Login / Signup

The Arabidopsis SGN3/GSO1 receptor kinase integrates soil nitrogen status into shoot development.

Defeng ShenKathrin WippelSimone RemmelYuanyuan ZhangNoah KuertoesUlla NeumannStanislav KoprivaTonni Grube Andersen
Published in: The EMBO journal (2024)
The Casparian strip is a barrier in the endodermal cell walls of plants that allows the selective uptake of nutrients and water. In the model plant Arabidopsis thaliana, its development and establishment are under the control of a receptor-ligand mechanism termed the Schengen pathway. This pathway facilitates barrier formation and activates downstream compensatory responses in case of dysfunction. However, due to a very tight functional association with the Casparian strip, other potential signaling functions of the Schengen pathway remain obscure. In this work, we created a MYB36-dependent synthetic positive feedback loop that drives Casparian strip formation independently of Schengen-induced signaling. We evaluated this by subjecting plants in which the Schengen pathway has been uncoupled from barrier formation, as well as a number of established barrier-mutant plants, to agar-based and soil conditions that mimic agricultural settings. Under the latter conditions, the Schengen pathway is necessary for the establishment of nitrogen-deficiency responses in shoots. These data highlight Schengen signaling as an essential hub for the adaptive integration of signaling from the rhizosphere to aboveground tissues.
Keyphrases
  • arabidopsis thaliana
  • gene expression
  • oxidative stress
  • risk assessment
  • stem cells
  • climate change
  • blood brain barrier
  • machine learning
  • bone marrow
  • deep learning
  • stress induced
  • drug induced
  • protein kinase