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Flavonoids Act as Negative Regulators of Auxin Transport in Vivo in Arabidopsis

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TLDR
Analyses of auxin transport in the inflorescence and hypocotyl of independent tt4 alleles indicate that auxIn transport is elevated in plants with a tt 4 mutation, which is consistent with a role for flavonoids as endogenous regulators of Auxin transport.
Abstract
Polar transport of the plant hormone auxin controls many aspects of plant growth and development. A number of synthetic compounds have been shown to block the process of auxin transport by inhibition of the auxin efflux carrier complex. These synthetic auxin transport inhibitors may act by mimicking endogenous molecules. Flavonoids, a class of secondary plant metabolic compounds, have been suggested to be auxin transport inhibitors based on their in vitro activity. The hypothesis that flavonoids regulate auxin transport in vivo was tested in Arabidopsis by comparing wild-type (WT) and transparent testa (tt4) plants with a mutation in the gene encoding the first enzyme in flavonoid biosynthesis, chalcone synthase. In a comparison between tt4 and WT plants, phenotypic differences were observed, including three times as many secondary inflorescence stems, reduced plant height, decreased stem diameter, and increased secondary root development. Growth of WT Arabidopsis plants on naringenin, a biosynthetic precursor to those flavonoids with auxin transport inhibitor activity in vitro, leads to a reduction in root growth and gravitropism, similar to the effects of synthetic auxin transport inhibitors. Analyses of auxin transport in the inflorescence and hypocotyl of independent tt4 alleles indicate that auxin transport is elevated in plants with a tt4 mutation. In hypocotyls of tt4, this elevated transport is reversed when flavonoids are synthesized by growth of plants on the flavonoid precursor, naringenin. These results are consistent with a role for flavonoids as endogenous regulators of auxin transport.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Flavonoid Biosynthesis. A Colorful Model for Genetics, Biochemistry, Cell Biology, and Biotechnology

TL;DR: The role of flavonoids as the major red, blue, and purple pigments in plants has gained these secondary products a great deal of attention over the years.
Journal ArticleDOI

Auxin: regulation, action, and interaction.

TL;DR: Nearly six decades after the structural elucidation of IAA, many aspects of auxin metabolism, transport and signalling are well established; however, more than a few fundamental questions and innumerable details remain unresolved.
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Biosynthesis of flavonoids and effects of stress.

TL;DR: The accumulation of red or purple flavonoids is a hallmark of plant stress and mounting evidence points to diverse physiological functions for these compounds in the stress response.
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Flavonoids as antioxidants in plants: Location and functional significance

TL;DR: The genes that govern the biosynthesis of antioxidant flavonoids are present in liverworts and mosses and are mostly up-regulated as a consequence of severe stress, which suggests that the antioxidant Flavonoid metabolism is a robust trait of terrestrial plants.
Journal ArticleDOI

Flavonoids: biosynthesis, biological functions, and biotechnological applications.

TL;DR: Different strategies and achievements through the genetic engineering of flavonoid biosynthesis with implication in the industry and the combinatorial biosynthesis in microorganisms by the reconstruction of the pathway to obtain high amounts of specific compounds are discussed.
References
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PatentDOI

Measurement of protein using bicinchoninic acid

TL;DR: This new method maintains the high sensitivity and low protein-to-protein variation associated with the Lowry technique and demonstrates a greater tolerance of the bicinchoninate reagent toward such commonly encountered interferences as nonionic detergents and simple buffer salts.
Journal ArticleDOI

Requirement of the Auxin Polar Transport System in Early Stages of Arabidopsis Floral Bud Formation.

TL;DR: It is suggested that the normal level of polar transport activity in the inflorescence axes is required in early developmental stages of floral bud formation in Arabidopsis and that the primary function of the pin1 gene is auxin polar transport in the inforescence axis.
Journal ArticleDOI

Naturally occurring auxin transport regulators.

TL;DR: It is shown that a group of flavonoids-including quercetin, apigenin, and kaempferol—can specifically compete with [3H]NPA for binding to its receptor and can perturb auxin transport in a variety of plant tissues and transport systems in a manner closely paralleling the action of synthetic transport inhibitors.
Journal ArticleDOI

AUX1 regulates root gravitropism in Arabidopsis by facilitating auxin uptake within root apical tissues

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that AUX1 regulates gravitropic curvature by acting in unison with the auxin efflux carrier to co‐ordinate the localized redistribution of auxin within the Arabidopsis root apex.
Journal ArticleDOI

Analysis of Arabidopsis mutants deficient in flavonoid biosynthesis.

TL;DR: Tissue- and locus-specific differences in the flavonols and anthocyanidins synthesized by mutant and wild-type plants are identified and evidence was uncovered that tt8 and ttg specifically affect dihydroflavonol reductase gene expression.
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