The TOR Pathway Is Involved in Adventitious Root Formation in Arabidopsis and Potato

In the agriculture industry, adventitious root formation is a core issue of plants asexual propagation. However, the underlying molecular mechanism of adventitious root formation is far beyond understanding. In present study we found that target of rapamycin (TOR) signaling plays a key role in adven...

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Veröffentlicht in:Frontiers in plant science 2017-05, Vol.8, p.784-784
Hauptverfasser: Deng, Kexuan, Dong, Pan, Wang, Wanjing, Feng, Li, Xiong, Fangjie, Wang, Kai, Zhang, Shumin, Feng, Shun, Wang, Bangjun, Zhang, Jiankui, Ren, Maozhi
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:In the agriculture industry, adventitious root formation is a core issue of plants asexual propagation. However, the underlying molecular mechanism of adventitious root formation is far beyond understanding. In present study we found that target of rapamycin (TOR) signaling plays a key role in adventitious root formation in potato and . The core components of TOR complex including TOR, RAPTOR, and LST8 are highly conserved in potato, but the seedlings of potato are insensitive to rapamycin, implying FK506 Binding Protein 12 KD (FKBP12) lost the function to bridge the interaction of rapamycin and TOR in potato. To dissect TOR signaling in potato, the rapamycin hypersensitive potato plants (BP12-OE) were engineered by introducing yeast ( ) into potato. We found that rapamycin can significantly attenuate the capability of adventitious root formation in BP12-OE potatoes. KU63794 (KU, an active-site TOR inhibitor) combined with rapamycin can more significantly suppress adventitious root formation of BP12-OE potato than the single treatments, such as KU63794 or rapamycin, indicating its synergistic inhibitory effects on potato adventitious root formation. Furthermore, RNA-seq data showed that many genes associated with auxin signaling pathway were altered when BP12-OE potato seedlings were treated with rapamycin + KU, suggesting that TOR may play a major role in adventitious root formation via auxin signaling. The auxin receptor mutant was sensitive to TOR inhibitors and the double and quadruple mutants including , and displayed more sensitive to asTORis than single mutant . Consistently, overexpression of in and potato can partially overcome the inhibitory effect of asTORis and promote adventitious root formation under asTORis treatments. These observations suggest that TOR signaling regulates adventitious root formation by mediating auxin signaling in and potato.
ISSN:1664-462X
1664-462X
DOI:10.3389/fpls.2017.00784