Drought Rhizogenesis in Arabidopsis thaliana (Differential Responses of Hormonal Mutants)

Plant Physiol. 1994 Feb;104(2):761-767. doi: 10.1104/pp.104.2.761.

Abstract

Drought rhizogenesis is an adaptive strategy that occurs during progressive drought stress and is characterized in the Brassicaceae and related families by the formation of short, tuberized, hairless roots. These roots are capable of withstanding a prolonged drought period and give rise to a new functional root system upon rehydration. The kinetics of drought rhizogenesis during progressive water shortage was analyzed in the Arabidopsis thaliana wild-type ecotypes Landsberg erecta and Columbia. In both genotypes, this response started from a similar threshold of soil humidity (about 2%). The intensity of drought rhizogenesis was compared in various A. thaliana hormonal mutants. The wild-type lines and most of the mutants achieved a similiar drought rhizogenetic index (DRI), defined as the maximum number of short roots produced per mg of root biomass, after progressive drought stress. However, this DRI was dramatically reduced in the abscisic acid (ABA)-deficient aba, ABA-insensitive abi1-1, and auxin-resistant axr1-3 mutants. These data indicate that endogenous ABA and auxin play a promotive role in drought rhizogenesis. The DRI was highly increased in the gibberellin (GA) biosynthetic mutant ga5, suggesting that some GAs might also participate in this process. The possible role and identity of the GA species involved is discussed in view of the unaltered DRI values of the ga2, ga3, and ga4 mutants. The present analysis also allowed further discrimination among the various ABA-insensitive (abi1 versus abi2 and abi3) and auxin-resistant (axr1 versus aux1) mutants tested. In particular, drought rhizogenesis is the first physiological response shown to be differentially affected by the abi1-1 and abi2-1 mutations.