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ABP1-TMK auxin perception for global phosphorylation and auxin canalization

Authors :
Jiří Friml
Michelle Gallei
Zuzana Gelová
Alexander Johnson
Ewa Mazur
Aline Monzer
Lesia Rodriguez
Mark Roosjen
Inge Verstraeten
Branka D. Živanović
Minxia Zou
Lukáš Fiedler
Caterina Giannini
Peter Grones
Mónika Hrtyan
Walter A. Kaufmann
Andre Kuhn
Madhumitha Narasimhan
Marek Randuch
Nikola Rýdza
Koji Takahashi
Shutang Tan
Anastasia Teplova
Toshinori Kinoshita
Dolf Weijers
Hana Rakusová
Source :
Nature, Nature 609 (2022) 7927, Nature, 609(7927), 575-581
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

The phytohormone auxin triggers transcriptional reprogramming through a well-characterized perception machinery in the nucleus. By contrast, mechanisms that underlie fast effects of auxin, such as the regulation of ion fluxes, rapid phosphorylation of proteins or auxin feedback on its transport, remain unclear1–3. Whether auxin-binding protein 1 (ABP1) is an auxin receptor has been a source of debate for decades1,4. Here we show that a fraction of Arabidopsis thaliana ABP1 is secreted and binds auxin specifically at an acidic pH that is typical of the apoplast. ABP1 and its plasma-membrane-localized partner, transmembrane kinase 1 (TMK1), are required for the auxin-induced ultrafast global phospho-response and for downstream processes that include the activation of H+-ATPase and accelerated cytoplasmic streaming. abp1 and tmk mutants cannot establish auxin-transporting channels and show defective auxin-induced vasculature formation and regeneration. An ABP1(M2X) variant that lacks the capacity to bind auxin is unable to complement these defects in abp1 mutants. These data indicate that ABP1 is the auxin receptor for TMK1-based cell-surface signalling, which mediates the global phospho-response and auxin canalization.

Details

ISSN :
00280836
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....7ccff2abe61f9e3fe183df15347083a9
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-022-05187-x