REVOLUTA regulates cell fate and wall patterning in the fruit endocarp

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AI-generated deep summary by claude@2026-07, 2026-07-03 · read from full text

This study investigates how polarized secondary cell wall (SCW) deposition in fruit endocarp b (endb) cells is specified and how it is modulated by the environment, using the polyploid Cardamine chenopodiifolia with both explosive aerial and non-explosive subterranean fruits. Using comparative analyses in Arabidopsis and Cardamine hirsuta, the authors show that light triggers underground fruit to switch from uniform to polar endb SCW patterning, associated with a reprogramming of cell fate and organ polarity. They identify the HD-ZIPIII transcription factor REVOLUTA as a central regulator of endb cell fate and SCW patterning, and report that duplicated REVOLUTA paralogs are required for endb SCW deposition in C. hirsuta, while other HD-ZIPIII genes contribute redundantly. The paper does not explicitly discuss endometriosis or adenomyosis; it was included in the corpus via a keyword match in the upstream search index.

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Abstract

Explosive seed dispersal distinguishes Cardamine species from Arabidopsis and depends on polarized secondary cell wall (SCW) deposition in fruit endocarp b (end b ) cells. How this SCW pattern is specified and environmentally modulated remains unclear. The polyploid Cardamine chenopodiifolia produces explosive aerial fruit and non-explosive subterranean fruit, creating a tractable system to address this problem. We show light triggers underground fruit to explode by reprogramming end b SCW patterning from uniform to polar. We identify the HD-ZIPIII transcription factor REVOLUTA as a central regulator of end b cell fate, SCW formation, and organ polarity in Arabidopsis and Cardamine hirsuta . In C. hirsuta , duplicated REVOLUTA paralogs are required for end b SCW deposition, while other HD-ZIPIII genes contribute redundantly to cell fate and organ polarity. REVOLUTA over-expression converts polar end b SCWs to uniform, producing non-explosive fruit. Together, these findings reveal a tunable developmental module underlying evolutionary transitions between explosive and non-explosive seed dispersal strategies.
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Abstract Explosive seed dispersal distinguishes Cardamine species from Arabidopsis and depends on polarized secondary cell wall (SCW) deposition in fruit endocarp b (endb) cells. How this SCW pattern is specified and environmentally modulated remains unclear. The polyploid Cardamine chenopodiifolia produces explosive aerial fruit and non-explosive subterranean fruit, creating a tractable system to address this problem. We show light triggers underground fruit to explode by reprogramming endb SCW patterning from uniform to polar. We identify the HD-ZIPIII transcription factor REVOLUTA as a central regulator of endb cell fate, SCW formation, and organ polarity in Arabidopsis and Cardamine hirsuta. In C. hirsuta, duplicated REVOLUTA paralogs are required for endb SCW deposition, while other HD-ZIPIII genes contribute redundantly to cell fate and organ polarity. REVOLUTA over-expression converts polar endb SCWs to uniform, producing non-explosive fruit. Together, these findings reveal a tunable developmental module underlying evolutionary transitions between explosive and non-explosive seed dispersal strategies. Competing Interest Statement The authors have declared no competing interest.

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License: CC-BY-4.0