Back to Search Start Over

Cytokinin Signaling Is Essential for Organ Formation in Marchantia polymorpha

Authors :
Shiori S Aki
Tatsuya Mikami
Ryuichi Nishihama
Takayuki Kohchi
Masaaki Umeda
Satoshi Naramoto
Kimitsune Ishizaki
Hitoshi Sakakibara
Yumiko Takebayashi
Junko Kyozuka
Mikiko Kojima
Source :
Plant and Cell Physiology. 60:1842-1854
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Oxford University Press (OUP), 2019.

Abstract

Cytokinins are known to regulate various physiological events in plants. Cytokinin signaling is mediated by the phosphorelay system, one of the most ancient mechanisms controlling hormonal pathways in plants. The liverwort Marchantia polymorpha possesses all components necessary for cytokinin signaling; however, whether they respond to cytokinins and how the signaling is fine-tuned remain largely unknown. Here, we report cytokinin function in Marchantia development and organ formation. Our measurement of cytokinin species revealed that cis-zeatin is the most abundant cytokinin in Marchantia. We reduced the endogenous cytokinin level by overexpressing the gene for cytokinin oxidase, MpCKX, which inactivates cytokinins, and generated overexpression and knockout lines for type-A (MpRRA) and type-B (MpRRB) response regulators to manipulate the signaling. The overexpression lines of MpCKX and MpRRA, and the knockout lines of MpRRB, shared phenotypes such as inhibition of gemma cup formation, enhanced rhizoid formation and hyponastic thallus growth. Conversely, the knockout lines of MpRRA produced more gemma cups and exhibited epinastic thallus growth. MpRRA expression was elevated by cytokinin treatment and reduced by knocking out MpRRB, suggesting that MpRRA is upregulated by the MpRRB-mediated cytokinin signaling, which is antagonized by MpRRA. Our findings indicate that when plants moved onto land they already deployed the negative feedback loop of cytokinin signaling, which has an indispensable role in organogenesis.

Details

ISSN :
14719053 and 00320781
Volume :
60
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Plant and Cell Physiology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....d33f70f292425ac4b842d4fa1453da20