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Dive into the research topics where Ranjan Swarup is active.

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Featured researches published by Ranjan Swarup.


The Plant Cell | 2001

Auxin Transport Promotes Arabidopsis Lateral Root Initiation

Ilda Casimiro; Alan Marchant; Rishikesh P. Bhalerao; Tom Beeckman; Sandra Dhooge; Ranjan Swarup; Neil S. Graham; Dirk Inzé; Göran Sandberg; Pedro Casero; Malcolm J. Bennett

Lateral root development in Arabidopsis provides a model for the study of hormonal signals that regulate postembryonic organogenesis in higher plants. Lateral roots originate from pairs of pericycle cells, in several cell files positioned opposite the xylem pole, that initiate a series of asymmetric, transverse divisions. The auxin transport inhibitor N-1-naphthylphthalamic acid (NPA) arrests lateral root development by blocking the first transverse division(s). We investigated the basis of NPA action by using a cell-specific reporter to demonstrate that xylem pole pericycle cells retain their identity in the presence of the auxin transport inhibitor. However, NPA causes indoleacetic acid (IAA) to accumulate in the root apex while reducing levels in basal tissues critical for lateral root initiation. This pattern of IAA redistribution is consistent with NPA blocking basipetal IAA movement from the root tip. Characterization of lateral root development in the shoot meristemless1 mutant demonstrates that root basipetal and leaf acropetal auxin transport activities are required during the initiation and emergence phases, respectively, of lateral root development.


Nature Cell Biology | 2008

The auxin influx carrier LAX3 promotes lateral root emergence

Kamal Swarup; Eva Benková; Ranjan Swarup; Ilda Casimiro; Benjamin Péret; Yaodong Yang; Geraint Parry; Erik Nielsen; Ive De Smet; Steffen Vanneste; Mitch P. Levesque; David John Carrier; Nicholas James; Vanessa Calvo; Karin Ljung; Eric M. Kramer; Rebecca Roberts; Neil S. Graham; Sylvestre Marillonnet; Kanu Patel; Jonathan D. G. Jones; Christopher G. Taylor; Daniel P. Schachtman; Sean T. May; Göran Sandberg; Philip N. Benfey; Jiri Friml; Ian D. Kerr; Tom Beeckman; Laurent Laplaze

Lateral roots originate deep within the parental root from a small number of founder cells at the periphery of vascular tissues and must emerge through intervening layers of tissues. We describe how the hormone auxin, which originates from the developing lateral root, acts as a local inductive signal which re-programmes adjacent cells. Auxin induces the expression of a previously uncharacterized auxin influx carrier LAX3 in cortical and epidermal cells directly overlaying new primordia. Increased LAX3 activity reinforces the auxin-dependent induction of a selection of cell-wall-remodelling enzymes, which are likely to promote cell separation in advance of developing lateral root primordia.


Trends in Plant Science | 2009

Arabidopsis lateral root development: an emerging story

Benjamin Péret; Bert De Rybel; Ilda Casimiro; Eva Benková; Ranjan Swarup; Laurent Laplaze; Tom Beeckman; Malcolm J. Bennett

Lateral root formation is a major determinant of root systems architecture. The degree of root branching impacts the efficiency of water uptake, acquisition of nutrients and anchorage by plants. Understanding the regulation of lateral root development is therefore of vital agronomic importance. The molecular and cellular basis of lateral root formation has been most extensively studied in the plant model Arabidopsis thaliana (Arabidopsis). Significant progress has recently been made in identifying many new Arabidopsis genes that regulate lateral root initiation, patterning and emergence processes. We review how these studies have revealed that the plant hormone auxin represents a common signal that integrates these distinct yet interconnected developmental processes.


Development | 2007

Auxin-dependent regulation of lateral root positioning in the basal meristem of Arabidopsis

Ive De Smet; Takuya Tetsumura; Bert De Rybel; Nicolas Frei dit Frey; Laurent Laplaze; Ilda Casimiro; Ranjan Swarup; Mirande Naudts; Steffen Vanneste; Dominique Audenaert; Dirk Inzé; Malcolm J. Bennett; Tom Beeckman

In plants, the developmental mechanisms that regulate the positioning of lateral organs along the primary root are currently unknown. We present evidence on how lateral root initiation is controlled in a spatiotemporal manner in the model plant Arabidopsis thaliana. First, lateral roots are spaced along the main axis in a regular left-right alternating pattern that correlates with gravity-induced waving and depends on AUX1, an auxin influx carrier essential for gravitropic response. Second, we found evidence that the priming of pericycle cells for lateral root initiation might take place in the basal meristem, correlating with elevated auxin sensitivity in this part of the root. This local auxin responsiveness oscillates with peaks of expression at regular intervals of 15 hours. Each peak in the auxin-reporter maximum correlates with the formation of a consecutive lateral root. Third, auxin signaling in the basal meristem triggers pericycle cells for lateral root initiation prior to the action of INDOLE-3-ACETIC ACID14 (SOLITARY ROOT).


