FERONIA and Her Pals: Functions and Mechanisms.
Journal: 2017/May - Plant Physiology
ISSN: 1532-2548
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Plant Physiol 171(4): 2379-2392

FERONIA and Her Pals: Functions and Mechanisms<sup><a href="#fn1" rid="fn1" class=" fn">1</a>,</sup><sup><a href="#fn2" rid="fn2" class=" fn">[OPEN]</a></sup>

Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology (C.L., H.-M.W., A.Y.C.);
Molecular and Cell Biology Program (H.-M.W., A.Y.C.); and
Plant Biology Graduate Program, University of Massachusetts, Amherst, Massachusetts 01003 (A.Y.C.)
www.plantphysiol.org/cgi/doi/10.1104/pp.16.00667
Address correspondence to ude.ssamu.mehcoib@gnuehca
The author responsible for distribution of materials integral to the findings presented in this article in accordance with the policy described in the Instructions for Authors (www.plantphysiol.org) is: Alice Y. Cheung (ude.ssamu.mehcoib@gnuehca).
Present address: School of Life Sciences, East China Normal University, Shanghai, China 200241.
All authors contributed equally to the article.
www.plantphysiol.org/cgi/doi/10.1104/pp.16.00667
Received 2016 Apr 27; Accepted 2016 Jun 21.

Abstract

Current research into the FERONIA family of receptor kinases highlights both questions and opportunities for understanding signaling strategies in plant growth and survival.

Abstract

FERONIA and 16 closely related proteins form a distinct clade within the Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) superfamily of receptor-like kinases (RLKs), transmembrane proteins with an extracellular domain for signal perception and a cytoplasmic domain that phosphorylates target molecules and induces cellular responses to incoming signals. Several members of this family, such as THESEUS1 and ANXUR1,2, are known to play distinct roles in growth and reproduction; FERONIA is unique in being critically involved in both plant growth and reproduction. The FERONIA family of proteins from Arabidopsis is distinguished from other RLKs by having extracellular protein motifs that share homology with malectin, an animal protein with the capacity to bind dimeric and oligomeric Glc. The possibility that these malectin-like motifs might interact with carbohydrates has generated widespread speculations that these receptor kinases could act as cell-wall sensors, communicating perturbations at the frontline of cell-cell and plant-environment interaction to the cytoplasm to induce responses. Here, we discuss emerging understanding of the functional roles and signaling mechanisms of FERONIA and its related proteins. We also highlight pressing questions, as well as the functional potential of the broader malectin-like domain-containing RLK family that exists across the plant kingdom. We believe FERONIA and her pals provide a rich ground for research with many emerging opportunities for uncovering novel insights into how plants strive for growth and survival.

FERONIA/SIRÈNE was first identified genetically more than ten years ago as a key regulator of female fertility in Arabidopsis (Rotman et al., 2003; Huck et al., 2003). It was later determined to be a receptor kinase (Escobar-Restrepo et al., 2007) and one of 17 closely related receptor-like kinases (RLKs) in Arabidopsis (Fig. 1; Hèmaty and Höfte, 2008; Boisson-Dernier et al., 2011; Cheung and Wu, 2011). The name FERONIA (after an Etruscan goddess of fertility) will be used from hereon. Arabidopsis has more than 600 RLKs (Shiu and Bleecker, 2003). Several discoveries made at about the same time led to an extraordinary level of interest in FERONIA and related RLKs. These include: (1) a member of this group, THESEUS1 (named after the Greek mythological figure that slew Procustes the brigand) is a critical regulator of cell growth and appears to function as a surveyor of cell-wall status (Hèmaty et al., 2007); (2) FERONIA functions broadly throughout development and is fundamental to cell and plant growth (Guo et al., 2009; Deslauriers and Larsen, 2010; Duan et al., 2010); and (3) a closely related pair of these RLKs, ANXUR1 and ANXUR2 (named after the consort of FERONIA), is essential for male fertility (Boisson-Dernier et al., 2009; Miyazaki et al., 2009). Last but not least was the report of malectin, a novel protein from animals with the capacity to bind dimeric and oligomeric Glc-binding protein (Schallus et al., 2008) and the realization that FERONIA and related RLKs contain malectin-like motifs (PFAM CL0468) in their extracellular domains (Fig. 1). This led to widespread speculations that FERONIA and related RLKs might interact with carbohydrate moieties and function as sensors of perturbations in the cell wall, communicating conditions at the cell surface to induce appropriate cellular responses (Hèmaty and Höfte, 2008; Boisson-Dernier et al., 2011; Cheung and Wu, 2011; Lindner et al., 2012). FERONIA and related malectin-like domain-containing RLKs are often referred to as the CrRLK1-like RLKs (see e.g. Nibau and Cheung, 2011), after its founding member identified in Catharanthus roseus, CrRLK1 (Schulze-Muth et al., 1996), but for which no functional work has been reported. THESEUS1 was the first member of the group for which a clear functional role was demonstrated, and FERONIA is the most prevalently studied among these RLKs. To provide a functional context for our discussion here, we will refer to the FERONIA-related RLKs in Arabidopsis as the THESEUS1/FERONIA-related RLK family. We update current knowledge about these RLKs from Arabidopsis and highlight pressing questions and emerging opportunities from these and related malectin-like domain-containing RLKs, which are present throughout the plant kingdom (Hèmaty and Höfte, 2008; Antolin-Llovera et al., 2014; Nguyen et al., 2015).

