the nucleus following touch.

To further investigate the transcriptomic responses of wildtype and SWIZ-OE, we conducted gene ontology (GO) analysis for biological processes for the differentially expressed transcripts at each time point (Figure 3). Following touch, numerous terms were enriched in wildtype samples, encompassing various cellular processes including response to stimulus, stress, abiotic, osmotic and cold (Figure 3a). Interestingly, untouched SWIZ-OE exhibited a strikingly similar profile to wildtype at 10 min, mirroring the findings of hierarchical clustering (Figure 2d). While the GO terms in SWIZ-OE were similar to those enriched in wildtype samples, certain distinctions emerged. For instance, terms related to response to stress and stimulus appeared later in wildtype, specifically at 30 and 60 min post-touch. Additionally, terms associated with metabolic and biosynthetic processes showed greater persistence in SWIZ-OE across most time points, contrasting with their appearance mainly at 10 min post-touch in wildtype, with more variability at 30 and 60 min (Figure 3b).

Figure 3. Gene ontology (GO) analysis of differentially expressed genes in wildtype and SWIZ-OE following touch treatment. (a) GO terms for biological processes for differentially expressed genes in (a) wildtype and (b) SWIZ-OE samples following touch. Dot colour indicates corrected p-value, while the dot size indicates the number of read counts.

Canonical touch-responsive genes include calcium-sensing proteins such as CAMs, CmL and XTHs (Braam & Davis, Reference Braam and Davis1990; Lee et al., Reference Lee, Polisensky and Braam2005). Based on homology with TCH1, TCH2 and TCH3, we identified 79 calcium sensing genes, the majority of which exhibited upregulation in wildtype plants following touch treatment (Figure 4a, Supplemental Table S11). Notably, SWIZ-OE plants also showed upregulation of calcium-sensing genes, albeit with a distinct subset responding over time. SWIZ-OE pre-touch closely resembled wildtype plants at 10 min post-touch, as seen in the hierarchical clustering and GO term analysis (Figures 2d, 3, 4a). However, at 30 and 60 min, gene clades 2 and 3 showed upregulation in wildtype plants post-touch. In contrast, gene clade 1 displayed consistent upregulation in SWIZ-OE across 10, 30 and 60 min, while remaining relatively stable in wildtype plants (Figure 4a, Supplemental Table 11).

Figure 4. Gene expression patterns of canonical and novel touch-responsive genes in wildtype B. distachyon and SWIZ-OE following touch.Differential gene expression of (a) calcium binding (b) xyloglucan endoglycolase/hydrolase (XTH), (c) glycosyl hydrolase 17 (GH17) and (d) GH18 family for wildtype and SWIZ-OE at 0, 10, 30 and 60 min following touch treatment. Full list of genes for calcium binding, XTH and glycoside hydrolases defined by Tyler et al. (Reference Tyler, Bragg, Wu, Yang, Tuskan and Vogel2010) is provided in Supplemental Tables S11–S13. Heatmaps were made with expression valves scaled to the median of three RNA-seq replicates with Euclidean distance and complete clustering was used to generate the hierarchy and k-means grouping to organise the boxes.

Figure 5. Gene expression analysis of cell wall-related genes. Log fold-change of gene expression measured by RNA-seq in wildtype and SWIZ-OE, presented as relative to wildtype expression at time 0, pre-touch. Bar colour indicates class of cell wall gene. Error bars indicate standard deviation of three biological replicates. Significance denoted by * reflecting q < 0.1 compared to wildtype expression at t = 0, with q-values representing Wald test p-values adjusted for false discovery rate. Legend abbreviations: BAHD, BAHD (BEAT, AHCT, HCBT and DAT) acyltransferases; CESA, cellulose synthase; MLG, mixed-linkage glucans.

Additionally, the 37 B. distachyon XTH and XTH-like genes, resembling TCH4, were expressed in both SWIZ-OE and wildtype plants at 10 min post-touch (Figure 4b, Supplemental Table S12). This clade, along with sample clade 2, exhibited upregulation of a subset of XTH genes (gene clades 1 and 2) in both SWIZ-OE and wildtype plants across all time points. However, this group of genes experienced notable downregulation in SWIZ-OE at 10 and 30 min, with a subsequent increase observed at 60 min. Moreover, SWIZ-OE diverged from wildtype plants in gene clade 3, exhibiting modest upregulation in wildtype at 30 min but pronounced upregulation in SWIZ-OE at 10, 30 and 60 min.

Cell wall modification is closely linked to touch-responsive growth, evident in both the gene expression patterns of XTH genes and observable changes in plant stature (Gladala-Kostarz et al., Reference Gladala-Kostarz, Doonan and Bosch2020; Lee et al., Reference Lee, Polisensky and Braam2005). Given this association, we investigated the response of glycosyl hydrolase genes in wildtype and SWIZ-OE plants following touch stimulation. This gene superfamily plays diverse roles in modifying various wall polymers. Our study unveiled a previously unreported observation: the significant upregulation of glycosyl hydrolase family 17 (GH17) and GH18 families following touch. Specifically, the GH17 family (Tyler et al., Reference Tyler, Bragg, Wu, Yang, Tuskan and Vogel2010), known for modifying β-1,3-glucans, exhibited notable changes. Among the 53 annotated GH17 members, 38 were measured. In wildtype plants, 8, 11 and 16 members showed differential expression at 10, 30 and 60 min, respectively, while in SWIZ-OE plants, the numbers were 22, 7, 10 and 7 at 0, 10, 30 and 60 min, respectively. Fisher’s exact test revealed significant enrichment of GH17 expression at 60 min in wildtype (adjusted p = 0.04) and at 0 min in SWIZ-OE (adjusted p = 6.15 × 10–3) (Figure 4c, Supplemental Table S13). Notably, SWIZ-OE plants at 0 min exhibited a gene expression pattern like wildtype plants at 10 min. In the sample clade analysis, wildtype plants at 30 and 60 min clustered together in sample clade 2, with pronounced upregulation of some GH17 members in gene clades 2 and 3, and a mix of downregulation and modest upregulation in gene clade 1. Conversely, SWIZ-OE plants at 10, 30 and 60 min grouped in sample clade 3, showing strong upregulation of gene clade 1, and downregulation mixed with modest upregulation of genes in gene clades 2 and 3.

The GH18 family was overrepresented with differentially expressed genes in just SWIZ-OE at 30 min following touch (Figure 4d). GH18 enzymes are characterised as chitinases, and are involved in modifying and hydrolysing chitin oligomers, typically in fungal cell walls. Fisher’s exact test determined significant enrichment of GH18 expression at 30 min (adjusted p = 7.53 × 10–3). The pattern of expression of this family shows overall repression in SWIZ-OE at 0 min, similar to wildtype at 10 and 30 min. SWIZ-OE showed general upregulation at 10, 30 and 60 min, as does wildtype at 60 min.

Broadly speaking, SWIZ-OE expression levels at 0 min closely resemble those of the wildtype but diverged notably at subsequent time points. SWIZ-OE exhibited a pronounced upregulation of genes that were modestly induced in the wildtype, alongside an inverse regulation pattern for certain subsets of genes across various time points.

An interactive platform for exploring this B. distachyon touched-root transcriptome further is available online at (https://hazenlab.shinyapps.io/swiztc/).

2.4. Specific cell wall genes are downregulated immediately following touch, then induced concurrent with SWIZ nuclear translocation and more strongly in SWIZ-OE

Given the impact of touch on certain cell wall modifying genes as described above, and the nature of macro observations of plant stature following touch, we chose to explore specific cell wall gene expression patterns. In particular, we pursued secondary cell wall synthesis and the grass-specific MLG-related genes that have been characterised in the literature (Coomey et al., Reference Coomey, Sibout and Hazen2020). Genes related to secondary cell wall synthesis were immediately downregulated in wildtype plants following touch but were subsequently upregulated (Figure 4, Supplemental Table S5–S10). Xylan, cellulose, MLG, and callose synthesis-associated genes were upregulated at 30 and 60 min following touch, while lignin biosynthesis and BAHD acyltransferase genes were upregulated at 60 min. Lignin biosynthesis originates from the shikimate biosynthetic pathway, comprising several enzymatic steps to produce monolignols, which are subsequently radicalised to facilitate polymerisation. Genes encoding enzymes across all steps of this process were upregulated following touch, with strong induction in SWIZ-OE at 10, 30 and 60 min. Before touch, nearly all cell wall-associated genes investigated were significantly downregulated relative to wildtype, then significantly upregulated following touch (Figure 5). In SWIZ-OE, cell wall-related terms were enriched in paths that had stronger upregulation earlier than the same terms in wildtype (Supplemental Figure S3A-B). Network analysis of gene expression patterns over time using the iDREM software showed that in SWIZ-OE plants, cell wall genes were more rapidly induced. Notably, cell wall polysaccharide biosynthesis, particularly glucan biosynthesis, was significantly enriched in SWIZ-OE path D, while not significantly enriched in wildtype (Supplemental Table S14). This is mirrored when looking at specific gene expression, with primary wall CESAs, MLG, and callose synthesis genes all significantly upregulated following touch in SWIZ-OE. Thus, cell wall genes were immediately repressed by touch, followed by significant activation, which occurs more rapidly in SWIZ-OE plants and is associated with the timing of SWIZ nuclear translocation.

Figure 6. DNA affinity purification sequencing to determine SWIZ binding sites (a) Top two most statistically enriched sequence motifs in SWIZ binding sites. (b) Distribution of binding sites across genomic features, relative to primary transcripts of the Brachypodium distachyon annotation v 3.1. (c) Relative distribution of binding sites centred on the transcriptional start site (TSS, blue dashed line), transcriptional termination site (TTS, red dashed line) represents the average length of all annotated transcripts, approximately 4.5 kb away from the TSS. (d) Path determinations from iDREM time course analysis of differentially expressed genes that also have DAP-seq binding sites. Each line represents a set of genes with similar expression level patterns over the time course relative to time 0, pre-touch. Wildtype: promoter and gene body = 170 and 146 genes, respectively. SWIZ-OE: promoter = 163 genes, gene body A and B = 141 and 60, respectively.

