The Flowering Hormone Florigen Accelerates Secondary Cell Wall Biogenesis to Harmonize Vascular Maturation with Reproductive Development [article]

Akiva Shalit-Kaneh, Tamar Eviatar–Ribak, Guy Horev, Naomi Suss, Roni Aloni, Yuval Eshed, Eliezer Lifschitz
2018 bioRxiv   pre-print
AbstractThe protein hormone florigen is a universal systemic inducer of flowering and a generic growth terminator across meristems. To understand the developmental rational for its pleiotropic functions and to uncover the deep cellular systems mobilized by florigen beyond flowering we explored termination of radial expansion of stems. Employing the power of tomato genetics along with RNAseq and histological validations we show that endogenous, mobile, or induced florigen accelerates secondary
more » ... ll wall biogenesis (SCWB), and hence vascular maturation, independently of flowering. This finding is supported by a systemic florigen antagonist from the non-flowering Ginkgo biloba, which arrests SCWB and by MADS and MIF genes downstream of florigen that similarly suppress or enhance, respectively, vascular maturation independent of flowering. We also show that florigen is remarkably stable and distributed to all organs regardless of existing endogenous levels. By accelerating SCWB, florigen reprograms the distribution of resources, signals and mechanical loads required for the ensuing reproductive phase it had originally set into motion.Developmental HighlightsFlorigen accelerates SCWB: A prime case for a long-range regulation of a complete metabolic network by a plant hormone.The dual acceleration of flowering and vascular maturation by Florigen provides a paradigm for a dynamic regulation of global, independent, developmental programs.The growth termination functions of florigen and the auto-regulatory mechanism for its production and distribution provide a communication network enveloping the shoot system.A stable florigen provides a possible mechanism for the quantitative regulation of floweringLateral stimulation of xylem differentiation links the phloem-travelling florigen with the annual rings in trunks.MADS genes are common relay partners in Florigen circuits; vascular maturation in stems and reproductive transition in apical meristems.
doi:10.1101/476028 fatcat:2bpkgyu3o5a6xk3snmaxh2k2ue