Photosensory adaptation mechanisms in hypocotyl phototropism: how plants recognize the direction of a light source.

Journal of experimental botany(2023)

引用 4|浏览0
暂无评分
摘要
Plants recognize the direction of a light source and exhibit phototropic responses. Physiological studies have predicted that differences in the light intensity received by the cells on the irradiated and shaded sides of a coleoptile or hypocotyl cause differences in the amounts of photoproduct. This hypothetical photoproduct appears to regulate a signaling pathway that controls cell elongation in which cells under lower light intensity elongate more than those under higher light intensity. This results in a bending growth toward a light source and has been proposed as the photoproduct-gradient model of phototropism. In this review, we summarize recent findings on the photosensory adaptation mechanisms involving a blue-light photoreceptor, phototropin1 (phot1), ROOT PHOTOTROPISM2, NONPHOTOTROPIC HYPOCOTYL3 (NPH3), and another photoreceptor family, the phytochromes. The current evidence demonstrates that, in addition to the transition of the phot1-NPH3 photoreceptor complexes to their active state, the presence of a certain population of the phot1-NPH3 complexes showing a steady state, even in a light environment, is essential for recognition of the light source direction in phototropism. This is consistent with the photoproduct-gradient model, and a dissociation state of the phot1-NPH3 complex would be considered an entity of the hypothetical photoproduct in this model.
更多
查看译文
关键词
NON PHOTOTROPIC HYPOCOTYL3,ROOT PHOTOTROPISM2,photosensory adaptation,phototropin,phototropism,phytochrome
AI 理解论文
溯源树
样例
生成溯源树,研究论文发展脉络
Chat Paper
正在生成论文摘要