Effects of conditional IPT-Dependent cytokinin overproduction on root architecture of Arabidopsis seedlings

Kuderova A, Urbankova I, Valkova M, Malbeck J, Brzobohaty B, Nemethova D, Hejatko J
PLANT AND CELL PHYSIOLOGY 49: 570-582 , 2008

Keywords: Arabidopsis thaliana; auxin-cytokinin cross-talk; CaMV 35S > GR > ipt transactivation; DR5 activity; endogenous cytokinin; root development
Abstract: Cytokinin (CK) has been known to inhibit primary root elongation and suggested to act as an auxin antagonist in the regulation of lateral root (LR) formation. While the role of auxin in root development has been thoroughly studied, the detailed and overall description of CK effects on root system morphology, particularly that of developing lateral root primordia (LRPs), and hence its role in organogenesis is still in progress. Here we examine the effects of conditional endogenous CK overproduction on root architecture and consider its temporal aspect during the early development of Arabidopsis thaliana. We employed the pOp/LhGR system to induce ectopic ipt overexpression with a glucocorticoid dexamethasone at designated developmental points. The transient CaMV 35SGRipt transactivation greatly enhanced levels of biologically active CKs of zeatin (Z)-type and identified a distinct developmental interval during which primary root elongation is susceptible to increases in endogenous CK production. Long-term CK overproduction inhibited primary root elongation by reducing quantitative parameters of primary root meristem, disturbed a characteristic graded distribution pattern of auxin response in LRPs and impaired their development. Our findings indicate the impact of perturbed endogenous CK on the regulation of asymmetric auxin distribution during LRP development and imply that there is cross-talk between auxin and CK during organogenesis in A. thaliana.
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IEB authors: Jiří Malbeck