Abstract
AbstractThe shoot of green plants is the primary site of carbon assimilation into sugars, the key source of energy and metabolic building blocks. The systemic transport of sugars is essential for plant growth and morphogenesis. Plants evolved intricate networks of molecular players to effectively orchestrate the subcellular partitioning of sugars. Dynamic distribution of these osmotically active compounds is a handy tool to regulate cell turgor pressure. Pressure-induced mechanical forces play an instructive role in developmental biology across kingdoms. Here, we functionally characterized a long non-coding RNA,CARMA,as a negative regulator of a receptor-like kinase, CANAR. Sugar-responsiveCARMAspecifically fine-tunesCANARexpression in the phloem, the route of sugar transport. By controlling sugar distribution, the CARMA-CANAR module allows cells to flexibly adapt to the external osmolality and adjust the size of vascular cell types during organ growth and development. We identify a nexus of plant vascular tissue formation with cell internal pressure monitoring and reveal a novel functional aspect of long non-coding RNAs in developmental biology.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory