While general tools for modifying crops currently exist, Nolan and his colleagues propose a more precise approach. They suggest that making subtle tweaks to a plant's own gene expression could, for example, promote deeper root growth during drought, enhance water and nutrient uptake efficiency, or change leaf architecture to better capture light in crowded field conditions.
"We want to be able to modulate plant growth with surgical-level precision, without side effects to the rest of the plant," Nolan says. "Being able to do this requires us to understand the context of exactly what the plant is doing on a cellular level."
Earlier this year, Nolan and collaborators reported in Cell that a particular class of plant hormones, brassinosteroids, orchestrate root growth through a dynamic cell-specific feedback network.
Brassinosteroids are essential for plant development, regulating cell division and cell elongation. Still, when applied broadly to a plant, they can have the opposite effect, stunting growth by disrupting the delicate balance of hormone signaling between cells. Nolan explains that brassinosteroids exert a kind of Goldilocks effect on plants growth only happens optimally with not too much, and not too little, in the right place at the right time.
The team discovered this by using cutting-edge techniques to see how individual cells express their genes in the model laboratory plant Arabidopsis thaliana. While each cell has the same genetic information stored in its genome, certain genes can be dialed on or off, like a set of light-dimmer switches, to give a cell different functions.
Various gene-expression patterns can tell the cell to divide, for example, or to produce more hormones, or even to self-destruct. Techniques such as single-cell transcriptomics can measure gene expression across many cells simultaneously.
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