Nitrate signaling promotes plant growth by upregulating gibberellin biosynthesis and destabilization of DELLA proteins
Nitrate, one of the main nitrogen (N) sources for crops, acts as a nutrient and key signaling molecule coordinating gene expression, metabolism, and various growth processes throughout the plant life cycle. It is widely accepted that nitrate-triggered developmental programs cooperate with hormone synthesis and transport to finely adapt plant architecture to N availability. Here, we report that nitrate, acting through its signaling pathway, promotes growth in Arabidopsis and wheat, in part by modulating the accumulation of gibberellin (GA)-regulated DELLA growth repressors. We show that nitrate reduces the abundance of DELLAs by increasing GA contents through activation of GA metabolism gene expression. Consistently, the growth restraint conferred by nitrate deficiency is partially rescued in global-DELLA mutant that lacks all DELLAs. At the cellular level, we show that nitrate enhances both cell proliferation and elongation in a DELLA dependent and independent manner, respectively. Our findings establish a connection between nitrate and GA signaling pathways that allow plants to adapt their growth to nitrate availability plants to adapt their growth to nitrate availability
| Item Type | Article |
|---|---|
| Open Access | Not Open Access |
| Keywords | Nitrate, Gibberellins, Hormone biosynthesis, DELLA proteins, Growth, Plant development, Arabidopsis, Wheat |
| Project | Designing Future Wheat - WP1 - Increased efficiency and sustainability |
| Date Deposited | 05 Dec 2025 10:31 |
| Last Modified | 19 Dec 2025 14:55 |
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