External mechanical cues reveal core molecular pathway behind tissue bending in plants

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Abstract

Tissue folding is a central building block of plant and animal morphogenesis. In dicotyledonous plants, hypocotyl folds to form hook after seedling germination that protects their aerial stem cell niche during emergence from soil. Auxin response factors and auxin transport are classically thought to play a key role in this process. Here we show that the microtubule-severing enzyme katanin contributes to hook formation. However, by exposing hypocotyls to external mechanical cues mimicking the natural soil environment, we reveal that auxin response factors ARF7/ARF19, auxin influx carriers, and katanin are dispensable for apical hook formation, indicating that these factors primarily play the role of catalyzers of tissue bending in the absence of external mechanical cues. Instead, our results reveal the key roles of the non-canonical TMK-mediated auxin pathway, PIN efflux carriers and cellulose microfibrils as components of the core pathway behind hook formation in presence or absence of external mechanical cues.

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  1. Excerpt

    Looks are deceiving: apical hook development relies on cellulose microfibrils and non-canonical TMK-mediated auxin signaling when plants are grown on soil-like conditions