Artículo
Differential auxin transport and accumulation in the stem base lead to profuse adventitious root primordia formation in the aerial roots (aer) mutant of tomato (solanum lycopersicum l.)
Fecha
2017-06Registro en:
Mignolli, Francesco, et al., 2017. Differential auxin transport and accumulation in the stem base lead to profuse adventitious root primordia formation in the aerial roots (aer) mutant of tomato (solanum lycopersicum l.). Journal of Plant Physiology. Múnich: Elsevier GmbH, vol. 213, p. 55-65. ISSN 0176-1617.
Autor
Mignolli, Francesco
Mariotti, Lorenzo
Picciarelli, Piero
Vidoz, María Laura
Institución
Resumen
The aerial roots (aer) mutant of tomato is characterized by a profuse and precocious formation of adven-
titious root primordia along the stem. We demonstrated that auxin is involved in the aer phenotype but
ruled out higher auxin sensitivity of mutant plants. Interestingly, polar auxin transport was altered in aer,
as young seedlings showed a reduced response to an auxin transport inhibitor and higher expression of
auxin export carriers SlPIN1 and SlPIN3. An abrupt reduction in transcripts of auxin efflux and influx genes
in older aer hypocotyls caused a marked deceleration of auxin transport in more mature tissues. Indeed,
in 20 days old aer plants, the transport of labeled IAA was faster in apices than in hypocotyls, displaying
an opposite trend in comparison to a wild type. In addition, auxin transport facilitators (SlPIN1, SlPIN4,
SlLAX5) were more expressed in aer apices than in hypocotyls, suggesting that auxin moves faster from
the upper to the lower part of the stem. Consequently, a significantly higher level of free and conjugated
IAA was found at the base of aer stems with respect to their apices. This auxin accumulation is likely the
cause of the aer phenotype.