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The inter‐kingdom volatile signal indole promotes root development by interfering with auxin signalling
Authors:Aurélien Bailly  Ulrike Groenhagen  Stefan Schulz  Markus Geisler  Leo Eberl  Laure Weisskopf
Affiliation:1. Department of Microbiology, Institute of Plant Biology, University of Zurich, , Zurich, Switzerland;2. Institute for Sustainability Sciences, Agroscope, , Zurich, Switzerland;3. Institut für Organische Chemie, Technische Universit?t Braunschweig, , Braunschweig, Germany;4. Department of Biology – Plant Biology, University of Fribourg, , Fribourg, Switzerland
Abstract:Recently, emission of volatile organic compounds (VOCs) has emerged as a mode of communication between bacteria and plants. Although some bacterial VOCs that promote plant growth have been identified, their underlying mechanism of action is unknown. Here we demonstrate that indole, which was identified using a screen for Arabidopsis growth promotion by VOCs from soil‐borne bacteria, is a potent plant‐growth modulator. Its prominent role in increasing the plant secondary root network is mediated by interfering with the auxin‐signalling machinery. Using auxin reporter lines and classic auxin physiological and transport assays we show that the indole signal invades the plant body, reaches zones of auxin activity and acts in a polar auxin transport‐dependent bimodal mechanism to trigger differential cellular auxin responses. Our results suggest that indole, beyond its importance as a bacterial signal molecule, can serve as a remote messenger to manipulate plant growth and development.
Keywords:plant–  microbe interaction  volatile organic compounds  auxin signalling  root development     Arabidopsis thaliana        Escherichia coli     plant‐growth‐promoting rhizobacteria
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