A plant lipocalin promotes retinal-mediated oscillatory lateral root initiation
Alexandra J. Dickinson, Jingyuan Zhang, Michael Luciano, Guy Wachsman, Evan Sandoval, Martin J. Schnermann, José R. Dinneny, Philip N. Benfey
Abstract
Building a wider root network As roots grow through the soil, lateral branches develop to broaden the reach toward water and nutrients. Just where on the main root these lateral roots will develop is organized by an oscillatory root clock. Dickinson et al . have now identified an initiating signal in the form of the signaling molecule retinal. Oscillatory expression of a retinal-binding protein, a temperature-sensitive lipocalin, defines sites where retinal signals can initiate growth. —PJH
Topics & Concepts
RetinalRoot (linguistics)LipocalinLateral rootBiologyPlant rootsSIGNAL (programming language)Plant rootBotanyCell biologyHorticultureComputer scienceArabidopsisBiochemistryGeneMutantLinguisticsPhilosophyProgramming languagePlant Molecular Biology ResearchPhotosynthetic Processes and MechanismsLight effects on plants