Abstract

BackgroundAbscission is an active, organized, and highly coordinated cell separation process enabling the detachment of aerial organs through the modification of cell-to-cell adhesion and breakdown of cell walls at specific sites on the plant body known as abscission zones. In Arabidopsis thaliana, abscission of floral organs and cauline leaves is regulated by the interaction of the hormonal peptide INFLORESCENCE DEFICIENT IN ABSCISSION (IDA), a pair of redundant receptor-like protein kinases, HAESA (HAE) and HAESA-LIKE2 (HSL2), and SOMATIC EMBRYOGENESIS RECEPTOR-LIKE KINASE (SERK) co-receptors. However, the functionality of this abscission signaling module has not yet been demonstrated in other plant species.ResultsThe expression of the pair of NbenIDA1 homeologs and the receptor NbenHAE.1 was supressed at the base of the corolla tube by the inoculation of two virus-induced gene silencing (VIGS) constructs in Nicotiana benthamiana. These gene suppression events arrested corolla abscission but did not produce any obvious effect on plant growth. VIGS plants retained a higher number of corollas attached to the flowers than control plants, an observation related to a greater corolla breakstrength. The arrest of corolla abscission was associated with the preservation of the parenchyma tissue at the base of the corolla tube that, in contrast, was virtually collapsed in normal corollas. In contrast, the inoculation of a viral vector construct that increased the expression of NbenIDA1A at the base of the corolla tube negatively affected the growth of the inoculated plants accelerating the timing of both corolla senescence and abscission. However, the heterologous ectopic overexpression of citrus CitIDA3 and Arabidopsis AtIDA in N. benthamiana did not alter the standard plant phenotype suggesting that the proteolytic processing machinery was unable to yield active peptides.ConclusionHere, we demonstrate that the pair of NbenIDA1 homeologs encoding small peptides of the IDA-like family and the receptor NbenHAE.1 control cellular breakdown at the base of the corolla tube awhere an adventitious AZ should be formed and, therefore, corolla abscission in N. benthamiana flowers. Altogether, our results provide the first evidence supporting the notion that the IDA-HAE/HSL2 signaling module is conserved in angiosperms.

Highlights

  • Abscission is an active, organized, and highly coordinated cell separation process enabling the detachment of aerial organs through the modification of cell-to-cell adhesion and breakdown of cell walls at specific sites on the plant body known as abscission zones

  • Here, we demonstrate that the pair of NbenIDA1 homeologs encoding small peptides of the INFLORESCENCE DEFICIENT IN ABSCISSION (IDA)-like family and the receptor NbenHAE.1 control cellular breakdown at the base of the corolla tube awhere an adventitious Abscission zone (AZ) should be formed and, corolla abscission in N. benthamiana flowers

  • Silencing and overexpression of Nicotiana benthamiana IDA-like and HAE-like genes using a viral vector based on Citrus leaf blotch virus In a previous study, we found that the expression pattern of both the pair of NbenIDA1 and NbenHAE homeologs paralleled the corolla abscission process in N. benthamiana [13]

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Summary

Introduction

Abscission is an active, organized, and highly coordinated cell separation process enabling the detachment of aerial organs through the modification of cell-to-cell adhesion and breakdown of cell walls at specific sites on the plant body known as abscission zones. It has been reported that specific IDA-like genes were highly expressed in abscission zones (AZs) in tomato, soybean, oil palm, citrus, litchi or yellow lupine and at the base of the corolla tube of Nicotiana benthamiana flowers during abscission [8,9,10,11,12,13]. These observations strongly suggest that IDA-like genes might conserve in other species the same function that IDA exerts in Arabidopsis regulating cell separation during organ abscission.

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