Temporal and spatial frameworks supporting plant responses to vegetation proximity.
Pedro Pastor-AndreuJordi Moreno-RomeroMikel Urdin-BravoJulia Palau-RodriguezSandi PaulisicElizabeth KastanakiVicente Vives-PerisAurelio Gomez-CadenasAnna Esteve-CodinaBeatriz Martín-MurAntía Rodríguez-VillalónJaime F Martinez-GarciaPublished in: Plant physiology (2024)
After perception of vegetation proximity by phytochrome photoreceptors, shade-avoider plants initiate a set of responses known as the Shade Avoidance Syndrome (SAS). Shade perception by the phytochrome B (phyB) photoreceptor unleashes the PHYTOCHROME INTERACTING FACTORs (PIFs) and initiates SAS responses. In Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) seedlings, shade perception involves rapid and massive changes in gene expression, increases auxin production, and promotes hypocotyl elongation. Other components, such as phyA and ELONGATED HYPOCOTYL 5 (HY5), also participate in the shade regulation of the hypocotyl elongation response by repressing it. However, why and how so many regulators with either positive or negative activities modulate the same response remain unclear. Our physiological, genetic, cellular, and transcriptomic analyses showed that (1) these components are organized into two main branches or modules and (2) the connection between them is dynamic and changes with the time of shade exposure. We propose a model for the regulation of shade-induced hypocotyl elongation in which the temporal and spatial functional importance of the various SAS regulators analyzed here helps to explain the co-existence of differentiated regulatory branches with overlapping activities.