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Dive into the research topics where Boris Parizot is active.

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Featured researches published by Boris Parizot.


The Plant Cell | 2007

Cytokinins Act Directly on Lateral Root Founder Cells to Inhibit Root Initiation

Laurent Laplaze; Eva Benková; Ilda Casimiro; Lies Maes; Steffen Vanneste; Ranjan Swarup; Dolf Weijers; Vanessa Calvo; Boris Parizot; Maria Begoña Herrera-Rodriguez; Remko Offringa; Neil S. Graham; Patrick Doumas; Jiri Friml; Didier Bogusz; Tom Beeckman; Malcolm J. Bennett

In Arabidopsis thaliana, lateral roots are formed from root pericycle cells adjacent to the xylem poles. Lateral root development is regulated antagonistically by the plant hormones auxin and cytokinin. While a great deal is known about how auxin promotes lateral root development, the mechanism of cytokinin repression is still unclear. Elevating cytokinin levels was observed to disrupt lateral root initiation and the regular pattern of divisions that characterizes lateral root development in Arabidopsis. To identify the stage of lateral root development that is sensitive to cytokinins, we targeted the expression of the Agrobacterium tumefaciens cytokinin biosynthesis enzyme isopentenyltransferase to either xylem-pole pericycle cells or young lateral root primordia using GAL4-GFP enhancer trap lines. Transactivation experiments revealed that xylem-pole pericycle cells are sensitive to cytokinins, whereas young lateral root primordia are not. This effect is physiologically significant because transactivation of the Arabidopsis cytokinin degrading enzyme cytokinin oxidase 1 in lateral root founder cells results in increased lateral root formation. We observed that cytokinins perturb the expression of PIN genes in lateral root founder cells and prevent the formation of an auxin gradient that is required to pattern lateral root primordia.


Current Biology | 2010

A novel aux/IAA28 signaling cascade activates GATA23-dependent specification of lateral root founder cell identity.

Bert De Rybel; Valya Vassileva; Boris Parizot; Marlies Demeulenaere; Wim Grunewald; Dominique Audenaert; Jelle Van Campenhout; Paul Overvoorde; Leentje Jansen; Steffen Vanneste; Barbara Möller; Michael Wilson; Tara J. Holman; Gert Van Isterdael; Géraldine Brunoud; Marnik Vuylsteke; Teva Vernoux; Lieven De Veylder; Dirk Inzé; Dolf Weijers; Malcolm J. Bennett; Tom Beeckman

BACKGROUND Lateral roots are formed at regular intervals along the main root by recurrent specification of founder cells. To date, the mechanism by which branching of the root system is controlled and founder cells become specified remains unknown. RESULTS Our study reports the identification of the auxin regulatory components and their target gene, GATA23, which control lateral root founder cell specification. Initially, a meta-analysis of lateral root-related transcriptomic data identified the GATA23 transcription factor. GATA23 is expressed specifically in xylem pole pericycle cells before the first asymmetric division and is correlated with oscillating auxin signaling maxima in the basal meristem. Also, functional studies revealed that GATA23 controls lateral root founder cell identity. Finally, we show that an Aux/IAA28-dependent auxin signaling mechanism in the basal meristem controls GATA23 expression. CONCLUSIONS We have identified the first molecular components that control lateral root founder cell identity in the Arabidopsis root. These include an IAA28-dependent auxin signaling module in the basal meristem region that regulates GATA23 expression and thereby lateral root founder cell specification and root branching patterns.


Plant Physiology | 2007

Diarch Symmetry of the Vascular Bundle in Arabidopsis Root Encompasses the Pericycle and Is Reflected in Distich Lateral Root Initiation

Boris Parizot; Laurent Laplaze; Lilian Ricaud; Elodie Boucheron-Dubuisson; Vincent Bayle; Martin Bonke; Ive De Smet; Scott Poethig; Ykä Helariutta; Jim Haseloff; Dominique Chriqui; Tom Beeckman; Laurent Nussaume

The outer tissues of dicotyledonous plant roots (i.e. epidermis, cortex, and endodermis) are clearly organized in distinct concentric layers in contrast to the diarch to polyarch vascular tissues of the central stele. Up to now, the outermost layer of the stele, the pericycle, has always been regarded, in accordance with the outer tissue layers, as one uniform concentric layer. However, considering its lateral root-forming competence, the pericycle is composed of two different cell types, with one subset of cells being associated with the xylem, showing strong competence to initiate cell division, whereas another group of cells, associated with the phloem, appears to remain quiescent. Here, we established, using detailed microscopy and specific Arabidopsis thaliana reporter lines, the existence of two distinct pericycle cell types. Analysis of two enhancer trap reporter lines further suggests that the specification between these two subsets takes place early during development, in relation with the determination of the vascular tissues. A genetic screen resulted in the isolation of mutants perturbed in pericycle differentiation. Detailed phenotypical analyses of two of these mutants, combined with observations made in known vascular mutants, revealed an intimate correlation between vascular organization, pericycle fate, and lateral root initiation potency, and illustrated the independence of pericycle differentiation and lateral root initiation from protoxylem differentiation. Taken together, our data show that the pericycle is a heterogeneous cell layer with two groups of cells set up in the root meristem by the same genetic pathway controlling the diarch organization of the vasculature.


