@article{12543, abstract = {Treating sick group members is a hallmark of collective disease defence in vertebrates and invertebrates alike. Despite substantial effects on pathogen fitness and epidemiology, it is still largely unknown how pathogens react to the selection pressure imposed by care intervention. Using social insects and pathogenic fungi, we here performed a serial passage experiment in the presence or absence of colony members, which provide social immunity by grooming off infectious spores from exposed individuals. We found specific effects on pathogen diversity, virulence and transmission. Under selection of social immunity, pathogens invested into higher spore production, but spores were less virulent. Notably, they also elicited a lower grooming response in colony members, compared with spores from the individual host selection lines. Chemical spore analysis suggested that the spores from social selection lines escaped the caregivers’ detection by containing lower levels of ergosterol, a key fungal membrane component. Experimental application of chemically pure ergosterol indeed induced sanitary grooming, supporting its role as a microbe-associated cue triggering host social immunity against fungal pathogens. By reducing this detection cue, pathogens were able to evade the otherwise very effective collective disease defences of their social hosts.}, author = {Stock, Miriam and Milutinovic, Barbara and Hönigsberger, Michaela and Grasse, Anna V and Wiesenhofer, Florian and Kampleitner, Niklas and Narasimhan, Madhumitha and Schmitt, Thomas and Cremer, Sylvia}, issn = {2397-334X}, journal = {Nature Ecology and Evolution}, pages = {450--460}, publisher = {Springer Nature}, title = {{Pathogen evasion of social immunity}}, doi = {10.1038/s41559-023-01981-6}, volume = {7}, year = {2023}, } @article{14313, abstract = {To respond to auxin, the chief orchestrator of their multicellularity, plants evolved multiple receptor systems and signal transduction cascades. Despite decades of research, however, we are still lacking a satisfactory synthesis of various auxin signaling mechanisms. The chief discrepancy and historical controversy of the field is that of rapid and slow auxin effects on plant physiology and development. How is it possible that ions begin to trickle across the plasma membrane as soon as auxin enters the cell, even though the best-characterized transcriptional auxin pathway can take effect only after tens of minutes? Recently, unexpected progress has been made in understanding this and other unknowns of auxin signaling. We provide a perspective on these exciting developments and concepts whose general applicability might have ramifications beyond auxin signaling.}, author = {Fiedler, Lukas and Friml, Jiří}, issn = {1369-5266}, journal = {Current Opinion in Plant Biology}, number = {10}, publisher = {Elsevier}, title = {{Rapid auxin signaling: Unknowns old and new}}, doi = {10.1016/j.pbi.2023.102443}, volume = {75}, year = {2023}, } @unpublished{14591, abstract = {Clathrin-mediated endocytosis (CME) is vital for the regulation of plant growth and development by controlling plasma membrane protein composition and cargo uptake. CME relies on the precise recruitment of regulators for vesicle maturation and release. Homologues of components of mammalian vesicle scission are strong candidates to be part of the scissin machinery in plants, but the precise roles of these proteins in this process is not fully understood. Here, we characterised the roles of Plant Dynamin-Related Proteins 2 (DRP2s) and SH3-domain containing protein 2 (SH3P2), the plant homologue to Dynamins’ recruiters, like Endophilin and Amphiphysin, in the CME by combining high-resolution imaging of endocytic events in vivo and characterisation of the purified proteins in vitro. Although DRP2s and SH3P2 arrive similarly late during CME and physically interact, genetic analysis of the Dsh3p1,2,3 triple-mutant and complementation assays with non-SH3P2-interacting DRP2 variants suggests that SH3P2 does not directly recruit DRP2s to the site of endocytosis. These observations imply that despite the presence of many well-conserved endocytic components, plants have acquired a distinct mechanism for CME. One Sentence Summary In contrast to predictions based on mammalian systems, plant Dynamin-related proteins 2 are recruited to the site of Clathrin-mediated endocytosis independently of BAR-SH3 proteins.