Floral organ abscission peptide IDA and its HAE/HSL2 receptors control cell separation during lateral root emergence

Throughout their life cycle, plants produce new organs, such as leaves, flowers, and lateral roots. Organs that have served their purpose may be shed after breakdown of primary cell walls between adjacent cell files at the site of detachment. In Arabidopsis , floral organs abscise after pollination,...

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Published inProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences - PNAS Vol. 110; no. 13; pp. 5235 - 5240
Main Authors Kumpf, Robert P., Shi, Chun-Lin, Larrieu, Antoine, Stø, Ida Myhrer, Butenko, Melinka A., Péret, Benjamin, Riiser, Even Sannes, Bennett, Malcolm J., Aalen, Reidunn B.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States National Academy of Sciences 26.03.2013
National Acad Sciences
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Summary:Throughout their life cycle, plants produce new organs, such as leaves, flowers, and lateral roots. Organs that have served their purpose may be shed after breakdown of primary cell walls between adjacent cell files at the site of detachment. In Arabidopsis , floral organs abscise after pollination, and this cell separation event is controlled by the peptide INFLORESCENCE DEFICIENT IN ABSCISSION (IDA), which signals through the leucine-rich repeat receptor-like kinases HAESA (HAE) and HAESA-LIKE2 (HSL2). Emergence of new lateral root primordia, initiated deep inside the root under the influence of auxin, is similarly dependent on cell wall dissolution between cells in the overlaying endodermal, cortical, and epidermal tissues. Here we show that this process requires IDA , HAE , and HSL2 . Mutation in these genes constrains the passage of the growing lateral root primordia through the overlaying layers, resulting in altered shapes of the lateral root primordia and of the overlaying cells. The HAE and HSL2 receptors are redundant in function during floral organ abscission, but during lateral root emergence they are differentially involved in regulating cell wall remodeling genes. In the root, IDA is strongly auxin-inducible and dependent on key regulators of lateral root emergence—the auxin influx carrier LIKE AUX1-3 and AUXIN RESPONSE FACTOR7. The expression levels of the receptor genes are only transiently induced by auxin, suggesting they are limiting factors for cell separation. We conclude that elements of the same cell separation signaling module have been adapted to function in different developmental programs.
Bibliography:http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1210835110
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PMCID: PMC3612645
1Present address: Laboratoire de Biologie du Développement des Plantes, Service de Biologie Végétale et de Microbiologie Environnementales, Institut de Biologie Environnementale et Biotechnologie, Commissariat à l'Energie Atomique et aux Energies Alternatives de Cadarache, 13108 Saint Paul lez Durance, France.
2Present address: Bioforsk, 1432 Ås, Norway.
Author contributions: M.A.B., B.P., M.J.B., and R.B.A. designed research; R.P.K., C.-L.S., A.L., I.M.S., E.S.R., and R.B.A. performed research; R.P.K. contributed new reagents/analytic tools; R.P.K., C.-L.S., A.L., I.M.S., M.J.B., and R.B.A. analyzed data; and R.B.A. wrote the paper.
Edited by Philip N. Benfey, Duke University, Durham, NC, and approved February 11, 2013 (received for review June 25, 2012)
ISSN:0027-8424
1091-6490
DOI:10.1073/pnas.1210835110