Root growth promotion by Penicillium melinii: mechanistic insights and agricultural applications
Authors: Gutierrez-Manso, L., Devesa-Aranguren, I., Conesa, C. M., Monteoliva-Garcia, G., Gonzalez-Sayer, S., Lozano-Enguita, A., Blasio, F., Ugena, L., Nolasco, J., Vazquez-Mora, A., Levy, C. C. B., Ariel Otero, E., Fernandez-Calvo, P., Moreno-Risueno, M. A., petrik, I., Pencik, A., Reguera, M., Gonzalez-Bodi, S., Huerta-Cepas, J., Sacristan, S., del Pozo, J. C., Cabrera, J.
The study characterizes the endophytic fungus Penicillium melinii, isolated from Arabidopsis thaliana roots, as a plant‑growth‑promoting agent that enhances root architecture and biomass across Arabidopsis, quinoa, and tomato. Integrated phenotypic, transcriptomic, and hormonal analyses reveal that the fungus stimulates auxin‑related pathways and modest stress responses, leading to increased tomato yield in field trials, underscoring its value as a model for root development and a sustainable biostimulant.
The study demonstrates that salinity stress induces a photomorphogenic‑like response in dark‑grown Arabidopsis thaliana seedlings, resulting in reduced apical hook curvature and impaired soil emergence. This phenotype is linked to disrupted asymmetric epidermal cell elongation, decreased auxin signaling and PIN3 abundance on the hook’s concave side, repression of BBX28 expression, and loss of a spatial COP1 gradient, highlighting spatial regulation as a key factor in stress‑affected seedling development.
The study demonstrates that subfamily I ethylene receptors form the core ethylene‑sensing module and act epistatically over subfamily II receptors, uniquely possessing Ca2+‑permeable channel activity that drives ethylene‑induced cytosolic calcium influx. This reveals a mechanistic link whereby subfamily I receptors integrate hormone perception with calcium signaling in plants.
SPOROCYTELESS/NOZZLE acts together with MADS-domain transcription factors to regulate an auxin-dependent network controlling the Megaspore Mother Cell development
Authors: Cavalleri, A., Astori, C., Manrique, S., Bruzzaniti, G., Smaczniak, C., Mizzotti, C., Ruiu, A., Spano, M., Movilli, A., Gregis, V., Xu, X., Kaufmann, K., Colombo, L.
The study elucidates the SPL/NZZ‑dependent regulatory pathway governing megaspore mother cell (MMC) differentiation, revealing that SPL/NZZ directly targets genes and interacts with ovule‑identity MADS‑domain transcription factor complexes. Integration of multi‑omics data with genetic complementation and mutant analyses uncovers an auxin‑dependent downstream network that drives MMC formation.
The study evaluated a transgenic soybean line (VPZ-34A) expressing Arabidopsis VDE, PsbS, and ZEP for combined improvements in light‑use efficiency and carbon assimilation under ambient and elevated CO2 in a FACE experiment. While VPZ‑34A showed enhanced maximum quantum efficiency of PSII under fluctuating light, it did not increase carbon assimilation efficiency or yield, and transcriptome analysis revealed limited gene expression changes. The results suggest that VPZ‑mediated photosynthetic gains are insufficient to boost productivity under elevated CO2.
The study demonstrates that very long chain sphingolipids in the outer membrane leaflet interdigitate with inner‑leaflet phosphatidylserine, forming a vertical bridge that organizes PS nanodomains and enables auxin‑induced activation of the Rho‑GTPase ROP6. Disruption of sphingolipid biosynthesis disperses these nanodomains, impairing ROP6 signaling, cytoskeletal dynamics, and directional growth, highlighting interleaflet coupling as a key mechanism linking membrane asymmetry to plant signal transduction.
The study investigates the role of the chromatin regulator MpSWI3, a core subunit of the SWI/SNF complex, in the liverwort Marchantia polymorpha. A promoter mutation disrupts male gametangiophore development and spermiogenesis, causing enhanced vegetative propagation, and transcriptomic analysis reveals that MpSWI3 regulates genes controlling reproductive initiation, sperm function, and asexual reproduction, highlighting its ancient epigenetic role in balancing vegetative and reproductive phases.
The study shows that inoculation with the non‑diazotrophic bacterium Enterobacter sp. SA187 significantly improves Arabidopsis thaliana growth under low nitrate conditions by increasing fresh weight, primary root length, and lateral root density, while enhancing nitrate accumulation and reducing shoot C:N ratios. Transcriptomic and mutant analyses reveal that these benefits depend on ethylene signaling and the activity of high‑affinity nitrate transporters NRT2.5 and NRT2.6, indicating an ethylene‑mediated, HATS‑dependent reprogramming of nitrogen uptake.
Unravelling the intraspecific variation in drought responses in seedlings of European black pine (Pinus nigra J.F. Arnold)
Authors: Ahmad, M., Hammerbacher, A., Priemer, C., Ciceu, A., Karolak, M., Mader, S., Olsson, S., Schinnerl, J., Seitner, S., Schoendorfer, S., Helfenbein, P., Jakub, J., Breuer, M., Espinosa, A., Caballero, T., Ganthaler, A., Mayr, S., Grosskinsky, D. K., Wienkoop, S., Schueler, S., Trujillo-Moya, C., van Loo, M.
The study examined drought tolerance across nine provenances of the conifer Pinus nigra using high‑throughput phenotyping combined with metabolomic and transcriptomic analyses under controlled soil‑drying conditions. Drought tolerance, measured by the decline in Fv/Fm, varied among provenances but was not linked to a climatic gradient and was independent of growth, with tolerant provenances showing distinct flavonoid and diterpene profiles and provenance‑specific gene expression patterns. Integrating phenotypic and molecular data revealed metabolic signatures underlying drought adaptation in this non‑model conifer.
The study reveals that Arabidopsis ethylene receptors ETR1 and ERS1 function as Ca²⁺-permeable channels, with ETR1 specifically mediating ethylene‑induced cytosolic Ca²⁺ spikes that influence hypocotyl elongation. Homologous receptors from diverse land plants and algae also show Ca²⁺ permeability, and ethylene further enhances this activity, indicating a conserved regulatory role across the green lineage.