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Root branching under high salinity requires auxin-independent modulation of LATERAL ORGAN BOUNDARY DOMAIN 16 function.

Yanxia ZhangYiyun LiThijs de ZeeuwKilian DuijtsDorota KawaJasper LamersKristina S MunzertHongfei LiYutao ZouA Jessica MeyerJinxuan YanFrancel VerstappenYixuan WangTom GijsbertsJielin WangNora Gigli-BiscegliaTimo EngelsdorfAalt D J van DijkChrista Testerink
Published in: The Plant cell (2023)
Salinity stress constrains lateral root (LR) growth and severely affects plant growth. Auxin signaling regulates LR formation, but the molecular mechanism by which salinity affects root auxin signaling and whether salt induces other pathways that regulate LR development remains unknown. In Arabidopsis thaliana, the auxin-regulated transcription factor LATERAL ORGAN BOUNDARY DOMAIN 16 (LBD16) is an essential player in LR development under control conditions. Here we show that under high-salt conditions, an alternative pathway regulates LBD16 expression. Salt represses auxin signaling but in parallel activates ZINC FINGER OF ARABIDOPSIS THALIANA 6 (ZAT6), a transcriptional activator of LBD16. ZAT6 activates LBD16 expression, thus contributing to downstream cell wall remodeling and promoting LR development under high-salt conditions. Our study thus shows that the integration of auxin-dependent repressive and salt-activated auxin-independent pathways converging on LBD16 modulates root branching under high-salt conditions.
Keyphrases
  • arabidopsis thaliana
  • transcription factor
  • poor prognosis
  • microbial community
  • cell wall
  • minimally invasive
  • plant growth
  • immune response
  • binding protein
  • long non coding rna
  • genome wide identification