The auxin signalling network translates dynamic input into robust patterning at the shoot apex

The plant hormone auxin is thought to provide positional information for patterning during development. It is still unclear, however, precisely how auxin is distributed across tissues and how the hormone is sensed in space and time. The control of gene expression in response to auxin involves a comp...

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Veröffentlicht in:Molecular systems biology 2011-07, Vol.7 (1), p.508-n/a
Hauptverfasser: Vernoux, Teva, Brunoud, Géraldine, Farcot, Etienne, Morin, Valérie, Van den Daele, Hilde, Legrand, Jonathan, Oliva, Marina, Das, Pradeep, Larrieu, Antoine, Wells, Darren, Guédon, Yann, Armitage, Lynne, Picard, Franck, Guyomarc'h, Soazig, Cellier, Coralie, Parry, Geraint, Koumproglou, Rachil, Doonan, John H, Estelle, Mark, Godin, Christophe, Kepinski, Stefan, Bennett, Malcolm, De Veylder, Lieven, Traas, Jan
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The plant hormone auxin is thought to provide positional information for patterning during development. It is still unclear, however, precisely how auxin is distributed across tissues and how the hormone is sensed in space and time. The control of gene expression in response to auxin involves a complex network of over 50 potentially interacting transcriptional activators and repressors, the auxin response factors (ARFs) and Aux/IAAs. Here, we perform a large‐scale analysis of the Aux/IAA‐ARF pathway in the shoot apex of Arabidopsis , where dynamic auxin‐based patterning controls organogenesis. A comprehensive expression map and full interactome uncovered an unexpectedly simple distribution and structure of this pathway in the shoot apex. A mathematical model of the Aux/IAA‐ARF network predicted a strong buffering capacity along with spatial differences in auxin sensitivity. We then tested and confirmed these predictions using a novel auxin signalling sensor that reports input into the signalling pathway, in conjunction with the published DR5 transcriptional output reporter. Our results provide evidence that the auxin signalling network is essential to create robust patterns at the shoot apex. Synopsis The plant hormone auxin is a key morphogenetic signal involved in the control of cell identity throughout development. A striking example of auxin action is at the shoot apical meristem (SAM), a population of stem cells generating the aerial parts of the plant. Organ positioning and patterning depends on local accumulations of auxin in the SAM, generated by polar transport of auxin (Vernoux et al , 2010 ). However, it is still unclear how auxin is distributed at cell resolution in tissues and how the hormone is sensed in space and time during development. A complex ensemble of 29 Aux/IAAs and 23 ARFs is central to the regulation of gene transcription in response to auxin (for review, see Leyser, 2006 ; Guilfoyle and Hagen, 2007 ; Chapman and Estelle, 2009 ). Protein–protein interactions govern the properties of this transduction pathway (Del Bianco and Kepinski, 2011 ). Limited interaction studies suggest that, in the absence of auxin, the Aux/IAA repressors form heterodimers with the ARF transcription factors, preventing them from regulating target genes. In the presence of auxin, the Aux/IAA proteins are targeted to the proteasome by an SCF E3 ubiquitin ligase complex (Chapman and Estelle, 2009 ; Leyser, 2006 ). In this process, auxin promotes the interacti
ISSN:1744-4292
1744-4292
DOI:10.1038/msb.2011.39