}, author = {Gnyliukh, Nataliia and Johnson, Alexander J and Nagel, Marie-Kristin and Monzer, Aline and Hlavata, Annamaria and Isono, Erika and Loose, Martin and Friml, Jiří}, booktitle = {bioRxiv}, title = {{Role of dynamin-related proteins 2 and SH3P2 in clathrin-mediated endocytosis in plants}}, doi = {10.1101/2023.10.09.561523}, year = {2023}, } @article{14339, abstract = {Lateral roots are typically maintained at non-vertical angles with respect to gravity. These gravitropic setpoint angles are intriguing because their maintenance requires that roots are able to effect growth response both with and against the gravity vector, a phenomenon previously attributed to gravitropism acting against an antigravitropic offset mechanism. Here we show how the components mediating gravitropism in the vertical primary root—PINs and phosphatases acting upon them—are reconfigured in their regulation such that lateral root growth at a range of angles can be maintained. We show that the ability of Arabidopsis lateral roots to bend both downward and upward requires the generation of auxin asymmetries and is driven by angle-dependent variation in downward gravitropic auxin flux acting against angle-independent upward, antigravitropic flux. Further, we demonstrate a symmetry in auxin distribution in lateral roots at gravitropic setpoint angle that can be traced back to a net, balanced polarization of PIN3 and PIN7 auxin transporters in the columella. These auxin fluxes are shifted by altering PIN protein phosphoregulation in the columella, either by introducing PIN3 phosphovariant versions or via manipulation of levels of the phosphatase subunit PP2A/RCN1. Finally, we show that auxin, in addition to driving lateral root directional growth, acts within the lateral root columella to induce more vertical growth by increasing RCN1 levels, causing a downward shift in PIN3 localization, thereby diminishing the magnitude of the upward, antigravitropic auxin flux.}, author = {Roychoudhry, S and Sageman-Furnas, K and Wolverton, C and Grones, Peter and Tan, Shutang and Molnar, Gergely and De Angelis, M and Goodman, HL and Capstaff, N and JPB, Lloyd and Mullen, J and Hangarter, R and Friml, Jiří and Kepinski, S}, issn = {2055-0278}, journal = {Nature Plants}, pages = {1500--1513}, publisher = {Springer Nature}, title = {{Antigravitropic PIN polarization maintains non-vertical growth in lateral roots}}, doi = {10.1038/s41477-023-01478-x}, volume = {9}, year = {2023}, } @article{14447, abstract = {Auxin belongs among major phytohormones and governs multiple aspects of plant growth and development. The establishment of auxin concentration gradients, determines, among other processes, plant organ positioning and growth responses to environmental stimuli. Herein we report the synthesis of new NBD- or DNS-labelled IAA derivatives and the elucidation of their biological activity, fluorescence properties and subcellular accumulation patterns in planta. These novel compounds did not show auxin-like activity, but instead antagonized physiological auxin effects. The DNS-labelled derivatives FL5 and FL6 showed strong anti-auxin activity in roots and hypocotyls, which also occurred at the level of gene transcription as confirmed by quantitative PCR analysis. The auxin antagonism of our derivatives was further demonstrated in vitro using an SPR-based binding assay. The NBD-labelled compound FL4 with the best fluorescence properties proved to be unsuitable to study auxin accumulation patterns in planta. On the other hand, the strongest anti-auxin activity possessing compounds FL5 and FL6 could be useful to study binding mechanisms to auxin receptors and for manipulations of auxin-regulated processes.}, author = {Bieleszová, Kristýna and Hladík, Pavel and Kubala, Martin and Napier, Richard and Brunoni, Federica and Gelová, Zuzana and Fiedler, Lukas and Kulich, Ivan and Strnad, Miroslav and Doležal, Karel and Novák, Ondřej and Friml, Jiří and Žukauskaitė, Asta}, issn = {1573-5087}, journal = {Plant Growth Regulation}, publisher = {Springer Nature}, title = {{New fluorescent auxin derivatives: anti-auxin activity and accumulation patterns in Arabidopsis thaliana}}, doi = {10.1007/s10725-023-01083-0}, year = {2023}, }