Non-cell autonomous and spatiotemporal signalling from a tissue organizer orchestrates root vascular development.
BaoJun YangMax MinneFederica BrunoniLenka PlačkováIvan PetříkYanbiao SunJonah NolfWouter SmetKevin VerstaenJos R WendrichThomas EekhoutKlára HoyerováGert Van IsterdaelJurgen HaustraeteAnthony BishoppEtienne FarcotOndřej NovákYvan SaeysBert De RybelPublished in: Nature plants (2021)
During plant development, a precise balance of cytokinin is crucial for correct growth and patterning, but it remains unclear how this is achieved across different cell types and in the context of a growing organ. Here we show that in the root apical meristem, the TMO5/LHW complex increases active cytokinin levels via two cooperatively acting enzymes. By profiling the transcriptomic changes of increased cytokinin at single-cell level, we further show that this effect is counteracted by a tissue-specific increase in CYTOKININ OXIDASE 3 expression via direct activation of the mobile transcription factor SHORTROOT. In summary, we show that within the root meristem, xylem cells act as a local organizer of vascular development by non-autonomously regulating cytokinin levels in neighbouring procambium cells via sequential induction and repression modules.