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A plant's amino acid factory secretly controls its growth signals

Plant Signaling

The same hormone pathway that makes your tomato seedlings stretch toward light and your bulbs push up in spring is apparently gated by a basic nutrient-building process, which could explain why some plants stall out even with plenty of light and water.

Plants use a hormone called gibberellin to tell their cells when to grow taller or bigger, kind of like a green light signal. This research found that the plant's process for building the amino acid lysine, a basic protein building block, actually acts as a gatekeeper for that green light. If the lysine-making machinery gets disrupted, the growth signal gets stuck, showing that basic metabolism and growth hormones are more tightly linked than scientists realized.

Key Findings

1

Lysine biosynthesis pathway identified as a regulatory checkpoint linked to gibberellin signaling in Arabidopsis thaliana

2

Disruptions to lysine metabolism alter gibberellin-mediated growth responses

3

Findings connect core amino acid metabolism directly to hormone-controlled growth pathways

chevron_right Technical Summary

Scientists discovered that a plant's amino acid production line acts like a checkpoint that controls how growth hormones tell the plant to get bigger, using Arabidopsis as the test subject.

hub This connects to 8 other discoveries — Arabidopsis plant-signaling, crop-improvement 5 related articles

Species Mentioned

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