Phytohormones
participate in various processes over the course
of a plant’s lifecycle. In addition to the five classical phytohormones
(auxins, cytokinins, gibberellins, abscisic acid, and ethylene), phytohormones
such as brassinosteroids, jasmonic acid, salicylic acid, strigolactones,
and peptides also play important roles in plant growth and stress
responses. Given the highly interconnected nature of phytohormones
during plant development and stress responses, it is challenging to
study the biological function of a single phytohormone in isolation.
In the current Review, we describe the combined functions and signaling
cascades (especially the shared points and pathways) of various phytohormones
in leaf development, in particular, during leaf primordium initiation
and the establishment of leaf polarity and leaf morphology as well
as leaf development under various stress conditions. We propose a
model incorporating the roles of multiple phytohormones in leaf development
and stress responses to illustrate the underlying combinatorial signaling
pathways. This model provides a reference for breeding stress-resistant
crops.
Salt-resistant plants have different mechanisms to limit the deleterious effects of high salt in soil; for example, recretohalophytes secrete salt from unique structures called salt glands. Salt glands are the first differentiated epidermal structure of the recretohalophyte sea lavender (Limonium bicolor), followed by stomata and pavement cells. While salt glands and stomata develop prior to leaf expansion, it is not clear whether these steps are connected. Here, we explored the effects of the five phytohormones salicylic acid, brassinolide, methyl jasmonate, gibberellic acid, and abscisic acid on the development of the first expanded leaf of L. bicolor and its potential connection to salt gland, stomata, and pavement cell differentiation. We calculated the total number of salt glands, stomata, and pavement cells, as well as leaf area and pavement cell area, and assessed the correlations between these parameters. We detected strong and positive correlations between salt gland number and pavement cell area, between stomatal number and pavement cell area, and between salt gland number and stomatal number. We observed evidence of coupling between the development of salt glands, stomata, and pavement cells in L. bicolor, which lays the foundation for further investigation of the mechanism behind salt gland development.
Halophytes complete their life cycles in saline environments. The recretohalophyte Limonium bicolor has evolved a specialized salt secretory structure, the salt gland, which excretes Na + to avoid salt damage. Typical L. bicolor salt glands consist of 16 cells with four fluorescent foci and four secretory pores. Here, we describe a special type of salt gland at the base of the L. bicolor leaf petiole named bracelet salt glands due to their beaded-braceletlike shape of blue auto-fluorescence. Bracelet salt glands contain more than 16 cells and more than four secretory pores. Leaf disc secretion measurements and non-invasive micro-test techniques indicated that bracelet salt glands secrete more salt than normal salt glands, which helps maintain low Na + levels at the leaf blade to protect the leaf. Cytokinin treatment induced bracelet salt gland differentiation, and the developed ones showed no further differentiation when traced with a living fluorescence microscopy imager, even though new salt gland development and leaf expansion were observed. Transcriptome revealed a NAC transcription factor gene that participates in bracelet salt gland development, as confirmed by its genome editing and overexpression in L. bicolor. These findings shed light on bracelet salt gland development and may facilitate the engineering of salt-tolerant crops.
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