Plants, compared to animals, exhibit an amazing adaptability and plasticity in their development. This is largely dependent on the ability of plants to form new organs, such as lateral roots, leaves, and flowers during postembryonic development. Organ primordia develop from founder cell populations into organs by coordinated cell division and differentiation. Here, we show that organ formation in Arabidopsis involves dynamic gradients of the signaling molecule auxin with maxima at the primordia tips. These gradients are mediated by cellular efflux requiring asymmetrically localized PIN proteins, which represent a functionally redundant network for auxin distribution in both aerial and underground organs. PIN1 polar localization undergoes a dynamic rearrangement, which correlates with establishment of auxin gradients and primordium development. Our results suggest that PIN-dependent, local auxin gradients represent a common module for formation of all plant organs, regardless of their mature morphology or developmental origin.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/s0092-8674(03)00924-3 | DOI Listing |
Plant Physiol Biochem
November 2024
Key Laboratory of Plant Molecular Physiology, Institute of Botany, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing, 100093, China. Electronic address:
Studies on plant height have been conducted in several crops. However, the underlying genetic mechanisms in woody plants remain unclear. To improve the genetic understanding of plant height, the genome-wide association study (GWAS) was conducted on the 298 individuals of paper mulberry (Broussonetia papyrifera), and the individuals with the highest and lowest plant heights were selected for comparative transcriptome analysis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPlants (Basel)
September 2024
College of Life Sciences, Linyi University, Linyi 276000, China.
Dev Cell
December 2024
Sainsbury Laboratory, University of Cambridge, Cambridge CB2 1LR, UK. Electronic address:
Differential growth is central to eukaryotic morphogenesis. We showed using cellular imaging, simulations, and perturbations that light-induced differential growth in a curved organ, the Arabidopsis thaliana apical hook, emerges from the longitudinal expansion of subepidermal cells, acting in parallel with a differential in the material properties of epidermal cell walls that resist expansion. The greater expansion of inner hook cells that results in apical hook opening is gated by wall alkalinity and auxin, both of which are depleted upon illumination.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNew Phytol
November 2024
Faculty of Engineering, Electrical Signaling in Plants (ESP) Laboratory - Center of Bioinformatics, Simulation and Modeling (CBSM), University of Talca, Talca, CL-3460000, Chile.
Extracellular auxin maxima and minima are important to control plant developmental programs. Auxin gradients are provided by the concerted action of proteins from the three major plasma membrane (PM) auxin transporter classes AUX1/LAX, PIN and ATP-BINDING CASSETTE subfamily B (ABCB) transporters. But neither genetic nor biochemical nor modeling approaches have been able to reliably assign the individual roles and interplay of these transporter types.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPlant Cell Rep
July 2024
State Key Laboratory of Hybrid Rice, Department of Plant Sciences, College of Life Sciences, Wuhan University, Wuhan, 430072, China.
BIG regulates ground tissue formative divisions by bridging the auxin gradient with SHR abundance in Arabidopsis roots. The formative divisions of cortex/endodermis initials (CEIs) and CEI daughter cells (CEIDs) in Arabidopsis roots are coordinately controlled by the longitudinal auxin gradient and the radial SHORT ROOT (SHR) abundance. However, the mechanism underlying this coordination remains poorly understood.
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