Apoplastic class III peroxidases PRX62 and PRX69 promote Arabidopsis root hair growth at low temperature.
Javier Martínez PachecoPhilippe RanochaLuciana KasulinCorina M FusariLucas ServiAriel A AptekmannVictoria Berdion GabarainJuan Manuel PeraltaCecilia BorassiEliana MarzolDiana Rosa Rodríguez-GarciaYossmayer Del Carmen Rondón GuerreroMariana Carignani SardoyLucía FerreroJavier Francisco BottoClaudio MenesesFederico ArielAlejandro Daniel NadraEzequiel PetrilloChristophe DunandJosé Manuel EstevezPublished in: Nature communications (2022)
Root Hairs (RHs) growth is influenced by endogenous and by external environmental signals that coordinately regulate its final cell size. We have recently determined that RH growth was unexpectedly boosted when Arabidopsis thaliana seedlings are cultivated at low temperatures. It was proposed that RH growth plasticity in response to low temperature was linked to a reduced nutrient availability in the media. Here, we explore the molecular basis of this RH growth response by using a Genome Wide Association Study (GWAS) approach using Arabidopsis thaliana natural accessions. We identify the poorly characterized PEROXIDASE 62 (PRX62) and a related protein PRX69 as key proteins under moderate low temperature stress. Strikingly, a cell wall protein extensin (EXT) reporter reveals the effect of peroxidase activity on EXT cell wall association at 10 °C in the RH apical zone. Collectively, our results indicate that PRX62, and to a lesser extent PRX69, are key apoplastic PRXs that modulate ROS-homeostasis and cell wall EXT-insolubilization linked to RH elongation at low temperature.