4.8 Article

On the outside looking in: roles of endogenous and exogenous strigolactones

Journal

PLANT JOURNAL
Volume 105, Issue 2, Pages 322-334

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/tpj.15087

Keywords

strigolactones; plant signalling; Pi starvation response; parasitic plants; mycorrhizal fungi; quorum sensing

Categories

Funding

  1. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC) [06752, 507992, 00356]
  2. New Frontiers in Research Fund Exploration (SSHRC-NFRF-E) [00118]

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Strigolactones (SLs) play crucial roles in plant development, fungal growth, and parasitic plant germination, particularly in the rhizosphere ecosystem. Their interactions with phosphate utilization suggest a more holistic view is needed to fully understand their roles in plant biology.
A collection of small molecules called strigolactones (SLs) act as both endogenous hormones to control plant development and as ecological communication cues between organisms. SL signalling overlaps with that of a class of smoke-derived compounds, karrikins (KARs), which have distinct yet overlapping developmental effects on plants. Although the roles of SLs in shoot and root development, in the promotion of arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) fungal branching and in parasitic plant germination have been well characterized, recent data have illustrated broader roles for these compounds in the rhizosphere. Here, we review the known roles of SLs in development, growth of AM fungi and germination of parasitic plants to develop a framework for understanding the use of SLs as molecules of communication in the rhizosphere. It appears, for example, that there are many connections between SLs and phosphate utilization. Low phosphate levels regulate SL metabolism and, in turn, SLs sculpt root and shoot architecture to coordinate growth and optimize phosphate uptake from the environment. Plant-exuded SLs attract fungal symbionts to deliver inorganic phosphate (Pi) to the host. These and other examples suggest the boundary between exogenous and endogenous SL functions can be easily blurred and a more holistic view of these small molecules is likely to be required to fully understand SL biology. Related to this, we summarize and discuss evidence for a primitive role of SLs in moss as a quorum sensing-like molecule, providing a unifying concept of SLs as endogenous and exogenous signalling molecules.

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