Metadata
Title
ResearchStrigolactones optimise plant water usage by modulating vessel formation
Category
general
UUID
17ff7f46d67e4adf8040d049a295f292
Source URL
https://www.bio.uni-heidelberg.de/en/newsroom/strigolactones-optimise-plant-wate...
Parent URL
https://www.bio.uni-heidelberg.de/en/news
Crawl Time
2026-03-11T06:36:54+00:00
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ResearchStrigolactones optimise plant water usage by modulating vessel formation

Source: https://www.bio.uni-heidelberg.de/en/newsroom/strigolactones-optimise-plant-water-usage-by-modulating-vessel-formation Parent: https://www.bio.uni-heidelberg.de/en/news

Research Strigolactones optimise plant water usage by modulating vessel formation

Single cell transcriptomics and physiological analyses reveal that hormone-dependent regulation of water transport capacities support drought resistance in plants

Wood formation supports plant growth by enabling water and nutrient transport through vessel elements derived from cambium stem cells (CSCs). CSCs generate vascular tissues supporting long-distance transport in plants, but how the fate of CSC derivatives is regulated has been unclear. Using single-cell transcriptomics in Arabidopsis thaliana, the Greb lab showed that the strigolactone (SL) signalling pathway inhibits vessel element formation in response to limited water availability. SL signalling is generally active in differentiating vascular tissues but remains low in CSCs and developing vessels, where it influences cell fate and drought response. Changes in vessel formation driven by SL affect transpiration rates, highlighting how structural alignments of vascular tissues impacts water balance and drought resistance.

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