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Conditional Auxin Response and Differential Cytokinin Profiles in Shoot Branching Mutants. | LitMetric

Conditional Auxin Response and Differential Cytokinin Profiles in Shoot Branching Mutants.

Plant Physiol

Department of Life Sciences, Imperial College London, London SW7 2AZ, United Kingdom (N.F.Y., I.A., M.H.B., C.G.N.T.); andAustralian Research Council Centre of Excellence for Integrative Legume Research (B.J.F.) and School of Biological Sciences (C.A.B.), University of Queensland, Brisbane, Queensland 4072, Australia

Published: August 2014

Strigolactone (SL), auxin, and cytokinin (CK) are hormones that interact to regulate shoot branching. For example, several ramosus (rms) branching mutants in pea (Pisum sativum) have SL defects, perturbed xylem CK levels, and diminished responses to auxin in shoot decapitation assays. In contrast with the last of these characteristics, we discovered that buds on isolated nodes (explants) of rms plants instead respond normally to auxin. We hypothesized that the presence or absence of attached roots would result in transcriptional and hormonal differences in buds and subtending stem tissues, and might underlie the differential auxin response. However, decapitated plants and explants both showed similar up-regulation of CK biosynthesis genes, increased CK levels, and down-regulation of auxin transport genes. Moreover, auxin application counteracted these trends, regardless of the effectiveness of auxin at inhibiting bud growth. Multivariate analysis revealed that stem transcript and CK changes were largely associated with decapitation and/or root removal and auxin response, whereas bud transcript profiles related more to SL defects. CK clustering profiles were indicative of additional zeatin-type CKs in decapitated stems being supplied by roots and thus promoting bud growth in SL-deficient genotypes even in the presence of added auxin. This difference in CK content may explain why rms buds on explants respond better to auxin than those on decapitated plants. We further conclude that rapid changes in CK status in stems are auxin dependent but largely SL independent, suggesting a model in which auxin and CK are dominant regulators of decapitation-induced branching, whereas SLs are more important in intact plants.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4119051PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1104/pp.114.239996DOI Listing

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