Nitric oxide is required for determining root architecture and lignin composition in sunflower. Supporting evidence from microarray analyses.

Nitric Oxide

Instituto de Investigaciones Biológicas, Universidad Nacional de Mar del Plata-CONICET, Mar del Plata, Argentina. Electronic address:

Published: May 2014

AI Article Synopsis

  • Nitric oxide (NO) is vital for root development in plants, but understanding its regulatory mechanisms is limited due to the potential toxicity of external NO donors.
  • Sunflower seedlings treated with the NO scavenger cPTIO showed that while primary root length remained unchanged, lateral root formation significantly decreased, indicating the importance of endogenous NO in root branching.
  • A large-scale analysis revealed that 330 genes were regulated due to NO depletion, with changes in the lignin biosynthetic pathway suggesting that NO levels fine-tune root architecture and lignin composition in plants.

Article Abstract

Nitric oxide (NO) is a signal molecule involved in several physiological processes in plants, including root development. Despite the importance of NO as a root growth regulator, the knowledge about the genes and metabolic pathways modulated by NO in this process is still limited. A constraint to unravel these pathways has been the use of exogenous applications of NO donors that may produce toxic effects. We have analyzed the role of NO in root architecture through the depletion of endogenous NO using the scavenger cPTIO. Sunflower seedlings growing in liquid medium supplemented with cPTIO showed unaltered primary root length while the number of lateral roots was deeply reduced; indicating that endogenous NO participates in determining root branching in sunflower. The transcriptional changes induced by NO depletion have been analyzed using a large-scale approach. A microarray analysis showed 330 genes regulated in the roots (p≤0.001) upon endogenous NO depletion. A general cPTIO-induced up-regulation of genes involved in the lignin biosynthetic pathway was observed. Even if no detectable changes in total lignin content could be detected, cell walls analyses revealed that the ratio G/S lignin increased in roots treated with cPTIO. This means that endogenous NO may control lignin composition in planta. Our results suggest that a fine tuning regulation of NO levels could be used by plants to regulate root architecture and lignin composition. The functional implications of these findings are discussed.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.niox.2014.04.004DOI Listing

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