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Dive into the research topics where Tal Nawy is active.

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Featured researches published by Tal Nawy.


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 Plant Cell | 2005

Transcriptional Profile of the Arabidopsis Root Quiescent Center

Tal Nawy; Ji-Young Lee; Juliette Colinas; Jean Y. J. Wang; Sumena C. Thongrod; Jocelyn E. Malamy; Kenneth D. Birnbaum; Philip N. Benfey

The self-renewal characteristics of stem cells render them vital engines of development. To better understand the molecular mechanisms that determine the properties of stem cells, transcript profiling was conducted on quiescent center (QC) cells from the Arabidopsis thaliana root meristem. The AGAMOUS-LIKE 42 (AGL42) gene, which encodes a MADS box transcription factor whose expression is enriched in the QC, was used to mark these cells. RNA was isolated from sorted cells, labeled, and hybridized to Affymetrix microarrays. Comparisons with digital in situ expression profiles of surrounding tissues identified a set of genes enriched in the QC. Promoter regions from a subset of transcription factors identified as enriched in the QC conferred expression in the QC. These studies demonstrated that it is possible to successfully isolate and profile a rare cell type in the plant. Mutations in all enriched transcription factor genes including AGL42 exhibited no detectable root phenotype, raising the possibility of a high degree of functional redundancy in the QC.


Science | 2009

Paternal Control of Embryonic Patterning in Arabidopsis thaliana

Martin Bayer; Tal Nawy; Carmela Giglione; Mary Galli; Thierry Meinnel; Wolfgang Lukowitz

The YODA (YDA) mitogen-activated protein kinase pathway promotes elongation of the Arabidopsis zygote and development of its basal daughter cell into the extra-embryonic suspensor. Here, we show that the interleukin-1 receptor–associated kinase (IRAK)/Pelle-like kinase gene SHORT SUSPENSOR (SSP) regulates this pathway through a previously unknown parent-of-origin effect. SSP transcripts are produced in mature pollen but do not appear to be translated. Instead, they are delivered via the sperm cells to the zygote and the endosperm, where SSP protein transiently accumulates. Ectopic expression of SSP protein in the leaf epidermis is sufficient to activate YDA-dependent signaling. We propose that SSP protein produced from paternal transcripts upon fertilization triggers zygotic YDA activity, providing an essential temporal cue for the regulation of the asymmetric first division.


Molecular Systems Biology | 2014

A map of cell type‐specific auxin responses

Bastiaan O. R. Bargmann; Steffen Vanneste; Gabriel Krouk; Tal Nawy; Idan Efroni; Eilon Shani; Goh Choe; Jiří Friml; Dominique C. Bergmann; Mark Estelle; Kenneth D. Birnbaum

In plants, changes in local auxin concentrations can trigger a range of developmental processes as distinct tissues respond differently to the same auxin stimulus. However, little is known about how auxin is interpreted by individual cell types. We performed a transcriptomic analysis of responses to auxin within four distinct tissues of the Arabidopsis thaliana root and demonstrate that different cell types show competence for discrete responses. The majority of auxin‐responsive genes displayed a spatial bias in their induction or repression. The novel data set was used to examine how auxin influences tissue‐specific transcriptional regulation of cell‐identity markers. Additionally, the data were used in combination with spatial expression maps of the root to plot a transcriptomic auxin‐response gradient across the apical and basal meristem. The readout revealed a strong correlation for thousands of genes between the relative response to auxin and expression along the longitudinal axis of the root. This data set and comparative analysis provide a transcriptome‐level spatial breakdown of the response to auxin within an organ where this hormone mediates many aspects of development.


Developmental Cell | 2010

The GATA Factor HANABA TARANU Is Required to Position the Proembryo Boundary in the Early Arabidopsis Embryo

Tal Nawy; Martin Bayer; Jozef Mravec; Jiří Friml; Kenneth D. Birnbaum; Wolfgang Lukowitz

Division of the Arabidopsis zygote defines two fundamentally different developmental domains, the proembryo and suspensor. The resulting boundary separates domain-specific gene expression, and a signal originating from the proembryo instructs the suspensor to generate the root stem cell niche. While root induction is known to require the phytohormone auxin and the Auxin Response Factor MONOPTEROS, it has remained largely elusive how the two domains involved in this process are initially specified. Here, we show that the GATA factor HANABA TARANU (HAN) is required to position the inductive proembryo boundary. Mutations in HAN cause a coordinated apical shift of gene expression patterns, revealing that HAN regulates transcription in the basal proembryo. Key auxin transporters are affected as early as the 8 cell stage, resulting in apical redistribution of auxin. Remarkably, han embryos eventually organize a root independent of MONOPTEROS and the suspensor around a new boundary marked by the auxin maximum.


Genome Biology | 2015

Quantification of cell identity from single-cell gene expression profiles

Idan Efroni; Pui Leng Ip; Tal Nawy; Alison Mello; Kenneth D. Birnbaum

The definition of cell identity is a central problem in biology. While single-cell RNA-seq provides a wealth of information regarding cell states, better methods are needed to map their identity, especially during developmental transitions. Here, we use repositories of cell type-specific transcriptomes to quantify identities from single-cell RNA-seq profiles, accurately classifying cells from Arabidopsis root tips and human glioblastoma tumors. We apply our approach to single cells captured from regenerating roots following tip excision. Our technique exposes a previously uncharacterized transient collapse of identity distant from the injury site, demonstrating the biological relevance of a quantitative cell identity index.


Cell | 2016

Root Regeneration Triggers an Embryo-like Sequence Guided by Hormonal Interactions

Idan Efroni; Alison Mello; Tal Nawy; Pui Leng Ip; Ramin Rahni; Nicholas Delrose; Ashley Powers; Rahul Satija; Kenneth D. Birnbaum


Current Opinion in Plant Biology | 2008

Talk global, act local - patterning the Arabidopsis embryo

Tal Nawy; Wolfgang Lukowitz; Martin Bayer


Current Opinion in Plant Biology | 2008

Talk global, act localpatterning the Arabidopsis embryo

Tal Nawy; Wolfgang Lukowitz; Martin Bayer


Archive | 2002

Homeotic genes and proteins, and uses thereof

Philip N. Benfey; Tal Nawy

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Idan Efroni

Weizmann Institute of Science

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Jiří Friml

Institute of Science and Technology Austria

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