CYP707As are effectors of karrikin and strigolactone signaling pathways in Arabidopsis thaliana and parasitic plants

2019 
Karrikins stimulate Arabidopsis thaliana germination, while parasitic weeds of the Orobanchaceae family have evolved to respond to host‐exuded compounds such as strigolactones, dehydrocostus lactone, and 2‐phenylethyl isothiocyanate. In Phelipanche ramosa, strigolactone‐induced germination was shown to require one of the CYP707A proteins involved in abscisic acid catabolism. Here, germination and gene expression were analyzed to investigate the role of CYP707As in germination of both parasitic plants and Arabidopsis upon perception of germination stimulants, after using pharmacological inhibitors and Arabidopsis mutants disrupting germination signals. CYP707A genes were up‐regulated upon treatment with effective germination stimulants in both parasitic plants and Arabidopsis. Obligate parasitic plants exhibited both an intensified up‐regulation of CYP707A genes and increased sensitivity to the CYP707A inhibitor Abscinazole‐E2B, while Arabidopsis cyp707a mutants still positively responded to germination stimulation. In Arabidopsis, CYP707A regulation required the canonical karrikin signaling pathway KAI2/MAX2/SMAX1 and the transcription factor WRKY33. Finally, CYP707As and WRKY33 also modulated Arabidopsis root architecture in response to the synthetic strigolactone rac‐GR24, and wrky33‐1 exhibited a shoot hyper‐branched phenotype. This study suggests that the lack of host‐independent germination in obligate parasites is associated with an exacerbated CYP707A induction, and that CYP707As and WRKY33 are new players involved in a variety of strigolactone/karrikin responses.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    68
    References
    17
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []