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Fix, Not Fight: Scientists Help Plants Regenerate After Injury

Study illustrates trade-off between plant regeneration and defense, offers strategies for enhancing regeneration in agriculture

photos of the model plant Arabidopsis thaliana

In response to environmental insults, plants use their resources either for defense mechanisms or to repair the damage. By affecting glutamate receptors’ function using the neuronal antagonist CNQX, regeneration of damaged or lost organs is improved. In the image, a detached leaf from the model plant Arabidopsis thaliana fails to generate a new root system (left). But in presence of the chemical, numerous and longer roots emerge (right). Photo credit: Poliana Coqueiro

After injury, plants make a trade-off between repairing damaged tissue and ramping up their defenses, according to a new study led by researchers in New York University’s Center for Genomics and Systems Biology and .

Understanding how plants regulate these responses enabled the researchers to nudge wounded plants toward repair instead of defense, a strategy that could be useful in improving regeneration in important staple crops like corn.

Under attack? Plants “fight or fix”

Plants are subject to a wide array of attacks and injuries, from caterpillars and rabbits munching on their leaves to grubs or fungi attacking their roots.

“Plants can hardly go a few days without some kind of injury. As a result, they have developed sophisticated strategies to respond,” said , a professor in NYU’s Department of Biology and Center for Genomics and Systems Biology and the study’s senior author.

Unlike animals, who employ “fight or flight” responses when attacked, plants can’t run. Instead, injury triggers a “fight or fix” response in plants, prompting them to either regenerate their damaged or missing parts or defend themselves. Plants defend themselves by rapidly producing compounds designed to stop an animal or pathogen from further attacks (these secondary compounds have proven to be particularly useful in medicine, giving us drugs like morphine, paclitaxel, and colchicine).

The trade-off between defense and regeneration

This study sought to understand how the “fight or fix” responses are linked-whether they are activated together and ramp up at the same time, or if there is a trade-off, with one response increasing as the other decreases. The researchers studied Arabidopsis, a small plant widely used as a model organism in plant biology, and corn, America’s largest crop and a critically important source of food for people and animals.

After cutting off tips of the roots and other parts of the plants to injure them, the researchers observed that plants produce some regeneration response and some defense response, but do not ramp both to maximal capacity-and in fact, lowering one response increases the other.

“The ‘fight or fix’ responses seem to be connected, like a seesaw or scales-if one goes up, the other goes down. Plants are essentially hedging their bets after an attack,” said Marcela Hernández Coronado of Cinvestav in Mexico, the study’s first author and a former postdoctoral researcher at NYU.

The researchers found that this balance in regeneration and defense responses was regulated by plant glutamate receptor-like (GLRs) proteins, which are distant relatives to glutamate receptors found in the brain. This allowed them to use drugs typically used in neurobiology research to study the plant’s responses to injury. GLRs have been implicated in plant defense responses, but in the study, GLRs also played a role in regeneration after injury, with GLR-mediated signals dialing down the regeneration system and turning up the defense response.

Targeting glutamate receptors to boost regeneration

Knowing that GLRs regulate both regeneration and defense responses presents an opportunity to improve crop growth-especially cereal crops like corn, sorghum, and wheat, which are particularly resistant to regeneration.

“These glutamate receptors provide a ‘druggable target’ that we can use to enhance plant regeneration and propagation,” said Birnbaum.

The researchers targeted GLRs by inhibiting the receptors’ activity through two means: genetics and drugs. The genetic research, aided by José Feijó and his lab at the University of Maryland, involved comparing the injury responses of normal plants with “quadruple mutants”-plants with mutations in four of the genes involved with GLRs. The researchers found that the quadruple mutants were better at regeneration, which suggests that the mutations compromised the defense response, and in doing so enhanced the regeneration response.

The researchers also used three neuronal antagonists to inhibit GLR activity. The three drugs each blocked GLR-mediated signaling after plant injury, which altered the plants’ decision-making process to favor regeneration. This dramatically enhanced regeneration, even more so than in the quadruple mutants.

“Retuning the balance between plant defense and regeneration could be used to improve regeneration for biotechnology, conservation, and propagation of staple food crops,” said Birnbaum. “Breeding crops that more readily regenerate and can adapt to new environments is critical in the face of climate change and food insecurity.”

The research is supported by the ³Ô¹ÏÍøÕ¾ Institutes of Health (R35GM136362, R01-GM131043) and the ³Ô¹ÏÍøÕ¾ Science Foundation (1934388, MCB-1930165). In addition to Birnbaum, Hernández Coronado, and Feijó, study authors include Poliana Coqueiro Dias Araujo, Pui-Leng Ip, and Ramin Rahni of NYU and Custódio Nunes, Michael Wudick, and Michael Lizzio of the University of Maryland.

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