Towards an integrated molecular understanding of plant hormones.
Vilain L, Fauconnier ML, Genva M
Plant Signaling
PubMedUnderstanding how plant hormones work is the key to growing more food with less water and fewer pesticides — directly affecting what ends up on your plate and how resilient your garden is to drought or disease.
Plants don't have brains, but they do have a sophisticated chemical messaging system — hormones — that tells them when to grow, when to drop their leaves, when to fight off attackers, and when to go dormant. This research pulls together everything scientists know about nine of these chemical messengers and shows how they constantly talk to each other to keep the plant running smoothly. By understanding this 'hormonal conversation,' researchers hope to breed tougher, more productive crops that can handle climate extremes.
Key Findings
Nine distinct plant hormones — including abscisic acid, auxins, gibberellins, and ethylene — collectively govern virtually all major plant life events from seed dormancy through senescence.
Hormonal pathways interact with each other primarily through two molecular mechanisms: transcriptional regulation (switching genes on/off) and direct protein-protein interactions.
The integrated molecular framework described has direct agricultural applications, offering new strategies to engineer crops resilient to emerging environmental and biological challenges.
chevron_right Technical Summary
Scientists have mapped out how plants use nine key chemical messengers — called hormones — to control nearly every stage of life, from sprouting seeds to fighting off disease. This review synthesizes decades of research into a unified framework showing how these hormones work together as a coordinated network.
Abstract Preview
From seed dormancy to pathogen attacks and senescence, many events in a plant's life are critically controlled by low-molecular-weight signaling molecules, called plant hormones. These master regul...
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