4.8 Article

Control of phyllotaxy by the cytokinin-inducible response regulator homologue ABPHYL1

Journal

NATURE
Volume 430, Issue 7003, Pages 1031-1034

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NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/nature02778

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Phyllotaxy describes the geometric pattern of leaves and flowers, and has intrigued botanists and mathematicians for centuries(1,2). How these patterns are initiated is poorly understood, and this is partly due to the paucity of mutants(3). Signalling by the plant hormone auxin appears to determine the site of leaf initiation; however, this observation does not explain how distinct patterns of phyllotaxy are initiated(4). abphyl1 (abph1) mutants of maize initiate leaves in a decussate pattern ( that is, paired at 1808), in contrast to the alternating or distichous phyllotaxy observed in wild-type maize and other grasses(5). Here we show that ABPH1 is homologous to two-component response regulators and is induced by the plant hormone cytokinin. ABPH1 is expressed in the embryonic shoot apical meristem, and its spatial expression pattern changes rapidly with cytokinin treatment. We propose that ABPH1 controls phyllotactic patterning by negatively regulating the cytokinin-induced expansion of the shoot meristem, thereby limiting the space available for primordium initiation at the apex.

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