Mobile Gibberellin Directly Stimulates Arabidopsis Hypocotyl Xylem Expansion

Author:

Ragni Laura1,Nieminen Kaisa1,Pacheco-Villalobos David1,Sibout Richard1,Schwechheimer Claus2,Hardtke Christian S.1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Plant Molecular Biology, University of Lausanne, CH-1015 Lausanne, Switzerland

2. Plant Systems Biology, Center of Life and Food Sciences Weihenstephan, Technische Universität München, 85354 Freising, Germany

Abstract

Abstract Secondary growth of the vasculature results in the thickening of plant structures and continuously produces xylem tissue, the major biological carbon sink. Little is known about the developmental control of this quantitative trait, which displays two distinct phases in Arabidopsis thaliana hypocotyls. The later phase of accelerated xylem expansion resembles the secondary growth of trees and is triggered upon flowering by an unknown, shoot-derived signal. We found that flowering-dependent hypocotyl xylem expansion is a general feature of herbaceous plants with a rosette growth habit. Flowering induction is sufficient to trigger xylem expansion in Arabidopsis. By contrast, neither flower formation nor elongation of the main inflorescence is required. Xylem expansion also does not depend on any particular flowering time pathway or absolute age. Through analyses of natural genetic variation, we found that ERECTA acts locally to restrict xylem expansion downstream of the gibberellin (GA) pathway. Investigations of mutant and transgenic plants indicate that GA and its signaling pathway are both necessary and sufficient to directly trigger enhanced xylogenesis. Impaired GA signaling did not affect xylem expansion systemically, suggesting that it acts downstream of the mobile cue. By contrast, the GA effect was graft transmissible, suggesting that GA itself is the mobile shoot-derived signal.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Cell Biology,Plant Science

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