Hairless but no longer clueless: understanding glandular trichome development
eXtra Botany
Insight
Hairless but no longer clueless: understanding glandular
trichome development
Johannes W. Stratmann and Carlton J. Bequette
Department of Biological Sciences, University of South Carolina, Columbia, SC 29208, USA
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Trichomes are hairlike structures found on many plant surfaces. Emerging from the epidermal cell layer, they develop
into morphologically very diverse forms ranging from single
cells to multicellular structures. Some are conspicuous – such
as the multicellular trichomes in nettles or tomatoes – and
cause a ‘hairy plant’ appearance. Some are smaller, but nevertheless obvious to people through essential oils they produce,
such as the peltate trichomes of mint species (Lange and
Turner, 2013); similarly, functions may appear obvious, as in
the production of insect-trapping exudates by tobacco trichomes (Box 1). Other functions include regulation of transpiration, absorption of harmful UV-B radiation and plant
defense (Wagner et al., 2004; Vigneron et al., 2005).
In contrast to non-glandular trichomes, glandular trichomes are metabolically highly diverse and synthesize, store
and release secondary metabolites such as terpenoids, flavonoids and acyl sugars. Many of these chemicals are thought
to function in defense against herbivores and pathogens,
and they are also of great interest to human nutrition and
medicine. To provide a compelling example, the alternative
anti-malaria drug artemisinin, a sesquiterpene lactone, is produced in trichomes of Artemisia annua and its discovery by
Youyou Tu resulted in her 2015 Nobel prize (Muangphrom
et al., 2016). With the availability of high-throughput metabolomic and genomic methods, much has been learned about
the amazingly diverse secondary metabolism of glandular trichomes (Lange and Turner, 2013). They are clearly not simple
hairs, but highly evolved plant organs.
We have an advanced understanding of the development
of trichomes in Arabidopsis. However, it possesses only single-celled, non-glandular trichomes. Tomato provides many
advantages pertinent to research on glandular trichomes. It
not only has several different types, but also offers a sequenced
genome, a detailed genetic map, routine genetic transformation, high diversity within the tomato clade, and availability
of a number of trichome mutants.
Through the work of Gregg Howe’s group, we already
know some basic facts about glandular trichome development in tomato, such as the involvement of JAI-1 (COI1),
coding for the receptor for the plant hormone jasmonic acid
(Li et al., 2004a), CHALCONE ISOMERASE 1 (CHI1)
(Kang et al., 2014), and the so far unidentified ODORLESS-2
gene (Kang et al., 2010a). Mutants in these genes all exhibit
a distorted trichome phenotype, compromised synthesis of
terpenoids and flavonoids, and reduced resistance against
herbivores. Characterization of these mutants represents a
promising start for delineating glandular trichome development in tomato, but until now they had not offered mechanistic insights into the regulation of development at the
molecular level.
First glimpse into glandular trichome
development at the molecular level
The paper by Kang et al. (2016) is the culmination of previous efforts aimed at characterizing the hl mutant and
represents a significant breakthrough in understanding the
development of multicellular glandular trichomes. The name
of the mutant is misleading: hl mutants do have glandular
trichomes (Reeves, 1977), but an earlier study by Kang et al.
(Kang et al., 2010b) showed that they are smaller and distorted (see Box 2): only the density of types I and VI on leaves
is reduced, and type VI exhibits reduced levels of sesquiterpenes and flavonoids. This altered defense metabolite profile
correlates with a reduced resistance to herbivory. Kang et al.
(2016) now demonstrate by map-based cloning that the hl
mutant harbors a mutation in the SRA1 (SPECIFICALLY
RAC1-ASSOCIATED) gene. When the hl mutant was transformed with the full-length wild-type tomato SRA1 sequence,
the wild-type phenotype was fully reconstituted.
SRA1 is conserved among multicellular organisms and is
one of five components that constitute the WAVE regulatory
© The Author 2016. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Society for Experimental Biology.
This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/), which
permits unrestricted reuse, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Glandular trichomes are remarkable biochemical factories that produce a wealth of secondary metabolites important for plant defenses against herbivores.
However, little is known about their developmental
biology. Studying the tomato hairless mutant, which
develops distorted glandular trichomes and has compromised metabolic and defense capacity, Kang et al.
(pages 5313–5324 in this issue) showed that the SRA1
gene regulates not only trichome morphogenesis, but
also aspects of secondary metabolism.
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Box 1. Trichomes in action
Glandular trichome exudates trap fungus gnats (Bradysia
spp.) with a similar efficiency to commercial ‘yellow
sticky traps’. Sticky trichomes are known to reduce performance of small arthropod herbivores (Wheeler Jr and
Krimmel, 2015).
Box 2. The hairless mutant
The hairless mutant harbors a mutation in the SRA1 gene, a component of the pentameric
WAVE regulatory complex (Sra1 and blue boxes). SRA1 (also known as PIROGI) interacts with
NAP1 (NCK-associated protein) and WAVE (also known as SCAR) via the C-terminal VCA
domain of WAVE. WAVE also interacts with NAP1 via ABI, and with BRICK1/HSPC300. The
complex is activated via small GTPases (G) such as RAC1 or ROP2, which target SRA1, and in
turn regulates actin assembly by the ARP2/3 (actin-related protein 2/3) complex (Chen et al.,
2010; Seaman et al., 2013; Yanagisawa et al., 2013). A dysfunctional WRC in hl results in distorted trichomes, reduced synthesis of sesquiterpenes and flavonoids, reduced resistance to
herbivores and brittleness of the stem. Nomenclature shown is according to Chen et al. (2010).
complex (WRC) (Box 2). The WRC regulates actin assembly by
the ARP2/3 complex (Seaman et al., 2013; Yanagisawa et al.,
2013). Actin filaments play an important role in cell development, such as enabling the targeted delivery of cell wall building
blocks to the extracellular space (Yanagisawa et al., 2013).
This finding is significant because it is the first report to
demonstrate a role for the WRC in the development of glandular trichomes. Moreover, the WRC connects the actincytoskeleton network with secondary metabolism and plant
defense against herbivores. It provides a lever for more indepth studies of the molecular mechanisms underlying
glandular trichome development. SRA1 and the WRC also
regulate trichome development in Arabidopsis (Yanagisawa
et al., 2013), although there are fundamental dif (...truncated)