Literature DB >> 28584126

Temperature variability is integrated by a spatially embedded decision-making center to break dormancy in Arabidopsis seeds.

Alexander T Topham1, Rachel E Taylor1, Dawei Yan2, Eiji Nambara2, Iain G Johnston1, George W Bassel3.   

Abstract

Plants perceive and integrate information from the environment to time critical transitions in their life cycle. Some mechanisms underlying this quantitative signal processing have been described, whereas others await discovery. Seeds have evolved a mechanism to integrate environmental information by regulating the abundance of the antagonistically acting hormones abscisic acid (ABA) and gibberellin (GA). Here, we show that hormone metabolic interactions and their feedbacks are sufficient to create a bistable developmental fate switch in Arabidopsis seeds. A digital single-cell atlas mapping the distribution of hormone metabolic and response components revealed their enrichment within the embryonic radicle, identifying the presence of a decision-making center within dormant seeds. The responses to both GA and ABA were found to occur within distinct cell types, suggesting cross-talk occurs at the level of hormone transport between these signaling centers. We describe theoretically, and demonstrate experimentally, that this spatial separation within the decision-making center is required to process variable temperature inputs from the environment to promote the breaking of dormancy. In contrast to other noise-filtering systems, including human neurons, the functional role of this spatial embedding is to leverage variability in temperature to transduce a fate-switching signal within this biological system. Fluctuating inputs therefore act as an instructive signal for seeds, enhancing the accuracy with which plants are established in ecosystems, and distributed computation within the radicle underlies this signal integration mechanism.

Entities:  

Keywords:  distributed control; dormancy; seed; signal integration; variability

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2017        PMID: 28584126      PMCID: PMC5488954          DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1704745114

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A        ISSN: 0027-8424            Impact factor:   11.205


  44 in total

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7.  A seed coat bedding assay shows that RGL2-dependent release of abscisic acid by the endosperm controls embryo growth in Arabidopsis dormant seeds.

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10.  The Transcription Factor ATHB5 Affects GA-Mediated Plasticity in Hypocotyl Cell Growth during Seed Germination.

Authors:  Petra Stamm; Alexander T Topham; Nur Karimah Mukhtar; Matthew D B Jackson; Daniel F A Tomé; Jim L Beynon; George W Bassel
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  20 in total

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2.  An ABA-GA bistable switch can account for natural variation in the variability of Arabidopsis seed germination time.

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4.  A transcriptional hub integrating gibberellin-brassinosteroid signals to promote seed germination in Arabidopsis.

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9.  Identification of a bet-hedging network motif generating noise in hormone concentrations and germination propensity in Arabidopsis.

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10.  Reactive Oxygen Species and Gibberellin Acid Mutual Induction to Regulate Tobacco Seed Germination.

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