作者
Wentao Yang,Huawei Zhai,Fangming Wu,Lei Deng,Yu Chao,Xianwen Meng,Qian Chen,Chenhuan Liu,Xiaomin Bie,Chuanlong Sun,Yang Yu,Xiaofei Zhang,Xiaoyue Zhang,Zeqian Chang,Min Xue,Yajie Zhao,Xiangbing Meng,Boshu Li,Xiansheng Zhang,Dajian Zhang,Xiangyu Zhao,Caixia Gao,Jiayang Li,Chuanyou Li
摘要
Plants frequently encounter wounding and have evolved an extraordinary regenerative capacity to heal the wounds. However, the wound signal that triggers regenerative responses has not been identified. Here, through characterization of a tomato mutant defective in both wound-induced defense and regeneration, we demonstrate that in tomato, a plant elicitor peptide (Pep), REGENERATION FACTOR1 (REF1), acts as a systemin-independent local wound signal that primarily regulates local defense responses and regenerative responses in response to wounding. We further identified PEPR1/2 ORTHOLOG RECEPTOR-LIKE KINASE1 (PORK1) as the receptor perceiving REF1 signal for plant regeneration. REF1-PORK1-mediated signaling promotes regeneration via activating WOUND-INDUCED DEDIFFERENTIATION 1 (WIND1), a master regulator of wound-induced cellular reprogramming in plants. Thus, REF1-PORK1 signaling represents a conserved phytocytokine pathway to initiate, amplify, and stabilize a signaling cascade that orchestrates wound-triggered organ regeneration. Application of REF1 provides a simple method to boost the regeneration and transformation efficiency of recalcitrant crops.