AI Article Synopsis

  • The fruit comes from the part of the flower that helps with reproduction, and it's very complex in angiosperms (flowering plants).
  • Plant hormones are really important for how flowers and fruits grow and shape themselves, and they often work together.
  • Researchers found out that certain proteins (like HEC1) help control how flowers develop by working with different hormones, particularly in a plant called Arabidopsis.

Article Abstract

The fruit, which develops from the fertilised gynoecium formed in the innermost whorl of the flower, is the reproductive organ and one of the most complex structures of an angiosperm plant. Phytohormones play important roles during flower and fruit patterning, morphogenesis and growth, and there is emerging evidence for a cross-talk between different classes of plant hormones throughout these processes. Here, we show that the bHLH transcription factors HECATE 1 (HEC1), HEC2 and HEC3, which have previously been identified as essential components of transmitting tract formation, affect both auxin and cytokinin responses during reproductive tissue development. We find that HEC1 interacts with SPATULA (SPT) to control carpel fusion and that both transcription factors restrict sensitivity to cytokinin in the gynoecium. In addition, HEC1 is tightly integrated into the auxin-signalling network at the levels of biosynthesis, transport and transcriptional response. Based on this data, we propose that HEC1 acts as a local modulator of auxin and cytokinin responses to control gynoecium development in Arabidopsis.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4631749PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1242/dev.120444DOI Listing

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