Abstract

Flavonoids are a class of specialized metabolites with subclasses including flavonols and anthocyanins, which have unique properties as antioxidants. Flavonoids modulate plant development, but whether and how they impact lateral root development is unclear. We examined potential roles for flavonols in this process using Arabidopsis thaliana mutants with defects in genes encoding key enzymes in flavonoid biosynthesis. We observed the tt4 and fls1 mutants, which produce no flavonols, have increased lateral root emergence. The tt4 root phenotype was reversed by genetic and chemical complementation. To more specifically define the flavonoids involved, we tested an array of flavonoid biosynthetic mutants, eliminating roles for anthocyanins and the flavonols quercetin and isorhamnetin in modulating lateral root development. Instead, two tt7 mutant alleles, with defects in a branchpoint enzyme blocking quercetin biosynthesis, formed reduced numbers of lateral roots and tt7-2 had elevated levels of kaempferol. Using a flavonol-specific dye, we observed that in the tt7-2 mutant, kaempferol accumulated within lateral root primordia at higher levels than wild-type. These data are consistent with kaempferol, or downstream derivatives, acting as a negative regulator of lateral root emergence. We examined ROS accumulation using ROS-responsive probes and found reduced fluorescence of a superoxide-selective probe within the primordia of tt7-2 compared with wild-type, but not in the tt4 mutant, consistent with opposite effects of these mutants on lateral root emergence. These results support a model in which increased level of kaempferol in the lateral root primordia of tt7-2 reduces superoxide concentration and ROS-stimulated lateral root emergence.

Highlights

  • In multiple species, their diverse functionality [4], and antioxidant capacity [5,6,7,8]

  • Flavonol levels were quantified in Col-0 and six mutants with defects in genes encoding enzymes involved in flavonoid biosynthesis

  • We asked whether the alteration in root development in flavonol biosynthetic mutants is tied to their role as antioxidants

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Summary

Introduction

In multiple species, their diverse functionality [4], and antioxidant capacity [5,6,7,8]. The lateral root number of the omt-1 and tt3 mutants were not significantly different from wild-type, consistent with the absence of root developmental roles of isorhamnetin, anthocyanins, and other downstream molecules in the flavonoid pathway.

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