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A University of Utah study identified a gene that helps a
plant's roots send chemical signals that makes leaves grow. A
thale cress seedling with the normal gene (above) produced
four leaves plus two smaller cotyledons or embryonic leaves.
But when the gene is disabled, the seedling (closeup view
below) produced only two cotyledons and no normal leaves.
Credit: Jaimie Van Norman, University of Utah
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October 4, 2004 - University of Utah biologists
discovered a gene that allows a plant's roots to tell the
leaves to stop growing, presumably when water is scarce, soil
is too compacted or other conditions are bad.
While roots obviously carry food and water to the leaves, the
new findings help show how roots also send chemical signals
that control whether or not leaves grow. How leaves grow is a
crucial matter given that leafy plants supply food for humans
and other creatures, produce oxygen for all animals to
breathe, influence global climate and grace us with the
current season of brilliant fall colors.
"When we look at plants, it's easy to think only about
the above-ground parts you can see," says Leslie Sieburth,
who led the study and is an associate professor of biology at
the University of Utah. "But this study shows that the roots
potentially play a huge role - in addition to supplying
water and nutrients - in controlling how the plant comes
to look as it does. It's very easy to ignore the root, but
our study shows we shouldn't."
Manipulating the process someday might allow scientists to
genetically engineer crops and other plants to be more
productive in dry conditions - for example, so that crops
could keep producing abundant leaves in a drought by
irrigating them while overriding the genetic signal that
normally would inhibit growth, Sieburth says.
The new study was published in the Oct. 5 issue of the
journal Current Biology by Sieburth, graduate student
Jaimie Van Norman and Rebecca Frederick, who formerly worked
in Sieburth's laboratory and now is a graduate student in
biochemistry.
Seeking the Secrets of How Leaves Grow
Sieburth's research focuses on a seemingly simple question:
"How do leaves grow? It's a basic biological question," she
says.
Plants look different depending where they grow. A dandelion,
for example, may be very leafy in Florida's humid climate,
but have only small leaves when growing in Utah during a
drought, says Sieburth.
She says the gene she and Van Norman discovered - named
BYPASS1 or BPS1 - may be the key. BPS1
normally allows leaves to develop, but stops leaf growth when
necessary, she adds. In the study, she and Van Norman
demonstrated that BPS1 could be manipulated to change
the way leaves develop even if a plant has enough food and
water.
The study used a plant named Arabidopsis, commonly
known as thale cress, which is frequently used in studies of
plant genetics because it is small, easy to handle, lives
only seven weeks from seed to seed, and fertilizes itself so
mutant strains can be maintained as seeds. Most plants are
believed to have genes similar to those in thale cress, which
is related to broccoli, cauliflower, Brussels sprouts,
cabbage and mustard.
Scientists already knew that a variety of hormones -
cytokinin, abscisic acid and derivatives of compounds called
carotenoids - play a role when plant roots send signals to
shoots, which include everything above ground: stems, leaves,
flowers and fruits. But little has been known about how genes
active in roots control these chemical signals, Sieburth
says. The new study reveals part of the answer, and indicates
a previously unknown plant hormone chemical probably made
from carotenoids - is involved.
Carotenoids include well-known substances such as beta
carotene in carrots and tomatoes, lycopene in tomatoes,
lutein in daffodil flowers and the substance that gives color
and flavor to saffron, a spice from crocus flowers.
Details of the Experiments
In the study, the biologists discovered the BPS1 gene
and then demonstrated that it is required to prevent a plant
from constantly producing the carotenoid byproduct that turns
off leaf growth.
First, they grew thale cress plants with the mutant form of
BPS1 known as bps1. Normal seedlings produce an
increasing number of flat, broad, round leaves as they grow.
Mutants grew only two smaller leaves shaped like triangles or
cones.
After a series of experiments suggested that the roots sent a
signal to halt leaf growth, Van Norman did what Sieburth
calls "a brilliant experiment." She grew mutant seedlings,
cut their roots off and placed the shoots on agar, a
gelatinous substance containing nutrients. Those mutants
produced two fairly normal flat leaves, then started making a
third leaf that was small and abnormally shaped. Van Norman
noticed that happened just as new roots started to grow from
the bottom of the shoots.
So Van Norman kept cutting off the roots each time they
started to regenerate. The plants produced normal leaves,
indicating the mutant roots were sending a chemical signal to
stop leaf growth.
To confirm that, Van Norman grafted mutant roots to normal
four-day-old shoots.
"We got small leaves," Sieburth says. "And no more were
produced."
The experiments indicated the normal BPS1 gene
produces a protein that is a "negative regulator," which
Sieburth compares with the handle on a water faucet.
In a normal plant, BPS1 keeps the faucet shut. But
when conditions are bad, it opens the faucet so that the
growth-inhibiting carotenoid byproduct flows freely from the
roots, telling leaves to stop growing.
Sieburth says the study didn't demonstrate what those
conditions might be, but lack of water and compacted soil are
likely because such conditions would threaten the plant's
survival were it not for a signal telling the leaves to stop
growing.
Earlier studies show that during drought, "an unknown signal
comes from the root and restricts leaf growth," Sieburth
says.
Plants with mutant bps1 in the study also allowed the
faucet to be wide open. That is why when roots were cut off
repeatedly, the flow of growth-inhibiting hormone stopped and
leaves grew normally.
Van Norman believes the normal BPS1 gene exists
because "plants are immobile organisms. They have to be able
to sense their environment both above ground and below
ground, and then respond to changes in the environment."
"They can't just walk away," when water is in short supply,
Sieburth says.
Seeking the Chemical Signal
To indicate what kind of hormone turned off leaf growth, Van
Norman and Sieburth treated thale cress plants with tiny
amounts of a herbicide named fluridone, which inhibits
production of carotenoids. When they used it on mutant plants
- which otherwise would have stunted leaves - the leaves grew
pretty much normally. Because fluridone stopped the growth
inhibiting chemical and allowed leaves to grow, and because
fluridone inhibits carotenoids, the experiment suggested the
growth-inhibiting chemical is a carotenoid.
Subsequent experiments indicated an unknown member of that
class of hormones is responsible. Because a carotenoid named
zeaxanthin made mutant plants even more abnormal, the
researchers suspect the unknown chemical is derived from
zeaxanthin.
Future studies will try to determine more about BPS1
functions, identify the specific growth-inhibiting
carotenoid, learn precisely how the chemical halts leaf
growth, and find out how plants in their normal environment
use BPS1 and the anti-growth signal it unleashes.
University of Utah Public Relations
201 S Presidents Circle, Room 308
Salt Lake City, Utah 84112-9017
(801) 581-6773 fax: 585-3350
www.utah.edu/unews
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