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Article Abstract

Many plant species display remarkable developmental plasticity and regenerate new organs after injury. Local signals produced by wounding are thought to trigger organ regeneration but molecular mechanisms underlying this control remain largely unknown. We previously identified an AP2/ERF transcription factor WOUND INDUCED DEDIFFERENTIATION1 (WIND1) as a central regulator of wound-induced cellular reprogramming in plants. In this study, we demonstrate that WIND1 promotes callus formation and shoot regeneration by upregulating the expression of the () gene, which encodes another AP2/ERF transcription factor in The mutants are defective in callus formation and shoot regeneration; conversely, its overexpression promotes both of these processes, indicating that ESR1 functions as a critical driver of cellular reprogramming. Our data show that WIND1 directly binds the vascular system-specific and wound-responsive -element-like motifs within the promoter and activates its expression. The expression of is strongly reduced in dominant repressors, and ectopic overexpression of bypasses defects in callus formation and shoot regeneration in plants, supporting the notion that ESR1 acts downstream of WIND1. Together, our findings uncover a key molecular pathway that links wound signaling to shoot regeneration in plants.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5304349PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1105/tpc.16.00623DOI Listing

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