| Literature DB >> 24336201 |
Fabrice Besnard1, Yassin Refahi2, Valérie Morin3, Benjamin Marteaux4, Géraldine Brunoud4, Pierre Chambrier5, Frédérique Rozier5, Vincent Mirabet6, Jonathan Legrand7, Stéphanie Lainé5, Emmanuel Thévenon8, Etienne Farcot9, Coralie Cellier5, Pradeep Das6, Anthony Bishopp10, Renaud Dumas8, François Parcy8, Ykä Helariutta11, Arezki Boudaoud6, Christophe Godin2, Jan Traas5, Yann Guédon2, Teva Vernoux5.
Abstract
How biological systems generate reproducible patterns with high precision is a central question in science. The shoot apical meristem (SAM), a specialized tissue producing plant aerial organs, is a developmental system of choice to address this question. Organs are periodically initiated at the SAM at specific spatial positions and this spatiotemporal pattern defines phyllotaxis. Accumulation of the plant hormone auxin triggers organ initiation, whereas auxin depletion around organs generates inhibitory fields that are thought to be sufficient to maintain these patterns and their dynamics. Here we show that another type of hormone-based inhibitory fields, generated directly downstream of auxin by intercellular movement of the cytokinin signalling inhibitor ARABIDOPSIS HISTIDINE PHOSPHOTRANSFER PROTEIN 6 (AHP6), is involved in regulating phyllotactic patterns. We demonstrate that AHP6-based fields establish patterns of cytokinin signalling in the meristem that contribute to the robustness of phyllotaxis by imposing a temporal sequence on organ initiation. Our findings indicate that not one but two distinct hormone-based fields may be required for achieving temporal precision during formation of reiterative structures at the SAM, thus indicating an original mechanism for providing robustness to a dynamic developmental system.Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 24336201 DOI: 10.1038/nature12791
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nature ISSN: 0028-0836 Impact factor: 49.962