2.5. SWIZ protein binding in the gene body is associated with dynamic changes in gene expression

Next, we investigated the direct binding targets of SWIZ protein by performing DNA affinity purification sequencing (DAP-seq) with whole genomic DNA. SWIZ interacted with 2,455 distinct positions in the genome (Supplemental Table S15). Those regions were significantly enriched for two E-box motif variants, (A/C)CAGNCTG(T/G) and (A/C)CAGCTG(T/G) (Figure 6a). Numerous binding sites were between the translational start and stop sites, with 21% of peaks in introns and 21% in exons (Figure 6b). Fewer than 10% of the peaks occurred in UTRs and the promoter (5 kb upstream of the 5‘UTR) and intergenic regions each accounted for 25%. Thus, SWIZ protein is preferentially bound to an E-box-like motif and often in the gene body (Figure 6c).

Table 1 Number of SWIZ DAP-seq targets differentially expressed in wildtype plants after touch treatment relative to untouched wildtype.

Note: The location of SWIZ DAP-seq binding, in either the promoter or gene body regions, is noted as is the direction of differential expression, up or down.

We next compared genes differentially expressed in the SWIZ-OE touch response RNA-seq time courses with the binding targets identified by DAP-seq (Supplemental Tables S5–S9, S15 ). Before touch, genes with promoter-SWIZ interactions were most often downregulated in SWIZ-OE relative to wildtype (Table 1). Following touch, SWIZ promoter binding targets were most often upregulated in SWIZ-OE in all three post-touch time points. Thus, SWIZ promoter binding was coincident with repression, but following a touch stimulus, activation was more prominent. This difference between untreated and touched was not as pronounced in gene body targets, with more upregulated genes 10 min following touch and more downregulated 30 and 60 min following touch. To further explore these trends, we conducted an iDREM cluster analysis of the differentially expressed genes that were also SWIZ protein targets (Figure 6d). For both wildtype and SWIZ-OE, the network analysis revealed a pathway to increased gene expression by 60 min following touch. The network pathway trend for both promoter and gene binding targets in wildtype was immediate repression at 10 min followed by increased expression at 30 and 60 min post-stimulus. A unique pathway was observed among gene body binding targets in SWIZ-OE; transcript abundance was reduced following touch. Thus, SWIZ binding to a promoter or gene body was more strongly associated with increased expression except for gene body targets in touched SWIZ-OE plants, which were more strongly repressed.

Figure 7. SWIZ binding targets differentially expressed in response to touch and SWIZ-OE. Gene expression over time of selected genes with SWIZ binding sites: (a) CSLF6, (b) GA2ox3, (c) SWAM3, and (d) NAC35. Line graphs are the average transcript abundance of three biological replicates for each time point. Binding site determined as peaks of sequence alignment. Scale bar unit is bases. Direction of transcription is shown with arrows on the gene model, 5’ and 3’ UTRs are depicted by narrowed rectangles on the gene model.

Several vignettes stood out as examples of genes differentially expressed by touch, SWIZ-OE transgene, and being bound by SWIZ at various locations. The mixed glucan synthase CSLF6 was bound in the first intron and upregulated by touch and SWIZ-OE (Figure 7a). GA2ox3, which inactivates bioactive GA, was bound by SWIZ protein in both the gene body and 3’UTR and was upregulated 30 min after touch in SWIZ-OE (Figure 7b). An example of gene body binding repression is SWAM3 (Bradi1g30252), the closest ortholog to a wheat transcription factor induced by hypoxia, TaMYB1 (Handakumbura et al., Reference Handakumbura, Brow, Whitney, Zhao, Sanguinet, Lee, Olins, Romero-Gamboa, Harrington and Bascom2018; Lee et al., Reference Lee, Jang, Kim, Kim, Park, Kim and Seo2006) (Figure 7c). A membrane-associated transcription factor, NAC35, was bound by SWIZ in the promoter region and downregulated in SWIZ-OE (Figure 7d).

2.6. Cis-regulatory sequences associated with mechanical stress, wounding and cell wall synthesis are enriched among touch-responsive genes

Touch-responsive genes in wildtype were analysed for enrichment of putative cis-regulatory elements (CREs). We identified several sequences significantly enriched among touch-responsive transcripts (Figure 8, Supplemental Figure S4, Supplemental Table S16, S17). Several of those have been previously described as touch-responsive, including the Rapid Stress Response Element, the GCC boxes AGCCGCC and GCCGCC, a sequence referred to as both the E-box and G-box (CACGTG), CM2, AP2-like, GGNCCCAC site II element, P-box and the GRF and FAR1 binding sites (Doherty et al., Reference Doherty, Van Buskirk, Myers and Thomashow2009; Fernández-Calvo et al., Reference Fernández-Calvo, Chini, Fernández-Barbero, Chico, Gimenez-Ibanez, Geerinck, Eeckhout, Schweizer, Godoy and Franco-Zorrilla2011; Moore et al., Reference Moore, Lee, Wang, Azodi, Grotewold and Shiu2022; Rushton et al., Reference Rushton, Reinstädler, Lipka, Lippok and Somssich2002; Walley et al., Reference Walley, Coughlan, Hudson, Covington, Kaspi, Banu, Harmer and Dehesh2007). Other putative CREs have not previously been identified as touch-responsive. One CRE was exclusively enriched in touch-repressed genes at all time points, the TCP site II element TGGGC. A GATA-like binding site was enriched among 10 min repressed transcripts. The homeobox binding site motif was enriched among both induced and repressed genes. The CGCG-box was enriched among induced genes at all timepoints like RSRE, CM2 and FAR1. The two CREs associated with secondary cell wall thickening were also significantly enriched (Coomey et al., Reference Coomey, Sibout and Hazen2020); the VNS element among induced genes, and the AC element ACC(A/T)ACC with a unique profile. AC elements were enriched among repressed genes at 10 min, in both induced and repressed genes at 30 min, and among induced genes only at 60 min.

Figure 8. Sequence motifs enriched in the cis-regulatory regions of touch-responsive Brachypodium distachyon genes. Negative log p-values for cis-elements, known and not known to be touch-responsive. RSRE – rapid stress response element, FAR1 – FAR-RED impaired response1, GRF – growth-regulating factor, VNS – VND, NST/SND and SMB.

2.7. Root morphology is altered by SWIZ-OE and mechanical treatment

Given the SWIZ protein mechanical response and regulatory influence, we then investigated how SWIZ might impact plant growth in response to touch. We challenged wildtype and SWIZ-OE roots with the same style of touch treatment used in the translocation and gene expression experiments but repeated twice daily for a period of 5 days. In both touch and control conditions, SWIZ-OE roots were significantly shorter than wildtype, suggesting a dwarfing effect from SWIZ overabundance (Supplemental Figure S5A-C). Mechanical challenges to roots have been reported to impact root straightness, a trait that has also been described as being impacted in other bZIP studies (Van Leene et al., Reference Van Leene, Blomme, Kulkarni, Cannoot, De Winne, Eeckhout, Persiau, Van De Slijke, Vercruysse and Vanden Bossche2016; Zha et al., Reference Zha, Wang, Liu, Yan, Zhu and Yang2016). In control conditions, we observed that SWIZ-OE roots were significantly less straight than wildtype, while this was not observed in response to touch (Supplemental Figure S5D). We further tested the mechanoresponse of SWIZ-OE roots by growing seedlings on plates with increasing degrees of plate angle at 10°, 20°, 30° and 40° from vertical as a form of mechanostimulation (Oliva & Dunand, Reference Oliva and Dunand2007; Zha et al., Reference Zha, Wang, Liu, Yan, Zhu and Yang2016) (Supplemental Figure S6). Wildtype B. distachyon roots displayed decreasing root length with increasing plate angle. SWIZ-OE roots were shorter than wildtype at all plate angles tested (Supplemental Figure S6). Root straightness did not show any significant differences.

2.8 B. distachyon displays classic thigmomorphogenic phenotypes

We next investigated the effect of touch treatment on aboveground tissue. Wildtype plants were perturbed with a metal bar once every 90 min for either 2 or 3 weeks (Supplemental Figures S7 and S8). After the treatment period, all plants were allowed to recover and grow to senescence (Supplemental Figure S8). Two-week stressed plants were significantly shorter than control plants, and 3-week stressed plants were shorter still (Supplemental Figure S8A-B). Despite this difference in height, there was no significant difference in aboveground biomass (Supplemental Figure S8C ). Three-week stressed plants had significantly more branches, (Supplemental Figure S8D). Transverse stem cross sections in the third elongated internode and peduncle did not show a significant difference in cell wall thickness or phloroglucinol staining in response to touch (Supplemental Figure S8E-G).

2.9. Stem height and cell wall thickening are affected by SWIZ-OE and touch treatment

To test the role of SWIZ in regulating thigmomorphogenesis and secondary cell wall development, we tested wildtype and SWIZ-OE under 2 weeks of mechanical perturbation as described above. In control conditions, there were no differences among genotypes in height, weight, or branching. Touch significantly shortened both wildtype and SWIZ-OE stems relative to control conditions, but not relative to each other (Supplemental Figure S9, S10). Transverse sections of the stem were made in the peduncle, the last elongated stem internode where the touch treatment occurred during stem elongation, and stained with phloroglucinol-HCl. SWIZ-OE touched peduncles showed significantly thicker interfascicular fibre cell walls compared to untouched, but not significantly different from touched wildtype (Supplemental Figure S10B-C).

3. Discussion

Touch stimulus is generally an inhibitor of plant elongation growth, but promotes branching and radial expansion (Braam, Reference Braam2004; Chehab et al., Reference Chehab, Eich and Braam2009; Jaffe, Reference Jaffe1973). The majority of this work has been done in dicots, where increased radial growth has been associated with greater deposition of secondary wall-forming cells, particularly in woody species such as poplar (Biro et al., Reference Biro, Hunt, Erner and Jaffe1980; Börnke & Rocksch, Reference Börnke and Rocksch2018; Coutand et al., Reference Coutand, Martin, Leblanc-Fournier, Decourteix, Julien and Moulia2009; Niez et al., Reference Niez, Dlouha, Moulia and Badel2019; Roignant et al., Reference Roignant, Badel, Leblanc-Fournier, Brunel-Michac, Ruelle, Moulia and Decourteix2018). Our understanding of thigmomorphogenesis in grasses is limited, and mostly in the agricultural context of lodging (Shah et al., Reference Shah, Yahyam, Shah, Nadeem, Ali, Ali, Wang, Riaz, Rehman and Wu2019). While these studies highlight the importance of stem strength and associated cell wall defects, they do relatively little to elucidate the mechanosensitive response. Recent work by Gladala-Kostarz et al. (Reference Gladala-Kostarz, Doonan and Bosch2020) describes grass touch response to both wind and direct mechanical treatment, with an emphasis on cell walls and stem anatomy. Touch treatment significantly increased lignin content and wall stiffness.

Specific gene expression patterns have become molecular hallmarks of plant touch response, most notably induction of the TCH and similar genes. Orthologs of wall modifying XTHs and calcium binding genes are upregulated in response to mechanical stimulation across species, and as we present here, in B. distachyon. Touch elicits major global changes in gene expression, with 2.5% to 10% of the genes assayed in A. thaliana and poplar differentially expressed (Lee et al., Reference Lee, Polisensky and Braam2005; Pomiès et al., Reference Pomiès, Decourteix, Franchel, Moulia and Leblanc-Fournier2017; Van Moerkercke et al., Reference Van Moerkercke, Duncan, Zander, Šimura, Broda, Vanden Bossche, Lewsey, Lama, Singh and Ljung2019). In sorghum (Sorghum bicolor), leaf sheath imposes mechanical constraints on emerging buds, and removing this dramatically altered gene expression, with 42% of genes differentially expressed over a 9 h period (Liu & Finlayson, Reference Liu and Finlayson2019). Recent work in cereal species, including oat, wheat, and barley, showed 2-5% differential gene expression within 2 h of mechanostimulation of young leaves with a soft brush (Darwish et al., Reference Darwish, Ghosh, Bentzer, Tsardakas Renhuldt, Proux-Wera, Kamal, Spannagl, Hause, Sirijovski and Van Aken2023). In our analysis, we applied a q-value significance cutoff of 0.1, which accounts to some extent for the larger number of genes we find differentially expressed compared to other reports. An interactive application (https://hazenlab.shinyapps.io/swiztc) allows users to sort gene expression results by q-value, p-value, or log-2 fold-change, and may be used by readers to make their own comparisons. Our results are similar to studies in other species in the strong induction of canonical TCH genes, along with stress-related genes (Pomiès et al., Reference Pomiès, Decourteix, Franchel, Moulia and Leblanc-Fournier2017). Canonical touch-responsive genes such as the orthologs of TCH1-4 and related XTH and CML genes were upregulated immediately following stimulus in wildtype. We also note the previously unreported touch-induction of GH17 and GH18 family genes, as well as CSLF6, suggesting a role for β−1,3 glucan modification and MLG and in grass touch response. Furthermore, the pronounced enrichment of chitinases within GH18 may imply their involvement in biotic stress response pathways. Fungal hyphal invasion inherently entails a mechanical aspect, potentially triggering both chitinases for degradation and callose modifiers for cell wall patching in response.

Touch-regulated expression of secondary cell wall-related transcripts appears to differ between early and late timepoints. Upon touch, we observed immediate repression of many key cell wall biosynthetic enzymes, followed by significant upregulation 1 h after stimulus. In poplar, no significant repression of these transcripts was reported, but terms related to wood or cell wall synthesis were also not enriched among touch-regulated transcripts until 24 or 72 h after touch (Pomiès et al., Reference Pomiès, Decourteix, Franchel, Moulia and Leblanc-Fournier2017). In other cereals, genes related to cell wall polysaccharides were upregulated 25-60 min following touch while lignin biosynthetic genes down regulated (Darwish et al., Reference Darwish, Ghosh, Bentzer, Tsardakas Renhuldt, Proux-Wera, Kamal, Spannagl, Hause, Sirijovski and Van Aken2023). While differences in mechanostimulation, tissue type, gene expression quantification, and temporal sampling schemes complicate direct comparisons of plant touch response experiments, together these data suggest that delayed induction of secondary cell wall transcripts is a common feature of plant touch responses.

The transcriptome response in SWIZ-OE before and following touch treatment is notable in that SWIZ-OE at 0 min consistently clustered most closely with wildtype at 10 min, indicating that the transcriptome of an untouched SWIZ-OE root is similar to an early-touch response wildtype. This is likely due to the presence of some SWIZ protein in the nucleus before touch. Following touch, the remaining cytoplasmic SWIZ protein translocates to the nucleus, and in some gene clusters we observe downregulation of genes in SWIZ-OE that were upregulated in wildtype. This inversion may suggest several possible mechanisms, such as SWIZ having a repressive function, or SWIZ activating a transcription circuit that triggers quick repression of touch-induced genes.

The timing of SWIZ nuclear accumulation following mechanostimulation was consistent with A. thaliana Group I bZIPs (Tsugama et al., Reference Tsugama, Liu and Takano2014, Reference Tsugama, Liu and Takano2016). However, by adopting a finer temporal sampling scheme, and quantifying nuclear signal sooner after touch (2 vs. 30 min), our results clarify the rapidity of this translocation. Furthermore, we show that the speed and magnitude of SWIZ nuclear accumulation is not diminished over successive touch treatments. Poplar transcriptional response to a second touch stimulus was significantly attenuated relative to a single treatment and trees given daily touch treatment for 4 days no longer showed touch-induced increases in their rates of radial growth (Martin et al., Reference Martin, Leblanc-Fournier, Julien, Moulia and Coutand2010; Pomiès et al., Reference Pomiès, Decourteix, Franchel, Moulia and Leblanc-Fournier2017). If B. distachyon is likewise desensitised to repeated touch, the repeatability of SWIZ translocation implies a mechanism downstream of touch perception and bZIP translocation in mediating that shift.

Although we did not observe a robust secondary wall response in touched stems, touch-responsive wall synthesis is still implicated by our transcriptomic data. Two CREs not previously associated with touch response, the AC and VNS elements, were identified in our touch-responsive and SWIZ-targeted datasets. These sites are bound by NAC and MYB proteins that regulate the thickening of secondary cell walls (Handakumbura et al., Reference Handakumbura, Brow, Whitney, Zhao, Sanguinet, Lee, Olins, Romero-Gamboa, Harrington and Bascom2018; Kim et al., Reference Kim, Ko and Han2012; Ohtani et al., Reference Ohtani, Nishikubo, Xu, Yamaguchi, Mitsuda, Goué, Shi, Ohme-Takagi and Demura2011; Olins et al., Reference Olins, Lin, Lee, Trabucco, MacKinnon and Hazen2018; Tamura et al., Reference Tamura, Endo, Suzuki, Sato, Kato, Ohtani, Yamaguchi and Demura2019; Zhong et al., Reference Zhong, Lee, McCarthy, Reeves, Jones and Ye2011; Zhong & Ye, Reference Zhong and Ye2012).

Before touch, several genes in the monolignol biosynthetic pathway were significantly downregulated in SWIZ-OE plants. Following touch, most of these genes were significantly upregulated. This activity is consistent with the compositional data presented by Gladala-Kostarz et al. (Reference Gladala-Kostarz, Doonan and Bosch2020). This activation may be a result of direct binding of SWIZ, or an indirect effect from other transcriptional regulators like the NAC transcription factor SWN5 that is significantly upregulated in SWIZ-OE following touch and capable of activating the full developmental programme for secondary cell wall synthesis (Valdivia et al., Reference Valdivia, Herrera, Gianzo, Fidalgo, Revilla, Zarra and Sampedro2013). The E-box (CANNTG) was initially described as a bHLH binding motif; many bZIP phylogenetic groups in A. thaliana have been shown to bind similar sequences (O’Malley et al., Reference O’Malley, Huang, Song, Lewsey, Bartlett, Nery, Galli, Gallavotti and Ecker2016). Using the same technique, we identified the SWIZ binding motifs as (A/C)CAGNCTG(T/G) and (A/C)CAGCTG(T/G), very similar to those bound by A. thaliana orthologs, although an ambiguous nucleotide in the core of one variant is not reported for other Group I bZIPs. Genes bound by SWIZ in vitro show both activation and repression following touch, suggesting a complex regulatory function for SWIZ. Furthermore, SWIZ direct binding sites were found in both promoter regions and gene bodies, and most often in genes activated by touch. SWIZ gene body binding targets tended to be repressed in SWIZ-OE plants following touch, without either being clearly associated with up- or down-regulation. AtVIP1 and AtbZIP29 have both been described as activators (Pitzschke et al., Reference Pitzschke, Djamei, Teige and Hirt2009; Ringli & Keller, Reference Ringli and Keller1998; Van Leene et al., Reference Van Leene, Blomme, Kulkarni, Cannoot, De Winne, Eeckhout, Persiau, Van De Slijke, Vercruysse and Vanden Bossche2016; Yin et al., Reference Yin, Zhu, Dai, Lamb and Beachy1997), while AtbZIP18 is described as a repressor (Gibalová et al., Reference Gibalová, Steinbachová, Hafidh, Bláhová, Gadiou, Michailidis, Műller, Pleskot, Dupľáková and Honys2017; Tsugama et al., Reference Tsugama, Liu and Takano2012). The directionality of SWIZ transcriptional control remains to be determined.

