Abstract

Plants are plastic organisms that optimize growth in response to a changing environment. This adaptive capability is regulated by external cues, including light, which provides vital information about the habitat. Phytochrome photoreceptors detect far-red light, indicative of nearby vegetation, and elicit the adaptive shade-avoidance syndrome (SAS), which is critical for plant survival. Plants exhibiting SAS are typically more elongated, with distinctive, small, narrow leaf blades. By applying SAS-inducing end-of-day far-red (EoD FR) treatments at different times during Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) leaf 3 development, we have shown that SAS restricts leaf blade size through two distinct cellular strategies. Early SAS induction limits cell division, while later exposure limits cell expansion. This flexible strategy enables phytochromes to maintain control of leaf size through the proliferative and expansion phases of leaf growth. mRNAseq time course data, accessible through a community resource, coupled to a bioinformatics pipeline, identified pathways that underlie these dramatic changes in leaf growth. Phytochrome regulates a suite of major development pathways that control cell division, expansion, and cell fate. Further, phytochromes control cell proliferation through synchronous regulation of the cell cycle, DNA replication, DNA repair, and cytokinesis, and play an important role in sustaining ribosome biogenesis and translation throughout leaf development.

Highlights

  • Plants are highly malleable organisms that are able to adjust their growth strategy to a changing environment

  • The phyB null mutant has reduced leaf blade cell number To establish the cellular basis for phyB control of leaf blade area, we measured leaf dimensions, abaxial epithelial cell number, cell size, and cell density parameters in fully expanded third leaves in the phyB-9 mutant

  • We find effective suppression of several kinesin 12 (KIN12) members (PAKRP1/KIN12A, KIN12B, PHRAGMOPLAST ORIENTING KINESIN 1 (POK1)/KIN12C, and POK2/KIN12D), which are important for phragmoplast formation and function

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Summary

Introduction

Plants are highly malleable organisms that are able to adjust their growth strategy to a changing environment. The leaf is an excellent example of a highly plastic organ, where shape and size are not predetermined, but influenced by external signals, such as light. These adaptative qualities are important for survival because leaves perform critical roles in temperature regulation, gas exchange, and sunlight capture for photosynthesis (Tsukaya, 2005; Fritz et al, 2018).

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