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Bi‐directional, long‐distance hormonal signalling between roots and shoots of soil water availability

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Bi‐directional, long‐distance hormonal signalling between roots and shoots of soil water availability. / Huntenburg, Katharina; Puértolas, Jaime; Ollas, Carlos et al.
In: Physiologia Plantarum, Vol. 174, No. 3, e13697, 20.05.2022.

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Huntenburg K, Puértolas J, Ollas C, Dodd IC. Bi‐directional, long‐distance hormonal signalling between roots and shoots of soil water availability. Physiologia Plantarum. 2022 May 20;174(3):e13697. Epub 2022 May 20. doi: 10.1111/ppl.13697

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@article{dc0e69a26f5440088ed54c58b588165e,
title = "Bi‐directional, long‐distance hormonal signalling between roots and shoots of soil water availability",
abstract = "While the importance of plant water relations in determining crop response to soil water availability is difficult to over-emphasise, under many circumstances, plants maintain their leaf water status as the soil dries yet shoot gas exchange and growth is restricted. Such observations lead to development of a paradigm that root-to-shoot signals regulate shoot physiology, and a conceptual framework to test the importance of different signals such as plant hormones in these physiological processes. Nevertheless, shoot-to-root (hormonal) signalling also plays an important role in regulating root growth and function and may dominate when larger quantities of a hormone are produced in the shoots than the roots. Here, we review the evidence for acropetal and basipetal transport of three different plant hormones (abscisic acid, jasmonates, strigolactones) that have antitranspirant effects, to indicate the origin and action of these signalling systems. The physiological importance of each transport pathway likely depends on the specific environmental conditions the plant is exposed to, specifically whether the roots or shoots are the first to lose turgor when exposed to drying soil or elevated atmospheric demand, respectively. All three hormones can interact to influence each other's synthesis, degradation and intracellular signalling to augment or attenuate their physiological impacts, highlighting the complexity of unravelling these signalling systems. Nevertheless, such complexity suggests crop improvement opportunities to select for allelic variation in the genes affecting hormonal regulation, and (in selected crops) to augment root–shoot communication by judicious selection of rootstock–scion combinations to ameliorate abiotic stresses.",
keywords = "Cell Biology, Plant Science, Genetics, General Medicine, Physiology",
author = "Katharina Huntenburg and Jaime Pu{\'e}rtolas and Carlos Ollas and Dodd, {Ian C.}",
year = "2022",
month = may,
day = "20",
doi = "10.1111/ppl.13697",
language = "English",
volume = "174",
journal = "Physiologia Plantarum",
issn = "0031-9317",
publisher = "Blackwell-Wiley",
number = "3",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Bi‐directional, long‐distance hormonal signalling between roots and shoots of soil water availability

AU - Huntenburg, Katharina

AU - Puértolas, Jaime

AU - Ollas, Carlos

AU - Dodd, Ian C.

PY - 2022/5/20

Y1 - 2022/5/20

N2 - While the importance of plant water relations in determining crop response to soil water availability is difficult to over-emphasise, under many circumstances, plants maintain their leaf water status as the soil dries yet shoot gas exchange and growth is restricted. Such observations lead to development of a paradigm that root-to-shoot signals regulate shoot physiology, and a conceptual framework to test the importance of different signals such as plant hormones in these physiological processes. Nevertheless, shoot-to-root (hormonal) signalling also plays an important role in regulating root growth and function and may dominate when larger quantities of a hormone are produced in the shoots than the roots. Here, we review the evidence for acropetal and basipetal transport of three different plant hormones (abscisic acid, jasmonates, strigolactones) that have antitranspirant effects, to indicate the origin and action of these signalling systems. The physiological importance of each transport pathway likely depends on the specific environmental conditions the plant is exposed to, specifically whether the roots or shoots are the first to lose turgor when exposed to drying soil or elevated atmospheric demand, respectively. All three hormones can interact to influence each other's synthesis, degradation and intracellular signalling to augment or attenuate their physiological impacts, highlighting the complexity of unravelling these signalling systems. Nevertheless, such complexity suggests crop improvement opportunities to select for allelic variation in the genes affecting hormonal regulation, and (in selected crops) to augment root–shoot communication by judicious selection of rootstock–scion combinations to ameliorate abiotic stresses.

AB - While the importance of plant water relations in determining crop response to soil water availability is difficult to over-emphasise, under many circumstances, plants maintain their leaf water status as the soil dries yet shoot gas exchange and growth is restricted. Such observations lead to development of a paradigm that root-to-shoot signals regulate shoot physiology, and a conceptual framework to test the importance of different signals such as plant hormones in these physiological processes. Nevertheless, shoot-to-root (hormonal) signalling also plays an important role in regulating root growth and function and may dominate when larger quantities of a hormone are produced in the shoots than the roots. Here, we review the evidence for acropetal and basipetal transport of three different plant hormones (abscisic acid, jasmonates, strigolactones) that have antitranspirant effects, to indicate the origin and action of these signalling systems. The physiological importance of each transport pathway likely depends on the specific environmental conditions the plant is exposed to, specifically whether the roots or shoots are the first to lose turgor when exposed to drying soil or elevated atmospheric demand, respectively. All three hormones can interact to influence each other's synthesis, degradation and intracellular signalling to augment or attenuate their physiological impacts, highlighting the complexity of unravelling these signalling systems. Nevertheless, such complexity suggests crop improvement opportunities to select for allelic variation in the genes affecting hormonal regulation, and (in selected crops) to augment root–shoot communication by judicious selection of rootstock–scion combinations to ameliorate abiotic stresses.

KW - Cell Biology

KW - Plant Science

KW - Genetics

KW - General Medicine

KW - Physiology

U2 - 10.1111/ppl.13697

DO - 10.1111/ppl.13697

M3 - Journal article

VL - 174

JO - Physiologia Plantarum

JF - Physiologia Plantarum

SN - 0031-9317

IS - 3

M1 - e13697

ER -