4. Conclusions

Touch significantly remodelled the B. distachyon transcriptome, with notable changes in wall polysaccharide biosynthetic gene expression not previously reported and revealed an enrichment of secondary cell wall-associated CREs, the AC and VNS elements. SWIZ translocation dynamics are similar to other bZIP proteins, and the timing of this translocation is consistent with the differential touch-responsive gene expression in SWIZ-OE. Some of the data presented here rely on overexpression of SWIZ, which comes with certain limitations as to how directly the phenotypic and molecular results relate to SWIZ-specific function in wildtype plants. Further experimentation is needed to elucidate the bZIP regulatory network in response to touch and other stimuli.

5. Materials and methods

5.1. Phylogenetic analysis

Protein sequences described for A. thaliana, B. distachyon and O. sativa (Liu & Chu, Reference Liu and Chu2015) as Group II bZIPs were selected and searched against the most recent genome annotations in Phytozome v12.1 (https://phytozome.jgi.doe.gov). The Nicotiana tabacum homologs NtRSGa and NtRSGb were also added to the analysis. Protein sequences were aligned by MAFFT using the L-INS-I model (Katoh et al., Reference Katoh, Rozewicki and Yamada2019). A maximum-likelihood phylogenetic tree bootstrap resampling value of 1000 was generated in W-IQ-TREE (Trifinopoulos et al., Reference Trifinopoulos, Nguyen, von Haeseler and Minh2016). All proteins in the phylogenetic analysis are described in Supplemental File S1.

5.2. Plant transformation

Overexpression constructs and plant transformation were carried out as previously described using accession Bd21-3 (Handakumbura et al., Reference Handakumbura, Matos, Osmont, Harrington, Heo, Kafle, Kim, Baskin and Hazen2013). Bradi1g17700 coding sequence was amplified from cDNA and cloned into the pOL001 ubigate ori1 binary expression vector (Handakumbura et al., Reference Handakumbura, Brow, Whitney, Zhao, Sanguinet, Lee, Olins, Romero-Gamboa, Harrington and Bascom2018) to make the SWIZ-OE trangene. The coding sequence without stop codon was amplified and cloned in frame with the enhanced GFP coding sequence in the pOL001 vector to generate SWIZ:GFP-OE. For both constructs, three independent events were analysed with no phenotypic difference between them for height or translocation dynamics among the SWIZ:GFP-OE lines.

5.3. Translocation assay

Bd21-3 seeds were surface sterilised and grown vertically on 1X MS media, pH 5.7, without sucrose for 6 days at 28°C in the dark. After 6 days, seedlings were moved to treatment plates containing 1X MS media, pH 5.7.

All observations were made on a Nikon A1R scanning confocal microscope using a Plan Apo 10× 0.5NA objective and PMT detector. Root areas were located by eye using transmitted light and then imaged with excitation at 488 nm and emission captured at 510–530 nm. Roots were imaged for 30 min pre-treatment, with images captured every 2 min. The one exception is the top panel of Figure 1b, which was made from observations on an Olympus FV3000 point scanning confocal laser microscope with a 10×/NA 0.4 objective and HyD detectors, with excitation at 488 nm and emission collection at 510–530 nm.

To elicit the touch response, the observed root region was gently probed five times in ~5 sec with a blunt probe while observing through the eyepiece (Supplemental Figure S7). Images were captured for 60–90 min post-treatment. For experiments with multiple stimulus events, the timelapse sequence was paused and roots were probed as described for the relevant stimulus events.

Analysis of GFP signal was done using the Nikon NIS Elements Advanced Research V5 software package. Nuclear regions were thresholded for intensity and particle size to identify regions of interest. Fluorescence intensity was calculated for each ROI and averaged at each timepoint. For the top panel of Figure 1b, analysis was carried out in ImageJ with thresholding for intensity and particle size to identify regions of interest.

5.4. Thigmomatic construction and operation

The Thigmomatic is a basic robotic device that sweeps plants with a metal bar at regular intervals to elicit a touch response. The device was constructed from aluminium V-Slot linear rail (Openbuilders Partstore, Monroeville, NJ) and bracket joints for the upright supports (20 mm × 20 mm), cross bars (20 mm × 20 mm), and tracks (20 mm × 40 mm). Two gantry carts ride along the 20 mm × 40 mm V-Slot linear rails, connected by a 6.35 mm diameter metal rod bolted to the carts. Their movement is powered by a belt-driven linear actuator system using a NEMA 17 stepper motor with a 12V 18W AC/DC power supply. Motor function is controlled by a Raspberry Pi 3B microcomputer with stepper motor HAT (Adafruit Industries, New York). The Thigmomatic was programmed to cover a specified distance in one direction once every 90 min.

5.5. Transverse stem sections and histology

Internode segments of the main stem were embedded in 8% agarose. A Leica VT1000 Vibratome was used to make 55 μm thick transverse sections. Histochemical staining with phloroglucinol-HCl was done as previously described (Matos et al., Reference Matos, Whitney, Harrington and Hazen2013). Images were obtained at 4, 10 and 20X using a Nikon Eclipse E200MV R light microscope and PixeLINK 3 MP camera. Cell wall thickness was quantified for interfascicular fibre cells separated by one cell layer from the mestome cells on the phloem side of major vascular bundles. Using ImageJ, lines were drawn across two adjoining walls divided by two yielding one cell wall width.

5.6. RNA extraction and quantification and analysis

Seedlings were grown for 6 days on vertical 1X MS agar plates. Touch treatment was performed as described above using a metal probe along the entire length of the root. Untouched samples were collected immediately before touch treatment and touched samples were collected 10, 30, and 60 min post-treatment. Three roots were pooled per biological replicate, and RNA was extracted by Qiagen RNeasy Plant Mini Kit with on-column DNA digestion with RNase-free DNase I (Qiagen). Strand-specific libraries were prepared using the Illumina TruSeq kit. Libraries were sequenced using Illumina technology and processed as previously described (MacKinnon et al., Reference MacKinnon, Cole, Yu, Coomey, Hartwick, Remigereau, Duffy, Michael, Kay and Hazen2020). Briefly, quality was checked with FastQC (Andrews, Reference Andrews2010), aligned to the Bd21 reference genome (v3.1) using HiSat2 (Kim et al., Reference Kim, Langmead and Salzberg2015), then assembled and quantified using StringTie (Pertea et al., Reference Pertea, Pertea, Antonescu, Chang, Mendell and Salzberg2015). Transcripts were normalised and differential expression tested using the likelihood ratio test from the R (v3.6.0) package DESeq2 (Love et al., Reference Love, Huber and Anders2014). Benjamini-Hochberg p-value adjustments were applied to account for multiple testing with a significance cutoff of 0.1 and 30,380 of 34,310 reference genes had non-zero read counts after normalisation, with an average mapping percentage of 97.8% for all libraries, as determined by SAMtools (Li et al., Reference Li, Handsaker, Wysoker, Fennell, Ruan, Homer, Marth, Abecasis and Durbin2009). Heatmaps were generated using median gene expression scaled by row, with zero-expression genes removed. Hierarchical clustering was performed using Euclidean distances with complete clustering and k-means grouping. Specific treatment contrasts (i.e., wildtype vs SWIZ-OE) were compared by Wald test from DESeq2 (Love et al., Reference Love, Huber and Anders2014). Statistical enrichment of gene families was assessed using Fisher’s exact test. Raw read data were deposited in the European Nucleotide Archive for public access (Accession no.: E-MTAB-10084).

5.7. DNA affinity purification sequencing

DNA affinity purification was carried out as previously described (Handakumbura et al., Reference Handakumbura, Brow, Whitney, Zhao, Sanguinet, Lee, Olins, Romero-Gamboa, Harrington and Bascom2018). In brief, transcription factor coding sequences were HALO tagged and mixed with Bd21 genomic DNA for in vitro binding. Protein-DNA was crosslinked, fragmented, immunoprecipitated using the HALO antibody, barcoded, and sequenced. Reads were mapped to the Bd21 genome using HiSat2 (Kim et al., Reference Kim, Langmead and Salzberg2015) to identify binding target loci. Peak calling and motif analysis were done using HOMER v4.10 (Hypergeometric Optimization of Motif EnRichment) suite (Heinz et al., Reference Heinz, Benner, Spann, Bertolino, Lin, Laslo, Cheng, Murre, Singh and Glass2010). Motif enrichment was calculated against the hypergeometric distribution; the significance threshold was set to p < 0.05. The nearest annotated gene to a bound peak was used for GO analysis. Raw read data were deposited in the European Nucleotide Archive for public access (Accession no.: E-MTAB-10066).

5.8. Gene ontology analysis

Phytozome was used to find orthologs for all B. distachyon v3.1 genes as the reciprocal best match to A. thaliana TAIRv10 protein sequences. Arabidopsis gene identifiers were submitted to g:Profiler (Raudvere et al., Reference Raudvere, Kolberg, Kuzmin, Arak, Adler, Peterson and Vilo2019) for KEGG and Wiki pathway enrichment analysis.

5.9. iDREM network analysis

Probabilistic graphical models that predict diverging gene expression paths were generated using iDREM (Ding et al., Reference Ding, Hagood, Ambalavanan, Kaminski and Bar-Joseph2018). Briefly, this software applies an input-output hidden Markov model to time course gene expression data overlaid with static regulatory information, in this case SWIZ DAP-seq protein-DNA interactions. GO analysis, described above, was performed for each path identified by iDREM.