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FERONIA protein domain structure and phylogenetic tree of the Arabidopsis THESEUS1/FERONIA receptor kinase family. A, Deduced FERONIA structural domains. SS, ECD, TM are, respectively, signal peptide, extracellular domain, transmembrane domain. MALA and MALB are tandem malectin-like domains. exJM, extracellular juxtamembrane region. Numbers indicate amino acid residues. B, The THESEUS1/FERONIA protein family.

ADVANCES

  • FERONIA and related RLKs have extracellular motifs homologous with the diglucose-binding protein malectin, so potentially interact with cell wall carbohydrates and mediate wall-related activities.

  • FERONIA controls growth and female fertility, mediates hormone- and pathogen-induced responses, and is required for a normal cell wall.

  • FERONIA is a receptor for RALF1, a peptide regulatory factor, which affects phosphorylation of FERONIA and the key cell growth regulator H-ATPase.

  • FERONIA-related THESEUS1 suppresses growth in cellulose-deficient mutants, suggesting a role as surveyor of wall conditions.

  • FERONIA homologs ANXUR1 and ANXUR2 ensure pollen tube integrity and male fertility.

  • FERONIA, ANXUR1, and ANXUR2 signaling collectively involves a GPI-AP, a MLO protein, the RHO GTPase switch, NADPH oxidases, and a receptor-like cytoplasmic kinase; ROS and Ca are key elements in their functions.

Extracellular homology with malectin (Schallus et al., 2008; Fig. 1A) distinguishes the THESEUS1/FERONIA-related RLKs from other members of the Arabidopsis RLK family. Malectin, named after its in vitro ability to bind maltose (Glc α1-4 Glc), is a conserved animal protein located in the lumen of the endoplasmic reticulum where it is involved in protein quality control in the early steps of secretion (Schallus et al., 2008; Qin et al., 2012). A majority of the Arabidopsis THESEUS1/FERONIA family (Fig. 1B) has tandem malectin-like motifs (Fig. 1A; Boisson-Dernier et al., 2011) in their extracellular domains. We focus our discussion on FERONIA, THESEUS1, and three other members of the family, ANXUR1, ANXUR2, and ERULUS/[Ca]cyt-associated Protein Kinase1, for which clear biological roles have been demonstrated (Miyazaki et al., 2009; Boisson-Dernier et al., 2009; Bai et al., 2014). A contribution to cell growth and morphogenesis has also been reported for HERCULES1 (Guo et al., 2009) and CURVY (Gachomo et al., 2014), but details regarding their functions remain limited.

Acknowledgments

We are grateful to many of our colleagues who offered comments and helped edit this manuscript. In particular, we thank Qiaohong Duan, Jeff Stith, and Dong Wang (University of Massachusetts), Ravi Palanivelu (University of Arizona), Kim Hammon-Kosack (Rothamsted Research, UK), Trevor Yeats (University of California, Berkeley) and Jose Feijo (University of Maryland) for their thoughtful suggestions on content and style, and Sheila McCormick (University of California, Berkeley/PGEC) for editing the almost final version of this paper. Due to space limitation, we apologize for abbreviated discussions on details from many studies.

Acknowledgments

Footnotes

Research described from our laboratory was supported by grants from the National Science Foundation (IOS-1127007; IOS-1146941).

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