The Emerging Role of Reactive Oxygen Species Signaling during Lateral Root Development

Overall root architecture is the combined result of primary and lateral root growth and is influenced by both intrinsic genetic programs and external signals. One of the main questions for root biologists is how plants control the number of lateral root primordia and their emergence through the main...

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Published in:Plant physiology (Bethesda) Vol. 165; no. 3; pp. 1105 - 1119
Main Authors: Manzano, Concepción, Pallero-Baena, Mercedes, Casimiro, Ilda, De Rybel, Bert, Orman-Ligeza, Beata, Van Isterdael, Gert, Beeckman, Tom, Draye, Xavier, Casero, Pedro, del Pozo, Juan C.
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: United States American Society of Plant Biologists 01-07-2014
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Summary:Overall root architecture is the combined result of primary and lateral root growth and is influenced by both intrinsic genetic programs and external signals. One of the main questions for root biologists is how plants control the number of lateral root primordia and their emergence through the main root. We recently identified S-phase kinase-associated protein! (SKP2B) as a new early marker for lateral root development. Here, we took advantage of its specific expression pattern in Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) in a cell-sorting and transcriptomic approach to generate a lateral root-specific cell sorting SKP2B data set that represents the endogenous genetic developmental program. We first validated this data set by showing that many of the identified genes have a function during root growth or lateral root development. Importantly, genes encoding peroxidases were highly represented in our data set. Thus, we next focused on this class of enzymes and showed, using genetic and chemical inhibitor studies, that peroxidase activity and reactive oxygen species signaling are specifically required during lateral root emergence but, intriguingly, not for primordium specification itself.
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ISSN:0032-0889
1532-2548
DOI:10.1104/pp.114.238873