info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Knock-down of arabidopsis PLC5 reduces primary root growth and secondary root formation while overexpression improves drought tolerance and causes stunted root hair growth
Fecha
2018-10Registro en:
Zhang, Qianqian; Van Wijk, Ringo; Zarza, Xavier; Shahbaz, Muhammad; Van Hooren, Max; et al.; Knock-down of arabidopsis PLC5 reduces primary root growth and secondary root formation while overexpression improves drought tolerance and causes stunted root hair growth; Oxford University Press; Plant And Cell Physiology; 59; 10; 10-2018; 2004-2019
0032-0781
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
Zhang, Qianqian
Van Wijk, Ringo
Zarza, Xavier
Shahbaz, Muhammad
Van Hooren, Max
Guardia, Aisha Elena
Scuffi, Denise
Garcia-Mata, Carlos
Van Den Ende, Wim
Hoffmann-Benning, Susanne
Haring, Michel A.
Laxalt, Ana Maria
Munnik, Teun
Resumen
Phospholipase C (PLC) is a well-known signaling enzyme in metazoans that hydrolyzes phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate (PIP 2) to produce inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate and diacylglycerol as second messengers involved in mutiple processes. Plants contain PLC too, but relatively little is known about its function there. The model system Arabidopsis thaliana contains nine PLC genes. Reversed genetics have implicated several roles for PLCs in plant development and stress signaling. Here, PLC5 is functionally addressed. Promoter-β-glucuronidase (GUS) analyses revealed expression in roots, leaves and flowers, predominantly in vascular tissue, most probably phloem companion cells, but also in guard cells, trichomes and root apical meristem. Only one plc5-1 knock-down mutant was obtained, which developed normally but grew more slowly and exhibited reduced primary root growth and decreased lateral root numbers. These phenotypes could be complemented by expressing the wild-type gene behind its own promoter. Overexpression of PLC5 (PLC5-OE) using the UBQ10 promoter resulted in reduced primary and secondary root growth, stunted root hairs, decreased stomatal aperture and improved drought tolerance. PLC5-OE lines exhibited strongly reduced phosphatidylinositol 4-monophosphate (PIP) and PIP 2 levels and increased amounts of phosphatidic acid, indicating enhanced PLC activity in vivo. Reduced PIP 2 levels and stunted root hair growth of PLC5-OE seedlings could be recovered by inducible overexpression of a root hair-specific PIP 5-kinase, PIP5K3. Our results show that PLC5 is involved in primary and secondary root growth and that its overexpression improves drought tolerance. Independently, we provide new evidence that PIP 2 is essential for the polar tip growth of root hairs.