The Plant Cell | 2011

Auxin-Dependent Cell Cycle Reactivation through Transcriptional Regulation of Arabidopsis E2Fa by Lateral Organ Boundary Proteins

Barbara Berckmans; Valya Vassileva; Stephan Schmid; Sara Maes; Boris Parizot; Satoshi Naramoto; Zoltán Magyar; Claire Lessa Alvim Kamei; Csaba Koncz; László Bögre; Geert Persiau; Geert De Jaeger; Jiří Friml; Rüdiger Simon; Tom Beeckman; Lieven De Veylder

Auxin controls morphogenesis through local activation of cell division, but how auxin signaling controls the core cell cycle machinery in a developmental context is largely unknown. Here, the plant-specific LATERAL ORGAN BOUNDARY transcription factors are revealed to regulate cell cycle entry in response to auxin through transcriptional activation of the retinoblastoma-E2F pathway. Multicellular organisms depend on cell production, cell fate specification, and correct patterning to shape their adult body. In plants, auxin plays a prominent role in the timely coordination of these different cellular processes. A well-studied example is lateral root initiation, in which auxin triggers founder cell specification and cell cycle activation of xylem pole–positioned pericycle cells. Here, we report that the E2Fa transcription factor of Arabidopsis thaliana is an essential component that regulates the asymmetric cell division marking lateral root initiation. Moreover, we demonstrate that E2Fa expression is regulated by the LATERAL ORGAN BOUNDARY DOMAIN18/LATERAL ORGAN BOUNDARY DOMAIN33 (LBD18/LBD33) dimer that is, in turn, regulated by the auxin signaling pathway. LBD18/LBD33 mediates lateral root organogenesis through E2Fa transcriptional activation, whereas E2Fa expression under control of the LBD18 promoter eliminates the need for LBD18. Besides lateral root initiation, vascular patterning is disrupted in E2Fa knockout plants, similarly as it is affected in auxin signaling and lbd mutants, indicating that the transcriptional induction of E2Fa through LBDs represents a general mechanism for auxin-dependent cell cycle activation. Our data illustrate how a conserved mechanism driving cell cycle entry has been adapted evolutionarily to connect auxin signaling with control of processes determining plant architecture.


Trends in Plant Science | 2013

Post-embryonic root organogenesis in cereals: branching out from model plants.

Beata Orman-Ligeza; Boris Parizot; Pascal Gantet; Tom Beeckman; Malcolm J. Bennett; Xavier Draye

The root architecture of higher plants is amazingly diverse. In this review, we compare the lateral root developmental programme in cereals and Arabidopsis thaliana. In cereals, cells in the endodermis are recruited to form the new root cap and overlying cortical cells divide to facilitate the emergence of the lateral root primordium. The TIR1/ABF2 auxin receptors and the AUX/IAA, ARF, and LBD transcriptional regulatory proteins are conserved in cereals and Arabidopsis. Several elements of this regulatory network are common to lateral and crown roots in cereals. Also, the ground meristem from which crown roots differentiate shows similarities with the root pericycle. Studies in cereals promise to give complementary insights into the mechanisms regulating the development of post-embryonic roots in plants.


Nature Chemical Biology | 2012

A role for the root cap in root branching revealed by the non-auxin probe naxillin

Bert De Rybel; Dominique Audenaert; Wei Xuan; Paul Overvoorde; Lucia C. Strader; Stefan Kepinski; Rebecca C. Hoye; Ronald G. Brisbois; Boris Parizot; Steffen Vanneste; Xing Liu; Alison D. Gilday; Ian A. Graham; Long Nguyen; Leentje Jansen; Maria Fransiska Njo; Dirk Inzé; Bonnie Bartel; Tom Beeckman

The acquisition of water and nutrients by plant roots is a fundamental aspect of agriculture and strongly depends on root architecture. Root branching and expansion of the root system is achieved through the development of lateral roots and is to a large extent controlled by the plant hormone auxin. However, the pleiotropic effects of auxin or auxin-like molecules on root systems complicate the study of lateral root development. Here we describe a small-molecule screen in Arabidopsis thaliana that identified naxillin as what is to our knowledge the first non-auxin-like molecule that promotes root branching. By using naxillin as a chemical tool, we identified a new function for root cap-specific conversion of the auxin precursor indole-3-butyric acid into the active auxin indole-3-acetic acid and uncovered the involvement of the root cap in root branching. Delivery of an auxin precursor in peripheral tissues such as the root cap might represent an important mechanism shaping root architecture.


Current Biology | 2015

Root Cap-Derived Auxin Pre-patterns the Longitudinal Axis of the Arabidopsis Root

Wei Xuan; Dominique Audenaert; Boris Parizot; Barbara Möller; Maria Fransiska Njo; Bert De Rybel; Gieljan De Rop; Gert Van Isterdael; Ari Pekka Mähönen; Steffen Vanneste; Tom Beeckman

During the exploration of the soil by plant roots, uptake of water and nutrients can be greatly fostered by a regular spacing of lateral roots (LRs). In the Arabidopsis root, a regular branching pattern depends on oscillatory gene activity to create prebranch sites, patches of cells competent to form LRs. Thus far, the molecular components regulating the oscillations still remain unclear. Here, we show that a local auxin source in the root cap, derived from the auxin precursor indole-3-butyric acid (IBA), modulates the oscillation amplitude, which in turn determines whether a prebranch site is created or not. Moreover, transcriptome profiling identified novel and IBA-regulated components of root patterning, such as the MEMBRANE-ASSOCIATED KINASE REGULATOR4 (MAKR4) that converts the prebranch sites into a regular spacing of lateral organs. Thus, the spatiotemporal patterning of roots is fine-tuned by the root cap-specific conversion pathway of IBA to auxin and the subsequent induction of MAKR4.


PLOS ONE | 2012

Heart of Endosymbioses: Transcriptomics Reveals a Conserved Genetic Program among Arbuscular Mycorrhizal, Actinorhizal and Legume-Rhizobial Symbioses

Alexandre Tromas; Boris Parizot; Nathalie Diagne; Antony Champion; Valérie Hocher; Maı̈mouna Cissoko; Hermann Prodjinoto; Benoit Lahouze; Didier Bogusz; Laurent Laplaze; Sergio Svistoonoff

To improve their nutrition, most plants associate with soil microorganisms, particularly fungi, to form mycorrhizae. A few lineages, including actinorhizal plants and legumes are also able to interact with nitrogen-fixing bacteria hosted intracellularly inside root nodules. Fossil and molecular data suggest that the molecular mechanisms involved in these root nodule symbioses (RNS) have been partially recycled from more ancient and widespread arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) symbiosis. We used a comparative transcriptomics approach to identify genes involved in establishing these 3 endosymbioses and their functioning. We analysed global changes in gene expression in AM in the actinorhizal tree C. glauca. A comparison with genes induced in AM in Medicago truncatula and Oryza sativa revealed a common set of genes induced in AM. A comparison with genes induced in nitrogen-fixing nodules of C. glauca and M. truncatula also made it possible to define a common set of genes induced in these three endosymbioses. The existence of this core set of genes is in accordance with the proposed recycling of ancient AM genes for new functions related to nodulation in legumes and actinorhizal plants.


Plant Physiology | 2010

VisuaLRTC: a new view on lateral root initiation by combining specific transcriptome data sets.

Boris Parizot; Bert De Rybel; Tom Beeckman

Lateral root initiation and development has been increasingly studied over the last two decades. This postembryonic organogenic process guarantees the spatial development and plasticity of the root system in response to environmental cues and is crucial for the plants growth and development. Several independent large-scale transcriptome studies in different species resulted in a wealth of data that can be instructive to understand this process at the molecular level. Here, we present an easy and flexible spreadsheet tool, called Visual Lateral Root Transcriptome Compendium, that combines publicly available data sets involved in Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) lateral root development and links them with additional information on tissue-specific expression and cell cycle involvement, thus allowing the extraction of novel information from existing data sets in a visual and user-friendly manner. We believe that this tool will be valuable not only for root biologists but also for a broader range of scientists as it enables a fast indication of the potential involvement of a given gene during de novo organogenesis.


Science | 2016

Cyclic programmed cell death stimulates hormone signaling and root development in Arabidopsis

Wei Xuan; Leah R. Band; Robert P. Kumpf; Daniël Van Damme; Boris Parizot; Gieljan De Rop; Davy Opdenacker; Barbara Möller; Noemi Skorzinski; Maria Fransiska Njo; Bert De Rybel; Dominique Audenaert; Moritz K. Nowack; Steffen Vanneste; Tom Beeckman

Cell death establishes a site for development As plant roots grow through the soil, lateral roots emerge to reach more resources. Xuan et al. now show that programmed cell death sets the course for lateral root development. Cells in a specialized region of the root cap periodically die off as a group, defining a location at which a lateral root will later develop. Science, this issue p. 384 Cycles of programmed cell death establish the developmental clock in plant roots. The plant root cap, surrounding the very tip of the growing root, perceives and transmits environmental signals to the inner root tissues. In Arabidopsis thaliana, auxin released by the root cap contributes to the regular spacing of lateral organs along the primary root axis. Here, we show that the periodicity of lateral organ induction is driven by recurrent programmed cell death at the most distal edge of the root cap. We suggest that synchronous bursts of cell death in lateral root cap cells release pulses of auxin to surrounding root tissues, establishing the pattern for lateral root formation. The dynamics of root cap turnover may therefore coordinate primary root growth with root branching in order to optimize the uptake of water and nutrients from the soil.

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Laurent Laplaze

Institut de recherche pour le développement

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Wei Xuan

Nanjing Agricultural University

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