Publication | Open Access
Strigolactone signaling is required for auxin-dependent stimulation of secondary growth in plants
401
Citations
56
References
2011
Year
Plant PhysiologyBotanyPlant Growth RegulatorPlant DevelopmentPlant Molecular BiologyBiosynthesisStrigolactone SignalingLong DistancePlant CytologySls ActCell DivisionMorphogenesisCell BiologyPlant HormoneBiologyAuxin-dependent StimulationDevelopmental BiologySignal TransductionSecondary GrowthNatural SciencesMedicinePlant Biochemistry
Long distance cell-to-cell communication is critical for the development of multicellular organisms. In this respect, plants are especially demanding as they constantly integrate environmental inputs to adjust growth processes to different conditions. One example is thickening of shoots and roots, also designated as secondary growth. Secondary growth is mediated by the vascular cambium, a stem cell-like tissue whose cell-proliferating activity is regulated over a long distance by the plant hormone auxin. How auxin signaling is integrated at the level of cambium cells and how cambium activity is coordinated with other growth processes are largely unknown. Here, we provide physiological, genetic, and pharmacological evidence that strigolactones (SLs), a group of plant hormones recently described to be involved in the repression of shoot branching, positively regulate cambial activity and that this function is conserved among species. We show that SL signaling in the vascular cambium itself is sufficient for cambium stimulation and that it interacts strongly with the auxin signaling pathway. Our results provide a model of how auxin-based long-distance signaling is translated into cambium activity and suggest that SLs act as general modulators of plant growth forms linking the control of shoot branching with the thickening of stems and roots.
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