Review: Competence to flower
Plant Science Research Weekly, Research0 Comments
/
The transition between vegetative and reproductive stages in the plant life cycle implies a change in the developmental program of the shoot apical meristem to stop developing leaves and start developing floral buds. The factors that allow this transition to happen are many and the underlying mechanisms…
Previewing Pollen Biology special issue of Plant Physiology
Plant Science Research Weekly, ResearchIn Plant Physiology Preview you can get a head start on reading the excellent set of articles from a forthcoming special issue on Pollen Biology. Updates and research articles cover all aspects of this crucial part of reproductive biology, from the complex cell biology that underpins polar growth of…
Plant farming by ants ($)
Plant Science Research Weekly, ResearchFarming mutualisms, in which an organism benefits from another to promote growth, have evolved in many lineages. In particular, symbioses between plants and ants are mostly defensive mutualisms. In this paper, Chomicki and Renner describe the obligate mutualism observed between epiphytes in the genus…
Bacteria lower surface tension in pitcher plant traps, trapping prey more efficiently ($)
Plant Science Research Weekly, ResearchPitcher plants are carnivorous, similar to Venus fly traps. However, pitcher plants have fluid-filled modified leaves instead of the movable lobes found on Venus fly traps. The pitcher plant’s modified leaf contains bacteria-laden water that traps small insects, but how are the insects trapped…
Transcriptional repression of K+ uptake by ARF2
Plant Science Research Weekly, ResearchHAK5 is a high-affinity potassium transporter that is transcriptionally repressed in high K+ conditions. Zhao et al. identified hormone-related cis-elements in the HAK5 promoter. They screened mutants deficient in transcription factors associated with these cis-elements and found that arf2 mutants show…
Evolutionary origins of stomata ($)
Plant Science Research Weekly, ResearchQuestions remain about the evolutionary origins and functions of stomata. They are absent from liverworts, present to a limited extent in mosses, and are found on 410 million year-old fossils of Cooksonia, a leafless plant. Chater et al. show that orthologs of two key transcription factors that control…
Inclination, not force, is detected in shoot gravitropism
Plant Science Research Weekly, ResearchPlant cells detect gravity as a consequence of the movement of dense starch granules called statoliths when the statoctyte, the cell that encompasses, them reorients. An open question has been whether the position of the statoliths within the statocyte or the force exerted by them is the primary gravisensing…
Improving Rubisco
Plant Science Research Weekly, ResearchRubisco (Ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase / oxygenase) is the enzyme responsible for fixing almost all inorganic carbon into organic form, but it is not optimized for current conditions. As temperature and CO2 levels increase, there is an opportunity to increase photosynthetic efficiency by engineering…
Gibberellin biosynthesis in bacteria: Still more convergent evolution ($)
Plant Science Research Weekly, ResearchGibberellin hormones were famously identified as the product of Gibberella fujikuroi, a fungal pathogen that stimulates host cell elongation, and then subsequently recognized as a hormone produced by plants as well. Fungi and plants produce gibberellins from distinct biochemical pathways, in an example…