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Dive into the research topics where Renze Heidstra is active.

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Featured researches published by Renze Heidstra.


Plant Physiology | 1994

Root Hair Deformation Activity of Nodulation Factors and Their Fate on Vicia sativa

Renze Heidstra; R. Geurts; H. Franssen; Herman P. Spaink; A. van Kammen; T. Bisseling

We used a semiquantitative root hair deformation assay for Vicia sativa (vetch) to study the activity of Rhizobium leguminosarum bv viciae nodulation (Nod) factors. Five to 10 min of Nod factor-root interaction appears to be sufficient to induce root hair deformation. The first deformation is visible within 1 h, and after 3 h about 80% of the root hairs in a small susceptible zone of the root are deformed. This zone encompasses root hairs that have almost reached their maximal size. The Nod factor accumulates preferentially to epidermal cells of the young part of the root, but is not restricted to the susceptible zone. In the interaction with roots, the glucosamine backbone of Nod factors is shortened, presumably by chitinases. NodRlv-IV(C18:4,Ac) is more stable than NodRlv-V(C18:4,Ac). No correlation was found between Nod factor degradation and susceptibility. Degradation occurs both in the susceptible zone and in the mature zone. Moreover, degradation is not affected by NH4NO3 and is similar in vetch and in the nonhost alfalfa (Medicago sativa).


The Plant Cell | 1993

Rhizobium Lipooligosaccharides Rescue a Carrot Somatic Embryo Mutant

A.J. de Jong; Renze Heidstra; Herman P. Spaink; M.V. Hartog; E.A. Meijer; T. Hendriks; Fiorella Lo Schiavo; Mario Terzi; T. Bisseling; A. van Kammen; S. de Vries

At a nonpermissive temperature, somatic embryos of the temperature-sensitive (ts) carrot cell mutant ts11 only proceed beyond the globular embryo stage in the presence of medium conditioned by wild-type embryos. The causative component in the conditioned medium has previously been identified as a 32-kD acidic endochitinase. In search of a function for this enzyme in plant embryogenesis, several compounds that contain oligomers of N-acetylglucosamine were tested for their ability to promote ts11 embryo formation. Of these compounds, only the Rhizobium lipooligosaccharides or nodulation (Nod) factors were found to be effective in rescuing the formation of ts11 embryos. These results suggest that N-acetylglucosamine-containing lipooligosaccharides from bacterial origin can mimic the effect of the carrot endochitinase. This endochitinase may therefore be involved in the generation of plant analogs of the Rhizobium Nod factors.


Plant Physiology | 1997

Sym2 of Pea Is Involved in a Nodulation Factor-Perception Mechanism That Controls the Infection Process in the Epidermis

R. Geurts; Renze Heidstra; A. E. Hadri; J.A. Downie; H. Franssen; A. van Kammen; T. Bisseling

In pea (Pisum sativum) up to 50 nodulation mutants are known, several of which are affected in the early steps of the symbiotic interaction with Rhizobium sp. bacteria. Here we describe the role of the sym2 gene in nodulation (Nod) factor perception. Our experiments show that the sym2A allele from the wild pea variety Afghanistan confers an arrest in infection-thread growth if the Rhizobium leguminosarum bv viciae strain does not produce Nod factors with a NodX-mediated acetylation at their reducing end. Since the induction of the early nodulin gene ENOD12 in the epidermis and the formation of a nodule primordium in the inner cortex were not affected, we conclude that more than one Nod factor-perception mechanism is active. Furthermore, we show that sym2A-mediated control of infection-thread growth was affected by the bacterial nodulation gene nodO.


Nature Reviews Molecular Cell Biology | 2014

Plant and animal stem cells: similar yet different

Renze Heidstra; Sabrina Sabatini

The astonishingly long lives of plants and their regeneration capacity depend on the activity of plant stem cells. As in animals, stem cells reside in stem cell niches, which produce signals that regulate the balance between self-renewal and the generation of daughter cells that differentiate into new tissues. Plant stem cell niches are located within the meristems, which are organized structures that are responsible for most post-embryonic development. The continuous organ production that is characteristic of plant growth requires a robust regulatory network to keep the balance between pluripotent stem cells and differentiating progeny. Components of this network have now been elucidated and provide a unique opportunity for comparing strategies that were developed in the animal and plant kingdoms, which underlie the logic of stem cell behaviour.


