The FERONIA Receptor Kinase Maintains Cell-Wall Integrity during Salt Stress through Ca Signaling.

Curr Biol

Department of Plant Biology, Carnegie Institution for Science, 260 Panama Street, Stanford, CA 94305, USA; Department of Biology, Stanford University, 371 Serra Mall, Stanford, CA 94305, USA. Electronic address:

Published: March 2018

AI Article Synopsis

  • Cells can maintain their structure even when facing changes due to growth or environmental stress, but how they sense and respond to damage, especially in plants, is not fully understood.* -
  • The study identifies the receptor kinase FERONIA (FER) in Arabidopsis as essential for root recovery from high salinity stress, suggesting it helps plant cells sense and respond to cell wall damage.* -
  • FER's function involves sensing softening of the cell wall due to salinity, and it engages in signaling that triggers calcium transients to preserve cell-wall integrity, ultimately highlighting a critical role of FER in managing salt-induced cell wall toxicity.*

Article Abstract

Cells maintain integrity despite changes in their mechanical properties elicited during growth and environmental stress. How cells sense their physical state and compensate for cell-wall damage is poorly understood, particularly in plants. Here we report that FERONIA (FER), a plasma-membrane-localized receptor kinase from Arabidopsis, is necessary for the recovery of root growth after exposure to high salinity, a widespread soil stress. The extracellular domain of FER displays tandem regions of homology with malectin, an animal protein known to bind di-glucose in vitro and important for protein quality control in the endoplasmic reticulum. The presence of malectin-like domains in FER and related receptor kinases has led to widespread speculation that they interact with cell-wall polysaccharides and can potentially serve a wall-sensing function. Results reported here show that salinity causes softening of the cell wall and that FER is necessary to sense these defects. When this function is disrupted in the fer mutant, root cells explode dramatically during growth recovery. Similar defects are observed in the mur1 mutant, which disrupts pectin cross-linking. Furthermore, fer cell-wall integrity defects can be rescued by treatment with calcium and borate, which also facilitate pectin cross-linking. Sensing of these salinity-induced wall defects might therefore be a direct consequence of physical interaction between the extracellular domain of FER and pectin. FER-dependent signaling elicits cell-specific calcium transients that maintain cell-wall integrity during salt stress. These results reveal a novel extracellular toxicity of salinity, and identify FER as a sensor of damage to the pectin-associated wall.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5894116PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.cub.2018.01.023DOI Listing

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