4.7 Review

Integrating the Roles for Cytokinin and Auxin in De Novo Shoot Organogenesis: From Hormone Uptake to Signaling Outputs

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms22168554

Keywords

auxin; cytokinin; de novo shoot organogenesis; DNSO; gene regulatory network; hormone uptake; shoot regeneration; sucrose; transport

Funding

  1. Ministry of Education, Science and Technological Development of the Republic of Serbia [451-03-9/2021-14/200007]
  2. Czech Science Foundation [19-13103S]

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De novo shoot organogenesis (DNSO) is a common procedure used for shoot regeneration in vitro. The genetic regulation of DNSO has been studied in detail, highlighting the roles of plant hormones cytokinin (CK) and auxin, as well as their interaction with sucrose in the regeneration media. These signaling events mediate the complex process of shoot regeneration.
De novo shoot organogenesis (DNSO) is a procedure commonly used for the in vitro regeneration of shoots from a variety of plant tissues. Shoot regeneration occurs on nutrient media supplemented with the plant hormones cytokinin (CK) and auxin, which play essential roles in this process, and genes involved in their signaling cascades act as master regulators of the different phases of shoot regeneration. In the last 20 years, the genetic regulation of DNSO has been characterized in detail. However, as of today, the CK and auxin signaling events associated with shoot regeneration are often interpreted as a consequence of these hormones simply being present in the regeneration media, whereas the roles for their prior uptake and transport into the cultivated plant tissues are generally overlooked. Additionally, sucrose, commonly added to the regeneration media as a carbon source, plays a signaling role and has been recently shown to interact with CK and auxin and to affect the efficiency of shoot regeneration. In this review, we provide an integrative interpretation of the roles for CK and auxin in the process of DNSO, adding emphasis on their uptake from the regeneration media and their interaction with sucrose present in the media to their complex signaling outputs that mediate shoot regeneration.

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