5.10. Cis-regulatory sequence analysis

Differentially expressed genes following touch were categorised as increasing or decreasing in transcript abundance at each time point. Homer v.4.10 identified regulatory sequences in the 1000 bp upstream of the transcriptional start site of differentially expressed genes previously identified in A. thaliana DAP-seq analysis (Heinz et al., Reference Heinz, Benner, Spann, Bertolino, Lin, Laslo, Cheng, Murre, Singh and Glass2010; O’Malley et al., Reference O’Malley, Huang, Song, Lewsey, Bartlett, Nery, Galli, Gallavotti and Ecker2016). We also applied the growing k-mer approach to identify CREs (Moore et al., Reference Moore, Lee, Wang, Azodi, Grotewold and Shiu2022). In brief, touch-responsive genes were divided into six groups: up or down regulated each timepoint. The 1000 bp upstream of differential expressed genes were searched for all possible 6-mers, plus one additional base (A, T, C and G), and then tested for p-value shift. If the p-value was lower, the 7-mer(s) was kept and grown further up to 12-mer length. The Tomtom tool in MEME Suite 5.4.1 found similarities between significant CREs and the A. thaliana DAP-seq database, with a false discovery rate cutoff of < 0.01.

5.11. Root touch experiment

Bd21-3 seeds were surface sterilised and plated on 1× MS, pH 5.7, containing 0.05 % MES as a buffering agent and 1% plant agar (Gold Bio). Seeds were stratified on plates in the dark at 4 °C for 2 days and then transferred to a Percival PGC-15 growth chamber with day/night conditions of 16 h light at 24 °C and 8 h dark at 18 °C, respectively, and grown at a ~10° angle from vertical. After 2 days, a touch location was designated by selecting the lower of 1 cm up from the root tip or 1 cm down from the seed and marked on the plate. For 5 days, this marked spot was treated twice daily, 2 h before and 2 h after chamber midday (ZT6 and ZT10). Touch treatment consisted of five firm presses with the side of a sterile pipette tip.

5.12. Root length and straightness measurement

Plates were photographed at the conclusion of the experiment. Semi-automated measurements of root length were performed using the Smart Roots plugin for ImageJ (Lobet et al., Reference Lobet, Pagès and Draye2011). Straightness was quantified as described in Swanson et al. (Reference Swanson, Barker, Ye and Gilroy2015); the straight-line distance between the root tip and the base of the seed was measured, and this value was divided by the traced length of the root.

Data availability statement

The data that support the findings of this study are openly available at E-MTAB-10066 and E-MTAB-10084 in the European Nucleotide Archive and https://hazenlab.shinyapps.io/swiztc.

Author contribution

J.H.C., I.W.M. and S.P.H. conceived and designed the study. J.H.C., I.W.M., P.P.H., G.M.T., M.H-R., J.P.V. and R.C.O. developed techniques and reagents. J.H.C., I.W.M., J.M., N.A.L., R.K., K.B., L.L., J.E.L., J.P.V. and R.C.O. acquired the data. J.H.C., K.J-M.M., I.W.M., B.K. and S.P.H. analysed and interpreted the data. J.H.C., K.J-M.M., I.W.M. and S.P.H. drafted the article. S.P.H. agrees to serve as the author responsible for contact and ensures communication.

Funding statement

This work was supported by the Office of Science, Biological and Environmental Research, Department of Energy (DE-FG02-08ER64700DE and DE-SC0006641); the National Science Foundation Division of Integrative Organismal Systems (NSF IOS-1558072); and the United States Department of Agriculture’s National Institute of Food and Agriculture and Massachusetts Agriculture Experiment Station (MAS00534) to S.P.H., the Constantine J. Gilgut Fellowship to J.H.C, I.W.M. and P.P.H., and the Lotta M. Crabtree Fellowship to J.H.C., I.W.M. and K.J-M.M. The work conducted by the U.S. Department of Energy Joint Genome Institute, a DOE Office of Science User Facility, is supported by the Office of Science of the U.S. Department of Energy operated under Contract No. DE-AC02-05CH11231. The microscopy data were gathered in the Light Microscopy Facility and Nikon Center of Excellence at the Institute for Applied Life Sciences, UMass Amherst with support from the Massachusetts Life Sciences Center.

Competing interest

The authors declare none.

Accession number

AtbZIP18 (At2g40620), AtbZIP29 (At4g38900), AtbZIP52 (At1g06850), AtTCH1/AtCaM2 (At2g41110), AtTCH2/AtCML24 (At5g37770), AtTCH3/CML12 (At2g41100), AtTCH4/AtXTH22 (At5g57560), CAD1 (Bradi3g17920), CESA4 (Bradi4g28350), COMT6 (Bradi3g16530), CSLF6 (Bradi3g16307), GA2ox3 (Bradi2g50280), SWAM3/MYB44 (Bradi1g30252), NAC35 (Bradi2g28020), NtRSGa (Niben101Scf01150g00005), NtRSGb (Niben101Scf02191g00014), SWIZ (Bradi1g17700) and VIP1 (At1g43700).

Supplementary materials

The supplementary material for this article can be found at http://doi.org/10.1017/qpb.2024.5.

