A conserved superlocus regulates above- and belowground root initiation.
Moutasem OmaryNaama GilChen YahavEvyatar SteinerAnat HendelmanIdan EfroniPublished in: Science (New York, N.Y.) (2022)
Plants continuously form new organs in different developmental contexts in response to environmental cues. Underground lateral roots initiate from prepatterned cells in the main root, but cells can also bypass the root-shoot trajectory separation and generate shoot-borne roots through an unknown mechanism. We mapped tomato ( Solanum lycopersicum ) shoot-borne root development at single-cell resolution and showed that these roots initiate from phloem-associated cells through a unique transition state. This state requires the activity of a transcription factor that we named SHOOTBORNE ROOTLESS ( SBRL ) . Evolutionary analysis reveals that SBRL 's function and cis regulation are conserved in angiosperms and that it arose as an ancient duplication, with paralogs controlling wound-induced and lateral root initiation. We propose that the activation of a common transition state by context-specific regulators underlies the plasticity of plant root systems.