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In vivo gibberellin gradients visualized in rapidly elongating tissues

Accepted version
Peer-reviewed

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Authors

Walia, A 
Lanquar, V 
Frommer, WB 
Jones, AM 

Abstract

The phytohormone gibberellin (GA) is a key regulator of plant growth and development. Although the upstream regulation and downstream responses to GA vary across cells and tissues, developmental stages and environmental conditions, the spatiotemporal distribution of GA in vivo remains unclear. Using a combinatorial screen in yeast, we engineered an optogenetic biosensor, GIBBERELLIN PERCEPTION SENSOR 1 (GPS1), that senses nanomolar levels of bioactive GAs. Arabidopsis thaliana plants expressing a nuclear localized GPS1 report on GAs at the cellular level. GA gradients were correlated with gradients of cell length in rapidly elongating roots and dark-grown hypocotyls. In roots, accumulation of exogenously applied GA also correlated with cell length, intimating that a root GA gradient can be established independently of GA biosynthesis. In hypocotyls, GA levels were reduced in a phytochrome interacting factor (pif) quadruple mutant in the dark and increased in a phytochrome double mutant in the light, indicating that PIFs elevate GA in the dark and that phytochrome inhibition of PIFs could lower GA in the light. As GA signalling directs hypocotyl elongation largely through promoting PIF activity, PIF promotion of GA accumulation represents a positive feedback loop within the molecular framework driving rapid hypocotyl growth.

Description

Keywords

Gibberellin Perception Sensor 1, GPS1, cell growth, hormone, FRET biosensor, phytochrome, phytochrome interacting factor, root elongation, hypocotyl, PIFs

Journal Title

Nature Plants

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

2055-026X
2055-0278

Volume Title

3

Publisher

Nature
Sponsorship
Gatsby Charitable Foundation (unknown)
Gatsby Charitable Foundation (GAT3395/GLF)
We thank the Gatsby Charitable Foundation for funding support of A.R., A.W. and A.M.J.