Molecular Plant-microbe Interactions | 1997

Nod factor-induced expression of leghemoglobin to study the mechanism of NH4NO3 inhibition on root hair deformation

Renze Heidstra; G. Nilsen; Francisco Martinez-Abarca; A. van Kammen; T. Bisseling

Nod factors secreted by Rhizobium leguminosarum by, viciae induce root hair deformation, the formation of nodule primordia, and the expression of early nodulin genes in Vicia sativa (vetch). Root hair deformation is induced within 3 h in a small, susceptible zone (+/-2 mm) of the root. NH4NO3, known to be a potent blocker of nodule formation, inhibits root hair deformation, initial cortical cell divisions, and infection thread formation. To test whether NH4NO3 affects the formation of a component of the Nod factor perception-transduction system, we studied Nod factor-induced gene expression. The differential display technique was used to search for marker genes, which are induced within 1 to 3 h after Nod factor application. Surprisingly, one of the isolated cDNA clones was identified as a leghemoglobin gene (VsLb1), which is induced in vetch roots within 1 h after Nod factor application. By using the drug brefeldin A, it was then shown that VsLb1 activation does not require root hair deformation. The pVsLb1 clone was used as a marker to show that in vetch plants grown in the presence of NH4NO3, Nod factor perception and transduction leading to gene expression are unaffected.


Trends in Plant Science | 2014

AINTEGUMENTA-LIKE proteins: hubs in a plethora of networks

Anneke Horstman; Viola Willemsen; Kim Boutilier; Renze Heidstra

Members of the AINTEGUMENTA-LIKE (AIL) family of APETALA 2/ETHYLENE RESPONSE FACTOR (AP2/ERF) domain transcription factors are expressed in all dividing tissues in the plant, where they have central roles in developmental processes such as embryogenesis, stem cell niche specification, meristem maintenance, organ positioning, and growth. When overexpressed, AIL proteins induce adventitious growth, including somatic embryogenesis and ectopic organ formation. The Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) genome contains eight AIL genes, including AINTEGUMENTA, BABY BOOM, and the PLETHORA genes. Studies on these transcription factors have revealed their intricate relationship with auxin as well as their involvement in an increasing number of gene regulatory networks, in which extensive crosstalk and feedback loops have a major role.


Plant Science | 1995

Pea lines carrying sym1 or sym2 can be nodulated by Rhizobium strains containing nodX ; sym1 and sym2 are allelic

Alexander Kozik; Renze Heidstra; Beatrix M. Horvath; Olga Kulikova; Igor A. Tikhonovich; T. H. Noel Ellis; Ab van Kammen; T.A. Lie; Ton Bisseling

In wild pea varieties two genes, sym1 and sym2, have been identified that cause resistance to European Rhizobium leguminosarum bv. viciae (Rlv) strains. The sym2 gene has previously been studied in some detail and it was shown that the additional nodulation gene nodX is sufficient to overcome the sym2 controlled nodulation resistance. Here we characterize the sym1 gene. We show that the resistance conferred by sym1 can be overcome by the introduction of nodX in European Rlv strains, indicating that sym1 just as sym2 is involved in Nod factor recognition. Both sym1 and sym2 display a recessive or dominant nature depending on the Rlv strain used for inoculation. Furthermore, introgression lines containing either sym1 or sym2 are able to form nodules with Rlv strain 248 at 26°C, but not at 18°C, indicating that both sym1 and sym2 have a temperature sensitive nature. sym2 was mapped on the pea RFLP map. We found that sym1 maps in the same region of chromosome 1 as sym2. By crossing sym1 and sym2 containing introgression lines we demonstrate that sym1 and sym2 are allelic.