Footnotes

Associate Editor: Dr. Olivier Hamant

References

Altartouri, B., Bidhendi, A. J., Tani, T., Suzuki, J., Conrad, C., Chebli, Y., Liu, N., Karunakaran, C., Scarcelli, G., & Geitmann, A. (2019). Pectin chemistry and cellulose crystallinity govern pavement cell morphogenesis in a multi-step mechanism. Plant Physiology, 181, 127141.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Andrews, S (2010). FastQC: A quality control tool for high throughput sequence data. http://www.bioinformatics.babraham.ac.uk/projects/fastqc:Google Scholar
Bidhendi, A. J., Altartouri, B., Gosselin, F. P., & Geitmann, A. (2019) Mechanical stress initiates and sustains the morphogenesis of wavy leaf epidermal cells. Cell Reports 28, 12371250.e6.10.1016/j.celrep.2019.07.006CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Bidhendi, A. J., & Geitmann, A. (2018). Finite element modeling of shape changes in plant cells. Plant Physiology, 176, 4156.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Biro, R. L., Hunt, E. R., Erner, Y., & Jaffe, M. J. (1980). Thigmomorphogenesis: Changes in cell division and elongation in the internodes of mechanically-perturbed or ethrel-treated bean plants. Annals of Botany, 45, 655664.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Börnke, F., & Rocksch, T. (2018). Thigmomorphogenesis – Control of plant growth by mechanical stimulation. Scientia Horticulturae, 234, 344353.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Braam, J. (2004). In touch: Plant responses to mechanical stimuli. The New Phytologist, 165, 373389.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Braam, J., & Davis, R. W. (1990). Rain-, wind-, and touch-induced expression of calmodulin and calmodulin-related genes in Arabidopsis. Cell, 60, 357364.10.1016/0092-8674(90)90587-5CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Chehab, E. W., Eich, E., & Braam, J. (2009). Thigmomorphogenesis: A complex plant response to mechano-stimulation. Journal of Experimental Botany, 60, 4356.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Coomey, J. H., Sibout, R., & Hazen, S. P. (2020). Grass secondary cell walls, Brachypodium distachyon as a model for discovery. The New Phytologist, 227, 17091724.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Coutand, C., Martin, L., Leblanc-Fournier, N., Decourteix, M., Julien, J.-L., & Moulia, B. (2009). Strain mechanosensing quantitatively controls diameter growth and PtaZFP2 gene expression in poplar. Plant Physiology, 151, 223232.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Darwish, E., Ghosh, R., Bentzer, J., Tsardakas Renhuldt, N., Proux-Wera, E., Kamal, N., Spannagl, M., Hause, B., Sirijovski, N., & Van Aken, O. (2023). The dynamics of touch-responsive gene expression in cereals. The Plant Journal, 116, 282302.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Deppmann, C. D., Acharya, A., Rishi, V., Wobbes, B., Smeekens, S., Taparowsky, E. J., & Vinson, C. (2004). Dimerization specificity of all 67 B-ZIP motifs in Arabidopsis thaliana: A comparison to Homo sapiens B-ZIP motifs. Nucleic Acids Research, 32, 34353445.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Ding, J., Hagood, J. S., Ambalavanan, N., Kaminski, N., & Bar-Joseph, Z. (2018). iDREM: Interactive visualization of dynamic regulatory networks. PLoS Computational Biology, 14, e1006019.10.1371/journal.pcbi.1006019CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Doherty, C. J., Van Buskirk, H. A., Myers, S. J., & Thomashow, M. F. (2009). Roles for Arabidopsis CAMTA transcription factors in cold-regulated gene expression and freezing tolerance. Plant Cell, 21, 972984.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Dröge-Laser, W., Snoek, B. L., Snel, B., & Weiste, C. (2018). The Arabidopsis bZIP transcription factor family-an update. Current Opinion in Plant Biology, 45, 3649.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Ehlert, A., Weltmeier, F., Wang, X., Mayer, C. S., Smeekens, S., Vicente-Carbajosa, J., & Dröge-Laser, W. (2006). Two-hybrid protein-protein interaction analysis in Arabidopsis protoplasts: Establishment of a heterodimerization map of group C and group S bZIP transcription[CMT4] factors. The Plant Journal, 46, 890900.10.1111/j.1365-313X.2006.02731.xCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fernández-Calvo, P., Chini, A., Fernández-Barbero, G., Chico, J-M., Gimenez-Ibanez, S., Geerinck, J., Eeckhout, D., Schweizer, F., Godoy, M., Franco-Zorrilla, J. M., et al. (2011). The Arabidopsis bHLH transcription factors MYC3 and MYC4 are targets of JAZ repressors and act additively with MYC2 in the activation of jasmonate responses. Plant Cell 23, 701715.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Fukazawa, J., Nakata, M., Ito, T., Matsushita, A., Yamaguchi, S., & Takahashi, Y. (2011). bZIP transcription factor RSG controls the feedback regulation of NtGA20ox1 via intracellular localization and epigenetic mechanism. Plant Signaling & Behavior, 6, 2628.10.4161/psb.6.1.14114CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Fukazawa, J., Nakata, M., Ito, T., Yamaguchi, S., & Takahashi, Y. (2010). The transcription factor RSG regulates negative feedback of NtGA20ox1 encoding GA 20-oxidase. The Plant Journal, 62, 10351045.Google ScholarPubMed
Fukazawa, J., Sakai, T., Ishida, S., Yamaguchi, I., Kamiya, Y., & Takahashi, Y. (2000). Repression of shoot growth, a bZIP transcriptional activator, regulates cell elongation by controlling the level of gibberellins. Plant Cell, 12, 901915.10.1105/tpc.12.6.901CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Gibalová, A., Steinbachová, L., Hafidh, S., Bláhová, V., Gadiou, Z., Michailidis, C., Műller, K., Pleskot, R., Dupľáková, N., & Honys, D. (2017). Characterization of pollen-expressed bZIP protein interactions and the role of ATbZIP18 in the male gametophyte. Plant Reproduction, 30, 117.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Gladala-Kostarz, A., Doonan, J. H., & Bosch, M. (2020). Mechanical stimulation in Brachypodium distachyon: Implications for fitness, productivity and cell wall properties. Plant, Cell & Environment, 43, 13141330.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Grigoryan, G., & Keating, A. E. (2006). Structure-based prediction of bZIP partnering specificity. Journal of Molecular Biology, 355, 11251142.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Hamant, O., Heisler, M. G., Jönsson, H., Krupinski, P., Uyttewaal, M., Bokov, P., Corson, F., Sahlin, P., Boudaoud, A., Meyerowitz, E. M., et al. (2008)/ Developmental patterning by mechanical signals in Arabidopsis. Science 322, 16501655.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Handakumbura, P., Matos, D., Osmont, K., Harrington, M., Heo, K., Kafle, K., Kim, S., Baskin, T., & Hazen, S. (2013). Perturbation of Brachypodium distachyon CELLULOSE SYNTHASE A4 or 7 results in abnormal cell walls. BMC Plant Biology, 13, 131.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Handakumbura, P. P., Brow, K., Whitney, I. P., Zhao, K., Sanguinet, K. A., Lee, S. J., Olins, J., Romero-Gamboa, S. P., Harrington, M. J., Bascom, C. J., et al. (2018). SECONDARY WALL ASSOCIATED MYB1 is a positive regulator of secondary cell wall thickening in Brachypodium distachyon and is not found in the Brassicaceae. The Plant Journal 96, 485699.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Heinz, S., Benner, C., Spann, N., Bertolino, E., Lin, Y. C., Laslo, P., Cheng, J. X., Murre, C., Singh, H., & Glass, C. K. (2010). Simple combinations of lineage-determining transcription factors prime cis-regulatory elements required for macrophage and B cell identities. Molecular Cell, 38, 576589.10.1016/j.molcel.2010.05.004CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Igarashi, D., Ishida, S., Fukazawa, J., & Takahashi, Y. (2001). 14-3-3 proteins regulate intracellular localization of the bZIP transcriptional activator RSG. Plant Cell, 13, 24832497.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Iida, H. (2014). Mugifumi, a beneficial farm work of adding mechanical stress by treading to wheat and barley seedlings. Frontiers in Plant Science, 5, 453.10.3389/fpls.2014.00453CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Ishida, S., Fukazawa, J., Yuasa, T., & Takahashi, Y. (2004). Involvement of 14-3-3 signaling protein binding in the functional regulation of the transcriptional activator REPRESSION OF SHOOT GROWTH by gibberellins. Plant Cell, 16, 26412651.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Ishida, S., Yuasa, T., Nakata, M., & Takahashi, Y. (2008). A tobacco calcium-dependent protein kinase, CDPK1, regulates the transcription factor REPRESSION OF SHOOT GROWTH in response to gibberellins. Plant Cell, 20, 32733288.10.1105/tpc.107.057489CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Ito, T., Ishida, S., Oe, S., Fukazawa, J., & Takahashi, Y. (2017). Autophosphorylation affects substrate-binding affinity of tobacco Ca2+-dependent protein kinase1. Plant Physiology, 174, 24572468.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ito, T., Nakata, M., Fukazawa, J., Ishida, S., & Takahashi, Y. (2014). Scaffold function of Ca2+-DEPENDENT PROTEIN KINASE: Tobacco Ca2+-DEPENDENT PROTEIN KINASE1 transfers 14-3-3 to the substrate REPRESSION OF SHOOT GROWTH after phosphorylation. Plant Physiology, 165, 17371750.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jaffe, M. J. (1973). Thigmomorphogenesis: The response of plant growth and development to mechanical stimulation: With special reference to Bryonia dioica. Planta, 114, 143157.10.1007/BF00387472CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Jaffe, M. J., Biro, R., & Bridle, K. (1980). Thigmomorphogenesis: Calibration of the parameters of the sensory function in beans. Physiologia Plantarum, 49, 410416.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jakoby, M., Weisshaar, B., Dröge-Laser, W., Vicente-Carbajosa, J., Tiedemann, J., Kroj, T., Parcy, F., & bZIP Research Group (2002). bZIP transcription factors in Arabidopsis. Trends in Plant Science, 7, 106111.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Katoh, K., Rozewicki, J., & Yamada, K. D. (2019). MAFFT online service: Multiple sequence alignment, interactive sequence choice and visualization. Briefings in Bioinformatics, 20, 11601166.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Kim, D., Langmead, B., & Salzberg, S. L. (2015). HISAT: A fast spliced aligner with low memory requirements. Nature Methods, 12, 357.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Kim, W.-C., Ko, J.-H., & Han, K.-H. (2012). Identification of a cis-acting regulatory motif recognized by MYB46, a master transcriptional regulator of secondary wall biosynthesis. Plant Molecular Biology, 78, 489501.10.1007/s11103-012-9880-7CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Leblanc-Fournier, N., Martin, L., Lenne, C., & Decourteix, M. (2014). To respond or not to respond, the recurring question in plant mechanosensitivity. Frontiers in Plant Science, 5, 401.10.3389/fpls.2014.00401CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Lee, D., Polisensky, D. H., & Braam, J. (2005). Genome-wide identification of touch- and darkness-regulated Arabidopsis genes: A focus on calmodulin-like and XTH genes. The New Phytologist, 165, 429444.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lee, H-J., Kim, H-S., Park, J. M., Cho, H. S., & Jeon, J. H. (2019). PIN-mediated polar auxin transport facilitates root obstacle avoidance. The New Phytologist, 225, 12851296.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Lee, T. G., Jang, C. S., Kim, J. Y., Kim, D. S., Park, J. H., Kim, D. Y., & Seo, Y. W. (2006). A Myb transcription factor (TaMyb1) from wheat roots is expressed during hypoxia: Roles in response to the oxygen concentration in root environment and abiotic stresses. Physiologia Plantarum, 129, 375385.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Li, H., Handsaker, B., Wysoker, A., Fennell, T., Ruan, J., Homer, N., Marth, G., Abecasis, G., Durbin, R., & 1000 Genome Project Data Processing Subgroup (2009). The sequence alignment/map format and SAMtools. Bioinformatics, 25, 20782079.10.1093/bioinformatics/btp352CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Liu, R., & Finlayson, S. A. (2019). Sorghum tiller bud growth is repressed by contact with the overlying leaf. Plant, Cell & Environment, 42, 21202132.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Liu, X., & Chu, Z. (2015). Genome-wide evolutionary characterization and analysis of bZIP transcription factors and their expression profiles in response to multiple abiotic stresses in Brachypodium distachyon. BMC Genomics, 16, 227.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Lobet, G., Pagès, L., & Draye, X. (2011). A novel image-analysis toolbox enabling quantitative analysis of root system architecture. Plant Physiology, 157, 2939.10.1104/pp.111.179895CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Lourenço, T. F., Serra, T. S., Cordeiro, A. M., Swanson, S. J., Gilroy, S., Saibo, N. J. M., & Oliveira, M. M. (2015). The Rice E3-ubiquitin ligase HIGH EXPRESSION OF OSMOTICALLY RESPONSIVE GENE1 modulates the expression of ROOT MEANDER CURLING, a GENE involved in root Mechanosensing, through the interaction with two ETHYLENE-RESPONSE FACTOR transcription factors. Plant Physiology, 169, 22752287.Google Scholar
