AZG1 is a cytokinin transporter that interacts with auxin transporter PIN1 and regulates the root stress response.
Tomás María TessiVeronica G MaurinoMojgan ShahriariEsther MeissnerOndřej NovákTaras PasternakBenjamin S SchumacherFranck Anicet DitengouZenglin LiJasmin DuerrNoemi S FlubacherMoritz NautscherAlyssa WilliamsZuzanna KazimierczakMiroslav StrnadJörg-Oliver ThumfartKlaus PalmeMarcelo DesimoneWilliam D TealePublished in: The New phytologist (2023)
An environmentally responsive root system is crucial for plant growth and crop yield, especially in sub-optimal soil conditions. This responsiveness enables the plant to exploit regions of high nutrient density whilst simultaneously minimizing abiotic stress. Despite the vital importance of root systems in regulating plant growth, significant gaps of knowledge exist in the mechanisms that regulate their architecture. Auxin defines both the frequency of lateral root (LR) initiation and the rate of LR outgrowth. Here we describe a search for proteins that regulate root system architecture by interacting directly with a key auxin transporter, PIN1. The native separation of Arabidopsis plasma membrane protein complexes identified several PIN1 co-purifying proteins. Among them, AZG1 was subsequently confirmed as a PIN1 interactor. Here we show that, in Arabidopsis, AZG1 is a cytokinin import protein that co-localizes with and stabilizes PIN1, linking auxin and cytokinin transport streams. AZG1 expression in LR primordia is sensitive to NaCl, and the frequency of LRs is AZG1-dependent under salt stress. This report therefore identifies a potential point for auxin:cytokinin crosstalk which shapes root system architecture in response to NaCl.