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Efficient uptake of nutrients in both animal and plant cells requires tissue-spanning diffusion barriers separating inner tissues from the outer lumen/soil. However, we poorly understand how such contiguous three-dimensional superstructures are formed in plants. Here, we show that correct establishment of the plant Casparian Strip (CS) network relies on local neighbor communication. We show that positioning of Casparian Strip membrane domains (CSDs) is tightly coordinated between neighbors in wild-type and that restriction of domain formation involves the putative extracellular protease LOTR1. Impaired domain restriction in leads to fully functional CSDs at ectopic positions, forming 'half strips'. LOTR1 action in the endodermis requires its expression in the stele. LOTR1 endodermal expression cannot complement, while cortex expression causes a dominant-negative phenotype. Our findings establish as a crucial player in CSD positioning acting in a directional, non-cell-autonomous manner to restrict and coordinate CS positioning.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.69602 | DOI Listing |
Plant J
September 2025
Plant Genomics and Breeding Institute, Seoul National University, Seoul, South Korea.
Salt stress impairs photosynthetic efficiency and consequently reduces the growth, development, and grain yield of crop plants. The formation of hydrophobic barriers in the root endodermis, including the suberin lamellae and Casparian strips, is a key adaptive strategy for salt stress tolerance. In this study, we identified the role of the rice NAC transcription factor, ONAC005, in salt stress tolerance.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEnviron Res
August 2025
School of Biological and Marine Sciences, University of Plymouth, Plymouth, PL4 8AA, UK.
The capacity of crops to accumulate nanoplastics has remained relatively unexplored largely due to analytical constraints. To address this challenge, the present study employed a radiolabelling approach to demonstrate, for the first time, that polystyrene nanoplastics (C-PS NPs) accumulate and move into the tissues of radishes (Raphanus sativus). Radishes were exposed hydroponically for five days, with only their non-fleshy roots in contact with the C-PS NPs, while accumulation in the fleshy (edible) roots and shoots was subsequently measured.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPlant Physiol Biochem
August 2025
College of Landscape Architecture, Sichuan Agricultural University, Chengdu, Sichuan, 611130, China. Electronic address:
Radial transport of lead (Pb) within roots determines the extent of Pb loading into the xylem, facilitating its subsequent root-to-shoot translocation. However, the regulatory role and underlying mechanism of exogenous melatonin in modulating Pb radial transport in bermudagrass roots remain unclear. Here, morphological and molecular basis by which melatonin affects the Pb radial transport in bermudagrass were explored.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTree Physiol
August 2025
Department of Renewable Resources, 442 Earth Sciences Building, University of Alberta, Edmonton T6G 2E3, Canada.
White spruce is a leading species across nearly the entirety of the North American boreal forest, occurs under a wide range of climate conditions, and has been reported to take up water through its needles. As such, the species represents a good model organism to research adaptation to climatic factors through structural and physiological mechanisms. We used branch samples obtained from a 40-year-old range-wide provenance experiment to relate the climate of origin to needle anatomy, foliar water uptake, and aquaporin expression under simulated drought conditions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAnn Bot
July 2025
Rice Creek Field Station, SUNY Oswego, NY, USA.
Background And Aims: Botanical literature is filled with studies which tried to demonstrate that leaves of many gymnosperms have an endodermis with Casparian bands or a sheath of sclerified cells around leaf veins. Direct photographic evidence of an endodermis with Casparian bands (strips) is lacking for the leaves of many gymnosperms. Our goal was to confirm with direct evidence an endodermis with Casparian bands or a vein sheath in leaves of representative gymnosperms via histochemical staining and epifluorescence microscopy, while extending previous work by examining understudied petioles and leaf bases.
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