Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Philip N. Benfey is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Philip N. Benfey.


Cell | 1999

An Auxin-Dependent Distal Organizer of Pattern and Polarity in the Arabidopsis Root

Sabrina Sabatini; Dimitris Beis; Harald Wolkenfelt; Jane Murfett; Tom J. Guilfoyle; Jocelyn E. Malamy; Philip N. Benfey; Ottoline Leyser; Nicole Bechtold; Peter Weisbeek; Ben Scheres

Root formation in plants involves the continuous interpretation of positional cues. Physiological studies have linked root formation to auxins. An auxin response element displays a maximum in the Arabidopsis root and we investigate its developmental significance. Auxin response mutants reduce the maximum or its perception, and interfere with distal root patterning. Polar auxin transport mutants affect its localization and distal pattern. Polar auxin transport inhibitors cause dramatic relocalization of the maximum, and associated changes in pattern and polarity. Auxin application and laser ablations correlate root pattern with a maximum adjacent to the vascular bundle. Our data indicate that an auxin maximum at a vascular boundary establishes a distal organizer in the root.


Cell | 1996

The SCARECROW Gene Regulates an Asymmetric Cell Division That Is Essential for Generating the Radial Organization of the Arabidopsis Root

Laura Di Laurenzio; Joanna Wysocka-Diller; Jocelyn E. Malamy; Leonard Pysh; Yrjö Helariutta; Glenn Freshour; Michael G. Hahn; Kenneth A. Feldmann; Philip N. Benfey

In the Arabidopsis root meristem, initial cells undergo asymmetric divisions to generate the cell lineages of the root. The scarecrow mutation results in roots that are missing one cell layer owing to the disruption of an asymmetric division that normally generates cortex and endodermis. Tissue-specific markers indicate that a heterogeneous cell type is formed in the mutant. The deduced amino acid sequence of SCARECROW (SCR) suggests that it is a member of a novel family of putative transcription factors. SCR is expressed in the cortex/endodermal initial cells and in the endodermal cell lineage. Tissue-specific expression is regulated at the transcriptional level. These results indicate a key role for SCR in regulating the radial organization of the root.


Cell | 2000

The SHORT-ROOT Gene Controls Radial Patterning of the Arabidopsis Root through Radial Signaling

Yrjö Helariutta; Hidehiro Fukaki; Joanna Wysocka-Diller; Keiji Nakajima; Jee Jung; Giovanni Sena; Marie-Theres Hauser; Philip N. Benfey

Asymmetric cell divisions play an important role in the establishment and propagation of the cellular pattern of plant tissues. The SHORT-ROOT (SHR) gene is required for the asymmetric cell division responsible for formation of ground tissue (endodermis and cortex) as well as specification of endodermis in the Arabidopsis root. We show that SHR encodes a putative transcription factor with homology to SCARECROW (SCR). From analyses of gene expression and cell identity in genetically stable and unstable alleles of shr, we conclude that SHR functions upstream of SCR and participates in a radial signaling pathway. Consistent with a regulatory role in radial patterning, ectopic expression of SHR results in supernumerary cell divisions and abnormal cell specification in the root meristem.


Science | 1990

The Cauliflower Mosaic Virus 35S Promoter: Combinatorial Regulation of Transcription in Plants

Philip N. Benfey; Nam-Hai Chua

Appropriate regulation of transcription in higher plants requires specific cis elements in the regulatory regions of genes and their corresponding trans-acting proteins. Analysis of the cauliflower mosaic virus (CaMV) 35S promoter has contributed to the understanding of transcriptional regulatory mechanisms. The intact 35S promoter confers constitutive expression upon heterologous genes in most plants. Dissection into subdomains that are able to confer tissue-specific gene expression has demonstrated that the promoter has a modular organization. When selected subdomains are combined, they confer expression not detected from the isolated subdomains, suggesting that synergistic interactions occur among cis elements. The expression patterns conferred by specific combinations of 35S subdomains differ in tobacco and petunia. This indicates that a combinatorial code of cisregulatory elements may be interpreted differently in different species.


Nature | 2001

Intercellular movement of the putative transcription factor SHR in root patterning

Keiji Nakajima; Giovanni Sena; Tal Nawy; Philip N. Benfey

Positional information is pivotal for establishing developmental patterning in plants, but little is known about the underlying signalling mechanisms. The Arabidopsis root radial pattern is generated through stereotyped division of initial cells and the subsequent acquisition of cell fate. short-root (shr) mutants do not undergo the longitudinal cell division of the cortex/endodermis initial daughter cell, resulting in a single cell layer with only cortex attributes. Thus, SHR is necessary for both cell division and endodermis specification. SHR messenger RNA is found exclusively in the stele cells internal to the endodermis and cortex, indicating that it has a non-cell-autonomous mode of action. Here we show that the SHR protein, a putative transcription factor, moves from the stele to a single layer of adjacent cells, where it enters the nucleus. Ectopic expression of SHR driven by the promoter of the downstream gene SCARECROW (SCR) results in autocatalytic reinforcement of SHR signalling, producing altered cell fates and multiplication of cell layers. These results support a model in which SHR protein acts both as a signal from the stele and as an activator of endodermal cell fate and SCR-mediated cell division.


The EMBO Journal | 1989

The CaMV 35S enhancer contains at least two domains which can confer different developmental and tissue-specific expression patterns.