Love, M. I., Huber, W., & Anders, S. (2014). Moderated estimation of fold change and dispersion for RNA-seq data with DESeq2. Genome Biology, 15, 550.10.1186/s13059-014-0550-8CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
MacKinnon, K. J.-M., Cole, B. J., Yu, C., Coomey, J. H., Hartwick, N. T., Remigereau, M.-S., Duffy, T., Michael, T. P., Kay, S. A., & Hazen, S. P. (2020). Changes in ambient temperature are the prevailing cue in determining Brachypodium distachyon diurnal gene regulation. The New Phytologist, 227, 16491667.10.1111/nph.16507CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Martin, L., Leblanc-Fournier, N., Julien, J.-L., Moulia, B., & Coutand, C. (2010). Acclimation kinetics of physiological and molecular responses of plants to multiple mechanical loadings. Journal of Experimental Botany, 61, 24032412.10.1093/jxb/erq069CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Matos, D. A., Whitney, I. P., Harrington, M. J., & Hazen, S. P. (2013). Cell walls and the developmental anatomy of the Brachypodium distachyon stem internode. PLoS One, 8, e80640.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
McCahill, I. W., & Hazen, S. P. (2019). Regulation of cell wall thickening by a medley of mechanisms. Trends in Plant Science, 24, 853866.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Monshausen, G. B., Bibikova, T. N., Weisenseel, M. H., & Gilroy, S. (2009). Ca2+ regulates reactive oxygen species production and pH during mechanosensing in Arabidopsis roots. Plant Cell, 21, 23412356.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Moore, B. M., Lee, Y. S., Wang, P., Azodi, C., Grotewold, E., & Shiu, S.-H. (2022). Modeling temporal and hormonal regulation of plant transcriptional response to wounding. Plant Cell, 34, 867888.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Moulia, B., Coutand, C., & Julien, J.-L. (2015). Mechanosensitive control of plant growth: Bearing the load, sensing, transducing, and responding. Frontiers in Plant Science, 6, 52.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Nam, B. E., Park, Y.-J., Gil, K.-E., Kim, J.-H., Kim, J. G., & Park, C.-M. (2020). Auxin mediates the touch-induced mechanical stimulation of adventitious root formation under windy conditions in Brachypodium distachyon. BMC Plant Biology, 20, 335.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Niez, B., Dlouha, J., Moulia, B., & Badel, E. (2019). Water-stressed or not, the mechanical acclimation is a priority requirement for trees. Trees, 33, 279291.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
O’Malley, R. C., Huang, S.-S. C., Song, L., Lewsey, M. G., Bartlett, A., Nery, J. R., Galli, M., Gallavotti, A., & Ecker, J. R. (2016). Cistrome and epicistrome features shape the regulatory DNA landscape. Cell, 165, 12801292.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Ohtani, M., Nishikubo, N., Xu, B., Yamaguchi, M., Mitsuda, N., Goué, N., Shi, F., Ohme-Takagi, M., & Demura, T. (2011). A NAC domain protein family contributing to the regulation of wood formation in poplar. The Plant Journal, 67, 499512.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Olins, J. R., Lin, L., Lee, S. J., Trabucco, G. M., MacKinnon, K. J. M., & Hazen, S. P. (2018). Secondary wall regulating NACs differentially bind at the promoter at a CELLULOSE SYNTHASE A4 cis-eQTL. Frontiers in Plant Science, 9, 1895.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Oliva, M., & Dunand, C. (2007). Waving and skewing: How gravity and the surface of growth media affect root development in Arabidopsis. The New Phytologist, 176, 3743.10.1111/j.1469-8137.2007.02184.xCrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Pertea, M., Pertea, G. M., Antonescu, C. M., Chang, T.-C., Mendell, J. T., & Salzberg, S. L. (2015). StringTie enables improved reconstruction of a transcriptome from RNA-seq reads. Nature Biotechnology, 33, 290295.Google ScholarPubMed
Pitzschke, A., Djamei, A., Teige, M., & Hirt, H. (2009). VIP1 response elements mediate mitogen-activated protein kinase 3-induced stress gene expression. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 106, 1841418419.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Polisensky, D. H., & Braam, J. (1996). Cold-shock regulation of the Arabidopsis TCH genes and the effects of modulating intracellular calcium levels. Plant Physiology, 111, 12711279.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Pomiès, L., Decourteix, M., Franchel, J., Moulia, B., & Leblanc-Fournier, N. (2017). Poplar stem transcriptome is massively remodelled in response to single or repeated mechanical stimuli. BMC Genomics, 18, 300.10.1186/s12864-017-3670-1CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Raudvere, U., Kolberg, L., Kuzmin, I., Arak, T., Adler, P., Peterson, H., & Vilo, J. (2019). G:Profiler: A web server for functional enrichment analysis and conversions of gene lists. Nucleic Acids Research, 47, W191W198.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ringli, C., & Keller, B. (1998). Specific interaction of the tomato bZIP transcription factor VSF-1 with a non-palindromic DNA sequence that controls vascular gene expression. Plant Molecular Biology, 37, 977988.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Roignant, J., Badel, É., Leblanc-Fournier, N., Brunel-Michac, N., Ruelle, J., Moulia, B., & Decourteix, M. (2018). Feeling stretched or compressed? The multiple mechanosensitive responses of wood formation to bending. Annals of Botany, 121, 11511161.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Rushton, P. J., Reinstädler, A., Lipka, V., Lippok, B., & Somssich, I. E. (2002). Synthetic plant promoters containing defined regulatory elements provide novel insights into pathogen- and wound-induced signaling. Plant Cell, 14, 749762.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Schütze, K., Harter, K., & Chaban, C. (2008). Post-translational regulation of plant bZIP factors. Trends in Plant Science, 13, 247255.10.1016/j.tplants.2008.03.002CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Shah, L., Yahyam, M., Shah, S. M. A., Nadeem, M., Ali, A., Ali, A., Wang, J., Riaz, M. W., Rehman, S., Wu, W., et al. (2019) Improving lodging resistance: using wheat and rice as classical examples. International Journal of Molecular Sciences, 20, 4211.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sibout, R., Proost, S., Hansen, B. O., Vaid, N., Giorgi, F. M., Ho-Yue-Kuang, S., Legée, F., Cézart, L., Bouchabké-Coussa, O., Soulhat, C., et al. (2017). Expression atlas and comparative coexpression network analyses reveal important genes involved in the formation of lignified cell wall in Brachypodium distachyon. The New Phytologist 215, 10091025.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Swanson, S. J., Barker, R., Ye, Y., & Gilroy, S. (2015). Evaluating mechano-transduction and touch responses in plant roots. Methods in Molecular Biology, 1309, 143150.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Szczegielniak, J., Borkiewicz, L., Szurmak, B., Lewandowska-Gnatowska, E., Statkiewicz, M., Klimecka, M., Cieśla, J., & Muszyńska, G. (2012). Maize calcium-dependent protein kinase (ZmCPK11): Local and systemic response to wounding, regulation by touch and components of jasmonate signaling. Physiologia Plantarum, 146, 114.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Tamura, T., Endo, H., Suzuki, A., Sato, Y., Kato, K., Ohtani, M., Yamaguchi, M., & Demura, T. (2019). Affinity-based high-resolution analysis of DNA binding by VASCULAR-RELATED NAC-DOMAIN7 via fluorescence correlation spectroscopy. The Plant Journal, 100, 298313.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Trabucco, G. M., Matos, D. A., Lee, S. J., Saathoff, A., Priest, H., Mockler, T. C., Sarath, G., & Hazen, S. P. (2013). Functional characterization of cinnamyl alcohol dehydrogenase and caffeic acid O-methyltransferase in Brachypodium distachyon. BMC Biotechnology, 13, 61.10.1186/1472-6750-13-61CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Trifinopoulos, J., Nguyen, L.-T., von Haeseler, A., & Minh, B. Q. (2016). W-IQ-TREE: A fast online phylogenetic tool for maximum likelihood analysis. Nucleic Acids Research, 44, W232W235.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Tsugama, D., Liu, S., Fujino, K., & Takano, T. (2018). Calcium signalling regulates the functions of the bZIP protein VIP1 in touch responses in Arabidopsis thaliana. Annals of Botany, 122, 12191229.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Tsugama, D., Liu, S., & Takano, T. (2012). A bZIP protein, VIP1, is a regulator of osmosensory signaling in Arabidopsis. Plant Physiology, 159, 144155.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Tsugama, D., Liu, S., & Takano, T. (2014). Analysis of functions of VIP1 and its close homologs in osmosensory responses of Arabidopsis thaliana. PLoS One, 9, e103930.10.1371/journal.pone.0103930CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Tsugama, D., Liu, S., & Takano, T. (2016). The bZIP protein VIP1 is involved in touch responses in Arabidopsis roots. Plant Physiology, 171, 13551365.Google ScholarPubMed
Tyler, L., Bragg, J. N., Wu, J., Yang, X., Tuskan, G. A., & Vogel, J. P. (2010). Annotation and comparative analysis of the glycoside hydrolase genes in Brachypodium distachyon. BMC Genomics, 11, 600.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Uyttewaal, M., Burian, A., Alim, K., Landrein, B., Borowska-Wykręt, D., Dedieu, A., Peaucelle, A., Ludynia, M., Traas, J., Boudaoud, A., et al. (2012). Mechanical stress acts via katanin to amplify differences in growth rate between adjacent cells in Arabidopsis. Cell 149, 439451.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Valdivia, E. R., Herrera, M. T., Gianzo, C., Fidalgo, J., Revilla, G., Zarra, I., & Sampedro, J. (2013). Regulation of secondary wall synthesis and cell death by NAC transcription factors in the monocot Brachypodium distachyon. Journal of Experimental Botany, 64, 13331343.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Van Leene, J., Blomme, J., Kulkarni, S. R., Cannoot, B., De Winne, N., Eeckhout, D., Persiau, G., Van De Slijke, E., Vercruysse, L., Vanden Bossche, R., et al. (2016). Functional characterization of the Arabidopsis transcription factor bZIP29 reveals its role in leaf and root development. Journal of Experimental Botany 67, 58255840.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Van Moerkercke, A., Duncan, O., Zander, M., Šimura, J., Broda, M., Vanden Bossche, R., Lewsey, M. G., Lama, S., Singh, K. B., Ljung, K., et al. (2019). A MYC2/MYC3/MYC4-dependent transcription factor network regulates water spray-responsive gene expression and jasmonate levels. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 116, 2334523356.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Walley, J., Coughlan, S., Hudson, M. E., Covington, M. F., Kaspi, R., Banu, G., Harmer, S. L., & Dehesh, K. (2007). Mechanical stress induces biotic and abiotic stress responses via a novel cis-element. PLoS Genetics, 3, 18001812.10.1371/journal.pgen.0030172CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Weltmeier, F., Ehlert, A., Mayer, C. S., Dietrich, K., Wang, X., Schütze, K., Alonso, R., Harter, K., Vicente-Carbajosa, J., & Dröge-Laser, W. (2006). Combinatorial control of Arabidopsis proline dehydrogenase transcription by specific heterodimerisation of bZIP transcription factors. The EMBO Journal, 25, 31333143.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Yin, Y., Zhu, Q., Dai, S., Lamb, C., & Beachy, R. N. (1997). RF2a, a bZIP transcriptional activator of the phloem-specific rice tungro bacilliform virus promoter, functions in vascular development. The EMBO Journal, 16, 52475259.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Zha, G., Wang, B., Liu, J., Yan, J., Zhu, L., & Yang, X. (2016). Mechanical touch responses of Arabidopsis TCH1-3 mutant roots on inclined hard-agar surface. International Agrophysics, 30, 65.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Zhong, R., Lee, C., McCarthy, R. L., Reeves, C. K., Jones, E. G., & Ye, Z.-H. (2011). Transcriptional activation of secondary wall biosynthesis by rice and maize NAC and MYB transcription factors. Plant & Cell Physiology, 52, 18561871.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Zhong, R., & Ye, Z.-H. (2012). MYB46 and MYB83 bind to the SMRE sites and directly activate a suite of transcription factors and secondary wall biosynthetic genes. Plant & Cell Physiology, 53, 368380.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Figure 0

