Authors
Sergey Shabala, Rosemary G White, Michael A Djordjevic, Yong-Ling Ruan, Ulrike Mathesius
Publication date
2015/11/13
Source
Functional Plant Biology
Volume
43
Issue
2
Pages
87-104
Publisher
CSIRO PUBLISHING
Description
Plant adaptive potential is critically dependent upon efficient communication and co-ordination of resource allocation and signalling between above- and below-ground plant parts. Plant roots act as gatekeepers that sense and encode information about soil physical, chemical and biological factors, converting them into a sophisticated network of signals propagated both within the root itself, and also between the root and shoot, to optimise plant performance for a specific set of conditions. In return, plant roots receive and decode reciprocal information coming from the shoot. The communication modes are highly diverse and include a broad range of physical (electric and hydraulic signals, propagating Ca2+ and ROS waves), chemical (assimilates, hormones, peptides and nutrients), and molecular (proteins and RNA) signals. Further, different signalling systems operate at very different timescales. It remains unclear …
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