Login / Signup

Broadening the roles of UDP-glycosyltransferases in auxin homeostasis and plant development.

Eduardo Mateo-BonmatíRubén Casanova-SáezJan ŠimuraKaren Ljung
Published in: The New phytologist (2021)
The levels of the important plant growth regulator indole-3-acetic acid (IAA) are tightly controlled within plant tissues to spatiotemporally orchestrate concentration gradients that drive plant growth and development. Metabolic inactivation of bioactive IAA is known to participate in the modulation of IAA maxima and minima. IAA can be irreversibly inactivated by oxidation and conjugation to aspartate and glutamate. Usually overlooked because of its reversible nature, the most abundant inactive IAA form is the IAA-glucose (IAA-glc) conjugate. Glycosylation of IAA in Arabidopsis thaliana is reported to be carried out by UDP-glycosyltransferase 84B1 (UGT84B1), while UGT74D1 has been implicated in the glycosylation of the irreversibly formed IAA catabolite oxIAA. Here we demonstrated that both UGT84B1 and UGT74D1 modulate IAA levels throughout plant development by dual IAA and oxIAA glycosylation. Moreover, we identified a novel UGT subfamily whose members redundantly mediate the glycosylation of oxIAA and modulate skotomorphogenic growth.
Keyphrases
  • plant growth
  • arabidopsis thaliana
  • gene expression
  • blood pressure
  • adipose tissue
  • nitric oxide
  • blood glucose
  • cell wall