TY - JOUR T1 - Conservation and Divergence of YODA MAPKKK Function in Regulation of Grass Epidermal Patterning JF - bioRxiv DO - 10.1101/287433 SP - 287433 AU - Emily Abrash AU - M Ximena Anleu Gil AU - Juliana L Matos AU - Dominique C Bergmann Y1 - 2018/01/01 UR - http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2018/03/23/287433.abstract N2 - All multicellular organisms must properly pattern cell types to generate functional tissues and organs. The organized and predictable cell lineages of the Brachypodium leaf enabled us to characterize the role of the MAPK kinase kinase gene BdYODA1 in regulating asymmetric cell divisions. We find that YODA genes promote normal stomatal spacing patterns in both Arabidopsis and Brachypodium, despite species-specific differences in those patterns. Using lineage tracing and cell fate markers, we show that, unexpectedly, patterning defects in bdyoda1 mutants do not arise from faulty physical asymmetry in cell divisions but rather from improper enforcement of alternative cellular fates after division. These cross-species comparisons allow us to refine our interpretations of MAPK activities during plant asymmetric cell divisions.Summary Statement Analysis of Brachypodium leaf epidermis development reveals that the MAPKKK, BdYODA1, regulates asymmetric divisions by enforcing resultant cell fates rather than driving initial physical asymmetries. ER -