Development | 2015

Root developmental programs shape the Medicago truncatula nodule meristem

H. Franssen; Ting Ting Xiao; Olga Kulikova; Xi Wan; Ton Bisseling; Ben Scheres; Renze Heidstra

Nodules on the roots of legume plants host nitrogen-fixing Rhizobium bacteria. Several lines of evidence indicate that nodules are evolutionarily related to roots. We determined whether developmental control of the Medicago truncatula nodule meristem bears resemblance to that in root meristems through analyses of root meristem-expressed PLETHORA genes. In nodules, MtPLETHORA 1 and 2 are preferentially expressed in cells positioned at the periphery of the meristem abutting nodule vascular bundles. Their expression overlaps with an auxin response maximum and MtWOX5, which is a marker for the root quiescent center. Strikingly, the cells in the central part of the nodule meristem have a high level of cytokinin and display MtPLETHORA 3 and 4 gene expression. Nodule-specific knockdown of MtPLETHORA genes results in a reduced number of nodules and/or in nodules in which meristem activity has ceased. Our nodule gene expression map indicates that the nodule meristem is composed of two distinct domains in which different MtPLETHORA gene subsets are expressed. Our mutant studies show that MtPLETHORA genes function redundantly in nodule meristem maintenance. This indicates that Rhizobium has recruited root developmental programs for nodule formation. Summary: In the legume Medicago, the PLETHORA genes are expressed in the nodule meristem and regulate nodule formation, indicating the recruitment of root developmental programs by Rhizobium.


Plant Physiology | 2016

MultiSite Gateway-Compatible Cell Type-Specific Gene-Inducible System for Plants.

Riccardo Siligato; Xin Wang; Shri Ram Yadav; Satu J. Lehesranta; Guojie Ma; Robertas Ursache; Iris Sevilem; Jing Zhang; Maartje Gorte; Kalika Prasad; Michael Wrzaczek; Renze Heidstra; Angus S. Murphy; Ben Scheres; Ari Pekka Mähönen

A tissue-specific inducible system allows a combination of inducible promoters, genes, reporters, and plant selection markers in a single cloning step. A powerful method to study gene function is expression or overexpression in an inducible, cell type-specific system followed by observation of consequent phenotypic changes and visualization of linked reporters in the target tissue. Multiple inducible gene overexpression systems have been developed for plants, but very few of these combine plant selection markers, control of expression domains, access to multiple promoters and protein fusion reporters, chemical induction, and high-throughput cloning capabilities. Here, we introduce a MultiSite Gateway-compatible inducible system for Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) plants that provides the capability to generate such constructs in a single cloning step. The system is based on the tightly controlled, estrogen-inducible XVE system. We demonstrate that the transformants generated with this system exhibit the expected cell type-specific expression, similar to what is observed with constitutively expressed native promoters. With this new system, cloning of inducible constructs is no longer limited to a few special cases but can be used as a standard approach when gene function is studied. In addition, we present a set of entry clones consisting of histochemical and fluorescent reporter variants designed for gene and promoter expression studies.


Plant Journal | 2015

SCARECROW-LIKE23 and SCARECROW jointly specify endodermal cell fate but distinctly control SHORT-ROOT movement

Yuchen Long; Joachim Goedhart; Martinus Schneijderberg; Inez Terpstra; Akie Shimotohno; Benjamin P. Bouchet; Anna Akhmanova; Theodorus W. J. Gadella; Renze Heidstra; Ben Scheres; Ikram Blilou

Intercellular signaling through trafficking of regulatory proteins is a widespread phenomenon in plants and can deliver positional information for the determination of cell fate. In the Arabidopsis root meristem, the cell fate determinant SHORT-ROOT (SHR), a GRAS domain transcription factor, acts as a signaling molecule from the stele to the adjacent layer to specify endodermal cell fate. Upon exiting the stele, SHR activates another GRAS domain transcription factor, SCARCROW (SCR), which, together with several BIRD/INDETERMINATE DOMAIN proteins, restricts movement of SHR to define a single cell layer of endodermis. Here we report that endodermal cell fate also requires the joint activity of both SCR and its closest homologue SCARECROW-LIKE23 (SCL23). We show that SCL23 protein moves with zonation-dependent directionality. Within the meristem, SCL23 exhibits short-ranged movement from ground tissue to vasculature. Away from the meristem, SCL23 displays long-range rootward movement into meristematic vasculature and a bidirectional radial spread, respectively. As a known target of SHR and SCR, SCL23 also interacts with SCR and SHR and can restrict intercellular outspread of SHR without relying on nuclear retention as SCR does. Collectively, our data show that SCL23 is a mobile protein that controls movement of SHR and acts redundantly with SCR to specify endodermal fate in the root meristem.

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Ton Bisseling

Laboratory of Molecular Biology

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T. Bisseling

Laboratory of Molecular Biology

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Ben Scheres

Wageningen University and Research Centre

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Luca Santuari

Wageningen University and Research Centre

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H. Franssen

Wageningen University and Research Centre

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Olga Kulikova

Wageningen University and Research Centre

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Wei-Cai Yang

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Ab van Kammen

Laboratory of Molecular Biology

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Elena Fedorova

Laboratory of Molecular Biology

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