Philip N. Benfey; Ling Ren; Nam-Hai Chua

We have analyzed expression conferred by two domains from the cauliflower mosaic virus (CaMV) 35S promoter and found different patterns in seeds, seedlings and seven week old plants. Expression from domain A (‐90 to +8) is strongest in the radicle of the embryo, the radicle pole of the endosperm and in root tissue of seedlings and mature plants. Expression from domain B (‐343 to ‐90) is strongest in the cells adjacent the cotyledon of the endosperm, in the cotyledons of the embryo and seedings and in the leaves and stem of mature plants. When both domain A and domain B are present expression is detectable in most tissues at all stages of development. Thus analysis of a constitutive promoter in transgenic plants can be used to identify cis elements that confer tissue specific and developmentally regulated expression.


Nature | 2010

Cell signalling by microRNA165/6 directs gene dose-dependent root cell fate

Annelie Carlsbecker; Ji-Young Lee; Christina Roberts; Jan Dettmer; Satu J. Lehesranta; Jing Zhou; Ove Lindgren; Miguel A. Moreno-Risueno; Anne Vatén; Siripong Thitamadee; Ana Campilho; Jose Sebastian; John L. Bowman; Ykä Helariutta; Philip N. Benfey

A key question in developmental biology is how cells exchange positional information for proper patterning during organ development. In plant roots the radial tissue organization is highly conserved with a central vascular cylinder in which two water conducting cell types, protoxylem and metaxylem, are patterned centripetally. We show that this patterning occurs through crosstalk between the vascular cylinder and the surrounding endodermis mediated by cell-to-cell movement of a transcription factor in one direction and microRNAs in the other. SHORT ROOT, produced in the vascular cylinder, moves into the endodermis to activate SCARECROW. Together these transcription factors activate MIR165a and MIR166b. Endodermally produced microRNA165/6 then acts to degrade its target mRNAs encoding class III homeodomain-leucine zipper transcription factors in the endodermis and stele periphery. The resulting differential distribution of target mRNA in the vascular cylinder determines xylem cell types in a dosage-dependent manner.


Nature Cell Biology | 2008

The auxin influx carrier LAX3 promotes lateral root emergence

Kamal Swarup; Eva Benková; Ranjan Swarup; Ilda Casimiro; Benjamin Péret; Yaodong Yang; Geraint Parry; Erik Nielsen; Ive De Smet; Steffen Vanneste; Mitch P. Levesque; David John Carrier; Nicholas James; Vanessa Calvo; Karin Ljung; Eric M. Kramer; Rebecca Roberts; Neil S. Graham; Sylvestre Marillonnet; Kanu Patel; Jonathan D. G. Jones; Christopher G. Taylor; Daniel P. Schachtman; Sean T. May; Göran Sandberg; Philip N. Benfey; Jiri Friml; Ian D. Kerr; Tom Beeckman; Laurent Laplaze

Lateral roots originate deep within the parental root from a small number of founder cells at the periphery of vascular tissues and must emerge through intervening layers of tissues. We describe how the hormone auxin, which originates from the developing lateral root, acts as a local inductive signal which re-programmes adjacent cells. Auxin induces the expression of a previously uncharacterized auxin influx carrier LAX3 in cortical and epidermal cells directly overlaying new primordia. Increased LAX3 activity reinforces the auxin-dependent induction of a selection of cell-wall-remodelling enzymes, which are likely to promote cell separation in advance of developing lateral root primordia.


Cell | 2010

Transcriptional Regulation of ROS Controls Transition from Proliferation to Differentiation in the Root

Hironaka Tsukagoshi; Wolfgang Busch; Philip N. Benfey

The balance between cellular proliferation and differentiation is a key aspect of development in multicellular organisms. Using high-resolution expression data from the Arabidopsis root, we identified a transcription factor, UPBEAT1 (UPB1), that regulates this balance. Genomewide expression profiling coupled with ChIP-chip analysis revealed that UPB1 directly regulates the expression of a set of peroxidases that modulate the balance of reactive oxygen species (ROS) between the zones of cell proliferation and the zone of cell elongation where differentiation begins. Disruption of UPB1 activity alters this ROS balance, leading to a delay in the onset of differentiation. Modulation of either ROS balance or peroxidase activity through chemical reagents affects the onset of differentiation in a manner consistent with the postulated UPB1 function. This pathway functions independently of auxin and cytokinin plant hormonal signaling. Comparison to ROS-regulated growth control in animals suggests that a similar mechanism is used in plants and animals.


Science | 2008

Cell Identity Mediates the Response of Arabidopsis Roots to Abiotic Stress

José R. Dinneny; Terri A. Long; Jean Y. J. Wang; Jee W. Jung; Daniel Mace; Solomon Pointer; Christa Barron; Siobhan M. Brady; John Schiefelbein; Philip N. Benfey

Little is known about the way developmental cues affect how cells interpret their environment. We characterized the transcriptional response to high salinity of different cell layers and developmental stages of the Arabidopsis root and found that transcriptional responses are highly constrained by developmental parameters. These transcriptional changes lead to the differential regulation of specific biological functions in subsets of cell layers, several of which correspond to observable physiological changes. We showed that known stress pathways primarily control semiubiquitous responses and used mutants that disrupt epidermal patterning to reveal cell-layer–specific and inter–cell-layer effects. By performing a similar analysis using iron deprivation, we identified common cell-type–specific stress responses and revealed the crucial role the environment plays in defining the transcriptional outcome of cell-fate decisions.

Collaboration


Dive into the Philip N. Benfey's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Ben Scheres

Wageningen University and Research Centre

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Wolfgang Busch

Salk Institute for Biological Studies

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Rosangela Sozzani

North Carolina State University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Uwe Ohler

Max Delbrück Center for Molecular Medicine

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge