Local light signaling at the leaf tip drives remote differential petiole growth through auxin-gibberellin dynamics
Küpers, Jesse J.; Snoek, Basten L.; Oskam, Lisa; Pantazopoulou, Chrysoula K.; Matton, Sanne E.A.; Reinen, Emilie; Liao, Che Yang; Eggermont, Eline D.C.; Weekamp, Harold; Biddanda-Devaiah, Muthanna; Kohlen, Wouter; Weijers, Dolf; Pierik, Ronald
(2023) Current Biology, volume 33, issue 1, pp. 75 - 85
(Article)
Abstract
Although plants are immobile, many of their organs are flexible to move in response to environmental cues. In dense vegetation, plants detect neighbors through far-red light perception with their leaf tip. They respond remotely, with asymmetrical growth between the abaxial and adaxial sides of the leafstalk, the petiole. This results
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in upward movement that brings the leaf blades into better lit zones of the canopy. The plant hormone auxin is required for this response, but it is not understood how non-differential leaf tip-derived auxin can remotely regulate movement. Here, we show that remote signaling of far-red light promotes auxin accumulation in the abaxial petiole. This local auxin accumulation is facilitated by reinforcing an intrinsic directionality of the auxin transport protein PIN3 on the petiole endodermis, as visualized with a PIN3-GFP line. Using an auxin biosensor, we show that auxin accumulates in all cell layers from endodermis to epidermis in the abaxial petiole, upon far-red light signaling in the remote leaf tip. In the petiole, auxin elicits a response to both auxin itself as well as a second growth promoter; gibberellin. We show that this dual regulation is necessary for hyponastic leaf movement in response to light. Our data indicate that gibberellin is required to permit cell growth, whereas differential auxin accumulation determines which cells can grow. Our results reveal how plants can spatially relay information about neighbor proximity from their sensory leaf tips to the petiole base, thus driving adaptive growth.
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Keywords: auxin, C3PO, confocal microscopy, gibberellin, hyponasty, leaf movement, neighbor detection, phytochrome, RNA sequencing, shade avoidance, General Neuroscience, General Biochemistry,Genetics and Molecular Biology, General Agricultural and Biological Sciences
ISSN: 0960-9822
Publisher: Cell Press
Note: Funding Information: We would like to thank all members of the Plant-Environment Signaling research group at Utrecht University that participated in material harvests for RNA sequencing. We thank Kerstin Gühl for developing methods for IAA quantification and Yorrit van der Kaa for help propagating seed material. We also thank the Utrecht Sequencing Facility and the UMCU Bioinformatics Expertise Core for RNA sequencing and read annotation. J.J.K. was supported by the Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research (GSU 831.15.003 ), C.-Y.L. was supported by the European Research Council (ERC; StG “CELLPATTERN”; contract 281573 to D.W.), W.K. was supported by the Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research (Veni 863.15.010 ), C.K.P. was supported by the Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research (open competition ALWOP.509 to Kaisa Kajala), and R.P. and L.O. were supported by the Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research (Vici 865.17.002 to R.P.). Publisher Copyright: © 2022 The Authors
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