4.8 Article

Supra-organismal regulation of strigolactone exudation and plant development in response to rhizospheric cues in rice

Journal

CURRENT BIOLOGY
Volume 32, Issue 16, Pages 3601-+

Publisher

CELL PRESS

Keywords

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Funding

  1. JST Agency PRESTO [JPMJPR17QA]
  2. Japan Society for the promotion of Sciences [KAKENHI 19K05757, 19KK0395]
  3. BBSRC [BB/R00398X/1]

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Plants have evolved mechanisms to detect neighboring plants and adapt to environmental and neighbor density limitations, by perceiving and utilizing the signaling molecules produced by neighboring plants.
Plants have evolved elaborate mechanisms to detect neighboring plants, which typically involve the perception of cues'' inadvertently produced by the neighbor.(1) Strigolactones are hormonal signaling molecules(2,3) that are also exuded into the rhizosphere by most flowering plant species to promote arbuscular mycorrhizal symbioses.(4) Since flowering plants have an endogenous perception system for strigolactones,(5) strigolactones are obvious candidates to act as a cue for neighbor presence, but have not been shown to act as such. To test this hypothesis in rice plants, we quantified two major strigolactones of rice plants, orobanchol and 4-deoxyorobanchol, in root exudates by using LC-MS/MS (MRM) and examined feedback regulation of strigolactone biosynthesis and changes in shoot branching phenotypes in rice plants grown at different densities in hydroponics and soil culture. We show that the presence of neighboring plants, or greater root volume, results in rapidly induced changes in strigolactone biosynthesis, sensitivity, and exudation and the subsequent longer-term changes in shoot architecture. These changes require intact strigolactone biosynthesis in neighboring plants and intact strigolactone signaling in focal plants. These results suggest that strigolactone biosynthesis and exudation in rice plants are driven by supra-organismal environmental strigolactone levels. Strigolactones thus act as a cue for neighbor presence in rice plants, but also seem to act as a more general root density-sensing mechanism in flowering plants that integrates soil volume and neighbor density and allows plants to adapt to the limitations of the rhizosphere.

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