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Brassinosteroid‐BZR1/2‐WAT1 module determines the high level of auxin signalling in vascular cambium during wood formation
Author(s) -
Lee Jinsu,
Kim Hyemin,
Park SinGi,
Hwang Hyeona,
Yoo Seungil,
Bae Wonsil,
Kim Eunhui,
Kim Jaehoon,
Lee HwaYong,
Heo TaeYoung,
Kang Kwon Kyoo,
Lee Yuree,
Hong Chang Pyo,
Cho Hyunwoo,
Ryu Hojin
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
new phytologist
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.742
H-Index - 244
eISSN - 1469-8137
pISSN - 0028-646X
DOI - 10.1111/nph.17265
Subject(s) - cambium , brassinosteroid , auxin , vascular cambium , microbiology and biotechnology , biology , xylem , vascular tissue , botany , secondary growth , arabidopsis , biochemistry , mutant , gene
Summary The tight regulation of local auxin homeostasis and signalling maxima in xylem precursor cells specifies the organising activity of the vascular cambium and consequently promotes xylem differentiation and wood formation. However, the molecular mechanisms underlying the local auxin signalling maxima in the vascular cambium are largely unknown. Here, we reveal that brassinosteroid (BR)‐activated WALLS ARE THIN1 (WAT1) facilitates wood formation by enhancing local auxin signalling in the vascular cambium in Solanum lycopersicum . Growth defects and low auxin signalling readouts in the BR‐deficient tomato cultivar, Micro‐Tom, were associated with a novel recessive allele, Slwat1‐copi , created by the insertion of a retrotransposon in the last exon of the SlWAT1 locus. Molecular and genetic studies by generating the gain‐of‐function and loss‐of‐function tomato mutants revealed that SlWAT1 is a critical regulator for fine tuning local auxin homeostasis and signalling outputs in vascular cambium to facilitate secondary growth. Finally, we discovered that BR‐regulated SlBZR1/2 directly activated downstream auxin responses by SlWAT1 upregulation in xylem precursor cells to facilitate xylem differentiation and subsequent wood formation. Our data suggest that the BR‐SlBZR1/2–WAT1 signalling network contributes to the high level of auxin signalling in the vascular cambium for secondary growth.