Progressive oxygenation of developing leaves directs morphogenesis
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Oxygen availability underpins energy production in multicellular organisms, yet internal oxygen gradients arise in both plants and animals. Plants sense these variations via the PLANT CYSTEINE OXIDASE branch of the N-degron pathway, which regulates the stability of key transcription factors. Originally linked to metabolic control, this pathway recently emerged as a development regulator. While the shoot apical meristem was shown to be hypoxic, the oxygen dynamics of organs originating from this low-oxygen niche remain unknown. Here we show that developing leaves form a spatiotemporal oxygen gradient that is sensed through the oxygen sensing machinery. This pathway integrates local oxygen availability to regulate leaf morphogenesis: early hypoxia restricts cell expansion, while subsequent distal-to-proximal oxygenation enables specialized cell fates acquisition. Our findings reveal that oxygen acts as a positional cue in normal growth, guiding developmental trajectories. Our work highlights opportunities to harness oxygen gradients or sensing to direct plant form and function.