학술논문

Two phylogenetically unrelated peptide‐receptor modules jointly regulate lateral root initiation via a partially shared signaling pathway in Arabidopsis thaliana.
Document Type
Article
Source
New Phytologist. Feb2022, Vol. 233 Issue 4, p1780-1796. 17p.
Subject
*CELLULAR signal transduction
*ARABIDOPSIS thaliana
*SIGNAL peptides
*TELECOMMUNICATION systems
*TRANSCRIPTION factors
Language
ISSN
0028-646X
Abstract
Summary: Peptide‐receptor signaling is an important system for intercellular communication, regulating many developmental processes. A single process can be controlled by several distinct signaling peptides. However, since peptide‐receptor modules are usually studied separately, their mechanistic interactions remain largely unexplored.Two phylogenetically unrelated peptide‐receptor modules, GLV6/GLV10‐RGI and TOLS2/PIP2‐RLK7, independently described as inhibitors of lateral root initiation, show striking similarities between their expression patterns and gain‐ and loss‐of‐function phenotypes, suggesting a common function during lateral root spacing and initiation.The GLV6/GLV10‐RGI and TOLS2/PIP2‐RLK7 modules trigger similar transcriptional changes, likely in part via WRKY transcription factors. Their overlapping set of response genes includes PUCHI and PLT5, both required for the effect of GLV6/10, as well as TOLS2, on lateral root initiation. Furthermore, both modules require the activity of MPK6 and can independently trigger MPK3/MPK6 phosphorylation.The GLV6/10 and TOLS2/PIP2 signaling pathways seem to converge in the activation of MPK3/MPK6, leading to the induction of a similar transcriptional response in the same target cells, thereby regulating lateral root initiation through a (partially) common mechanism. Convergence of signaling pathways downstream of phylogenetically unrelated peptide‐receptor modules adds an additional, and hitherto unrecognized, level of complexity to intercellular communication networks in plants. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]