Receptor-like-kinase-interacting protein TOW stabilizes PIN transporters for auxin canalization
Li M, Rydza N, Mazur E, Molnar G, Nodzyński T, Friml J. 2026. Receptor-like-kinase-interacting protein TOW stabilizes PIN transporters for auxin canalization. Current Biology. 36(6), 1468–1480.e6.
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Abstract
Auxin canalization is a self-organizing process that governs the flexible formation of vasculature by reinforcing the formation of auxin transport channels. A key prerequisite is the feedback between auxin signaling and directional auxin transport, mediated by PIN transporters. Despite the developmental importance of canalization, the molecular components linking auxin perception to the regulation of PIN auxin transporters remain poorly understood. Here, we identify TOW, a novel and essential component of auxin canalization that links intracellular auxin signaling with cell surface auxin perception. TOW is regulated downstream of TIR1/AFB-Aux/IAA-WRKY23 transcriptional auxin signaling. tow mutants exhibit defects in regeneration and de novo vasculature formation, along with impaired formation of polarized, PIN-expressing auxin channels. At the subcellular level, these mutants display disrupted auxin-induced PIN polarization and altered PIN endocytic trafficking dynamics. TOW localizes predominantly to the plasma membrane, where it interacts with receptor-like kinases involved in auxin canalization, including the TMK1 auxin co-receptor and the CAMEL-CANAR complex. TOW promotes PIN interaction with these kinases and stabilizes PINs at the cell surface. Together, our findings identify TOW as a molecular link between intracellular and cell surface auxin signaling mechanisms that converge on PIN trafficking and polarity, providing new insights into how auxin signaling regulates directional auxin transport for the self-organizing formation of vasculature during flexible plant development.
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Date Published
2026-03-23
Journal Title
Current Biology
Publisher
Elsevier
Acknowledgement
We thank Dr. Z. Ge (ISTA) for providing vectors for the CRISPR-Cas9 system, Dr. Armel Nicolas and Dr. Bella Bruszel for phosphoproteomic analysis, Prof. Michael Wrzaczek (Czech Academy of Sciences, Czechia) for valuable suggestions, and Prof. Maciek Adamowski (University of Gdańsk) for technical assistance. We also acknowledge the support of the Mass Spectrometry and Proteomics Facility, the Imaging & Optics Facility, and the Lab Support Facility at the Institute of Science and Technology Austria. This research was supported by the Scientific Service Units (SSU) of ISTA, utilizing resources provided by the Imaging & Optics Facility (IOF) and the Lab Support Facility (LSF). The work conducted by the Friml group was funded by the European Research Council (ERC) under grant agreement no. 101142681 (CYNIPS) and by the Austrian Science Fund (FWF) under project ESP271. We acknowledge the core facility CELLIM supported by MEYS CR (LM2023050 Czech-BioImaging) and the Plant Sciences Core Facility of CEITEC Masaryk University. E.M. received support from the National Science Centre (NCN), Poland, through the OPUS call within the Weave programme (grant no. 2021/43/I/NZ1/01835). T.N. received support from TowArds Next GENeration Crops, reg. no. CZ.02.01.01/00/22_008/0004581 of the ERDF Programme Johannes Amos Comenius.
Acknowledged SSUs
Volume
36
Issue
6
Page
1468-1480.e6
ISSN
IST-REx-ID
Cite this
Li M, Rydza N, Mazur E, Molnar G, Nodzyński T, Friml J. Receptor-like-kinase-interacting protein TOW stabilizes PIN transporters for auxin canalization. Current Biology. 2026;36(6):1468-1480.e6. doi:10.1016/j.cub.2026.02.023
Li, M., Rydza, N., Mazur, E., Molnar, G., Nodzyński, T., & Friml, J. (2026). Receptor-like-kinase-interacting protein TOW stabilizes PIN transporters for auxin canalization. Current Biology. Elsevier. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cub.2026.02.023
Li, Mingyue, Nikola Rydza, Ewa Mazur, Gergely Molnar, Tomasz Nodzyński, and Jiří Friml. “Receptor-like-Kinase-Interacting Protein TOW Stabilizes PIN Transporters for Auxin Canalization.” Current Biology. Elsevier, 2026. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cub.2026.02.023.
M. Li, N. Rydza, E. Mazur, G. Molnar, T. Nodzyński, and J. Friml, “Receptor-like-kinase-interacting protein TOW stabilizes PIN transporters for auxin canalization,” Current Biology, vol. 36, no. 6. Elsevier, p. 1468–1480.e6, 2026.
Li M, Rydza N, Mazur E, Molnar G, Nodzyński T, Friml J. 2026. Receptor-like-kinase-interacting protein TOW stabilizes PIN transporters for auxin canalization. Current Biology. 36(6), 1468–1480.e6.
Li, Mingyue, et al. “Receptor-like-Kinase-Interacting Protein TOW Stabilizes PIN Transporters for Auxin Canalization.” Current Biology, vol. 36, no. 6, Elsevier, 2026, p. 1468–1480.e6, doi:10.1016/j.cub.2026.02.023.
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