Figure 1. SWIZ translocates to the nucleus in response to mechanical stimulus, specifically in regions directly stimulated. (a) Image of SWIZ:GFP-OE and GFP-OE roots prior to stimulus and 30 min post-stimulus. Roots were observed immediately following mechanical perturbation. (b) Quantification of nuclear signal in control (purple) and touched (teal) conditions for GFP-OE (left) and SWIZ:GFP-OE (right). n = 14–20 nuclei. (c) SWIZ translocation occurred in the local area of the stimulus. At 30 min, stimulus was applied to an upper region of the root, while at 120 min it was applied to a lower region approximately 3 cm below. n = 109 and 184 nuclei, respectively, for upper and lower regions. Scale bar = 100 μm, (d) SWIZ:GFP-OE roots were imaged by confocal microscopy with stimulus applied in the field of view at 0, 90 and 180 min. n = 126 nuclei. (b–d) Images were taken every 2 min. Nuclear GFP signal was quantified in selected nuclei at each time point. The average nuclear GFP signal is represented by the line with error bars indicating the standard error of the mean. Scale bar = 100 μm. n = 4–6 plants per treatment.

Figure 1

Figure 2. Transcriptome analysis of touch response in Brachypodium distachyon roots. (a) Root tissue was sampled just prior to touch (t = 0), and at 10, 30 and 60 min following touch treatment in wildtype and SWIZ-OE. (b) Principal component analysis of gene expression across samples shows the greatest difference corresponding to genotype and the second greatest corresponding to time after touch. (c) Venn diagram analysis of unique and overlapping differentially expressed genes in wildtype at 10, 30 and 60 min following touch treatment, relative to t = 0 min. (d) Venn diagram analysis of unique and overlapping differentially expressed genes in SWIZ-OE at 0, 10, 30 and 60 min following touch treatment, relative to wildtype at t = 0 min. (e) Heatmap depiction of hierarchical clustering of gene expression direction and magnitude in wildtype and SWIZ-OE at t = 0, 10, 30 and 60 min following touch treatment. Genes with zero-expression in any sample were excluded. Euclidean distance with complete clustering was used to generate the hierarchy, with k-means grouping to organise the boxes.

Figure 2

Figure 3. Gene ontology (GO) analysis of differentially expressed genes in wildtype and SWIZ-OE following touch treatment. (a) GO terms for biological processes for differentially expressed genes in (a) wildtype and (b) SWIZ-OE samples following touch. Dot colour indicates corrected p-value, while the dot size indicates the number of read counts.

Figure 3

Figure 4. Gene expression patterns of canonical and novel touch-responsive genes in wildtype B. distachyon and SWIZ-OE following touch.Differential gene expression of (a) calcium binding (b) xyloglucan endoglycolase/hydrolase (XTH), (c) glycosyl hydrolase 17 (GH17) and (d) GH18 family for wildtype and SWIZ-OE at 0, 10, 30 and 60 min following touch treatment. Full list of genes for calcium binding, XTH and glycoside hydrolases defined by Tyler et al. (2010) is provided in Supplemental Tables S11–S13. Heatmaps were made with expression valves scaled to the median of three RNA-seq replicates with Euclidean distance and complete clustering was used to generate the hierarchy and k-means grouping to organise the boxes.

Figure 4

Figure 5. Gene expression analysis of cell wall-related genes. Log fold-change of gene expression measured by RNA-seq in wildtype and SWIZ-OE, presented as relative to wildtype expression at time 0, pre-touch. Bar colour indicates class of cell wall gene. Error bars indicate standard deviation of three biological replicates. Significance denoted by * reflecting q < 0.1 compared to wildtype expression at t = 0, with q-values representing Wald test p-values adjusted for false discovery rate. Legend abbreviations: BAHD, BAHD (BEAT, AHCT, HCBT and DAT) acyltransferases; CESA, cellulose synthase; MLG, mixed-linkage glucans.

Figure 5

Figure 6. DNA affinity purification sequencing to determine SWIZ binding sites (a) Top two most statistically enriched sequence motifs in SWIZ binding sites. (b) Distribution of binding sites across genomic features, relative to primary transcripts of the Brachypodium distachyon annotation v 3.1. (c) Relative distribution of binding sites centred on the transcriptional start site (TSS, blue dashed line), transcriptional termination site (TTS, red dashed line) represents the average length of all annotated transcripts, approximately 4.5 kb away from the TSS. (d) Path determinations from iDREM time course analysis of differentially expressed genes that also have DAP-seq binding sites. Each line represents a set of genes with similar expression level patterns over the time course relative to time 0, pre-touch. Wildtype: promoter and gene body = 170 and 146 genes, respectively. SWIZ-OE: promoter = 163 genes, gene body A and B = 141 and 60, respectively.

Figure 6

Table 1 Number of SWIZ DAP-seq targets differentially expressed in wildtype plants after touch treatment relative to untouched wildtype.

Figure 7

Figure 7. SWIZ binding targets differentially expressed in response to touch and SWIZ-OE. Gene expression over time of selected genes with SWIZ binding sites: (a) CSLF6, (b) GA2ox3, (c) SWAM3, and (d) NAC35. Line graphs are the average transcript abundance of three biological replicates for each time point. Binding site determined as peaks of sequence alignment. Scale bar unit is bases. Direction of transcription is shown with arrows on the gene model, 5’ and 3’ UTRs are depicted by narrowed rectangles on the gene model.

Figure 8

Figure 8. Sequence motifs enriched in the cis-regulatory regions of touch-responsive Brachypodium distachyon genes. Negative log p-values for cis-elements, known and not known to be touch-responsive. RSRE – rapid stress response element, FAR1 – FAR-RED impaired response1, GRF – growth-regulating factor, VNS – VND, NST/SND and SMB.

Supplementary material: File

Coomey et al. supplementary material

Coomey et al. supplementary material
Download Coomey et al. supplementary material(File)
File 8.6 MB

Author comment: Mechanically induced localisation of SECONDARY WALL INTERACTING bZIP is associated with thigmomorphogenic and secondary cell wall gene expression — R0/PR1

Comments

Dear Editor

This letter accompanies a manuscript for your consideration - “Mechanotropic bZIP localization is associated with thigmomorphogenic and secondary cell wall gene expression” by Joshua Coomey and colleagues. Our study describes the translocation of a Brachypodium distachyon bZIP transcription factor, SECONDARY WALL INTERACTING bZIP (SWIZ), to the nucleus in response to mechanostimulation. The binding of SWIZ protein to an E-box variant in both exons and introns was associated with an immediate activation, followed by a subsequent repression of gene expression. These results provide valuable insights into the dynamics of mechanotransduction in grasses and begin to reveal a mechanism for the poorly described phenomena of mechanically stimulated secondary wall thickening. We also provide a webtool to explore touch responsive gene expression. We think that this study will be of interest to the fields of mechanobiology and cell wall biosynthesis, and speaks broadly to the plasticity of growth in grasses.

Thank you for your consideration,

Sam Hazen

Recommendation: Mechanically induced localisation of SECONDARY WALL INTERACTING bZIP is associated with thigmomorphogenic and secondary cell wall gene expression — R0/PR2

Comments

Dear Samuel,

We now have received two constructive reviews for your article. There is certainly interest, and the story perfectly fits the scope of the journal. Yet, the reviewers also raise a number of important points to address before acceptance. Please take all of them into account for the revision.

Best wishes,

Olivier

Decision: Mechanically induced localisation of SECONDARY WALL INTERACTING bZIP is associated with thigmomorphogenic and secondary cell wall gene expression — R0/PR3

Comments

No accompanying comment.

Author comment: Mechanically induced localisation of SECONDARY WALL INTERACTING bZIP is associated with thigmomorphogenic and secondary cell wall gene expression — R1/PR4

Comments

No accompanying comment.

Recommendation: Mechanically induced localisation of SECONDARY WALL INTERACTING bZIP is associated with thigmomorphogenic and secondary cell wall gene expression — R1/PR5

Comments

As you can see the reviewers are quite polarized. Reviewer 2 has noted a number of shortcomings, but in my view, these can be relatively easily fixed with text/figure changes and toning down (once checked that the results are indeed correct). I therefore invite the authors to revise their manuscript, taking into account this careful analysis from reviewer 2.

Decision: Mechanically induced localisation of SECONDARY WALL INTERACTING bZIP is associated with thigmomorphogenic and secondary cell wall gene expression — R1/PR6

Comments

No accompanying comment.

Author comment: Mechanically induced localisation of SECONDARY WALL INTERACTING bZIP is associated with thigmomorphogenic and secondary cell wall gene expression — R2/PR7

Comments

Dear Dr. Hamant,

We genuinely appreciate the thoughtful and favorable review of our manuscript. We have made many changes in response to the astute assessments by the reviewers. We appreciate the opportunity to improve the manuscript and now return to you a revised manuscript along with our responses to the reviewer comments below.

Sincerely,

Sam Hazen

Recommendation: Mechanically induced localisation of SECONDARY WALL INTERACTING bZIP is associated with thigmomorphogenic and secondary cell wall gene expression — R2/PR8

Comments

As you can see, the reviewer and myself are happy with the revised version of the manuscript - Congratulations!

Decision: Mechanically induced localisation of SECONDARY WALL INTERACTING bZIP is associated with thigmomorphogenic and secondary cell wall gene expression — R2/PR9

Comments

No accompanying comment.