ARF degradation defines a deeply conserved step in auxin response
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Journal Article
| Epub ahead of print
| English
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Author
De Roij, Martijn;
Hernández García, Jorge;
Das, ShubhajitISTA;
Borst, Jan Willem;
Weijers, Dolf
Department
Abstract
In land plants, the signalling molecule auxin profoundly controls growth and development, chiefly through a transcriptional response system. The auxin response is mediated by modulating the activity of DNA-binding auxin response factor (ARF) proteins. The concentrations and stoichiometry of the competing A- and B-class ARFs define cells’ capacity for auxin response. In the minimal auxin response system of the liverwort Marchantia polymorpha, both A- and B-ARFs are unstable, but the underlying mechanisms, developmental relevance and evolutionary history of this instability are unknown. Here we identify a minimal motif that is necessary for MpARF2 (B-class) degradation and show that it is critical for development and the auxin response. Through comparative analysis and motif swaps among all ARF classes in extant algae and land plants, we infer that the emergence of ARF instability probably occurred in the ancestor of the A- and B-ARF clades and, therefore, preceded or coincided with the origin of the auxin response system.
Publishing Year
Date Published
2025-04-11
Journal Title
Nature Plants
Publisher
Springer Nature
Acknowledgement
We thank S. Woudenberg, S. Valk and J. Rienstra for help and advice, A. Kuhn for comments on the paper and M. Prigge and M. Estelle for helpful discussions. This work was supported by a grant from Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research (NWO; OCENW.M20.031 to J.W.B.), a Marie Skłodowska-Curie Individual Fellowship (H2020-MSCA-IF-2020 contract number to J.H.G.) and a research grant from the Human Frontiers Research Program (HFSP; grant RGP0015/2022 to D.W.).
Article Number
10909
eISSN
IST-REx-ID
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