The Plant Cell | 2007

Ethylene Upregulates Auxin Biosynthesis in Arabidopsis Seedlings to Enhance Inhibition of Root Cell Elongation

Ranjan Swarup; Paula Perry; Dik Hagenbeek; Dominique Van Der Straeten; Gerrit T.S. Beemster; Göran Sandberg; Rishikesh P. Bhalerao; Karin Ljung; Malcolm J. Bennett

Ethylene represents an important regulatory signal for root development. Genetic studies in Arabidopsis thaliana have demonstrated that ethylene inhibition of root growth involves another hormone signal, auxin. This study investigated why auxin was required by ethylene to regulate root growth. We initially observed that ethylene positively controls auxin biosynthesis in the root apex. We subsequently demonstrated that ethylene-regulated root growth is dependent on (1) the transport of auxin from the root apex via the lateral root cap and (2) auxin responses occurring in multiple elongation zone tissues. Detailed growth studies revealed that the ability of the ethylene precursor 1-aminocyclopropane-1-carboxylic acid to inhibit root cell elongation was significantly enhanced in the presence of auxin. We conclude that by upregulating auxin biosynthesis, ethylene facilitates its ability to inhibit root cell expansion.


Nature Cell Biology | 2005

Root gravitropism requires lateral root cap and epidermal cells for transport and response to a mobile auxin signal.

Ranjan Swarup; Eric M. Kramer; Paula Perry; Kirsten Knox; H. M. Ottoline Leyser; Jim Haseloff; Gerrit T.S. Beemster; Rishikesh P. Bhalerao; Malcolm J. Bennett

Re-orientation of Arabidopsis seedlings induces a rapid, asymmetric release of the growth regulator auxin from gravity-sensing columella cells at the root apex. The resulting lateral auxin gradient is hypothesized to drive differential cell expansion in elongation-zone tissues. We mapped those root tissues that function to transport or respond to auxin during a gravitropic response. Targeted expression of the auxin influx facilitator AUX1 demonstrated that root gravitropism requires auxin to be transported via the lateral root cap to all elongating epidermal cells. A three-dimensional model of the root elongation zone predicted that AUX1 causes the majority of auxin to accumulate in the epidermis. Selectively disrupting the auxin responsiveness of expanding epidermal cells by expressing a mutant form of the AUX/IAA17 protein, axr3-1, abolished root gravitropism. We conclude that gravitropic curvature in Arabidopsis roots is primarily driven by the differential expansion of epidermal cells in response to an influx-carrier-dependent auxin gradient.


The Plant Cell | 2007

Cytokinins Act Directly on Lateral Root Founder Cells to Inhibit Root Initiation

Laurent Laplaze; Eva Benková; Ilda Casimiro; Lies Maes; Steffen Vanneste; Ranjan Swarup; Dolf Weijers; Vanessa Calvo; Boris Parizot; Maria Begoña Herrera-Rodriguez; Remko Offringa; Neil S. Graham; Patrick Doumas; Jiri Friml; Didier Bogusz; Tom Beeckman; Malcolm J. Bennett

In Arabidopsis thaliana, lateral roots are formed from root pericycle cells adjacent to the xylem poles. Lateral root development is regulated antagonistically by the plant hormones auxin and cytokinin. While a great deal is known about how auxin promotes lateral root development, the mechanism of cytokinin repression is still unclear. Elevating cytokinin levels was observed to disrupt lateral root initiation and the regular pattern of divisions that characterizes lateral root development in Arabidopsis. To identify the stage of lateral root development that is sensitive to cytokinins, we targeted the expression of the Agrobacterium tumefaciens cytokinin biosynthesis enzyme isopentenyltransferase to either xylem-pole pericycle cells or young lateral root primordia using GAL4-GFP enhancer trap lines. Transactivation experiments revealed that xylem-pole pericycle cells are sensitive to cytokinins, whereas young lateral root primordia are not. This effect is physiologically significant because transactivation of the Arabidopsis cytokinin degrading enzyme cytokinin oxidase 1 in lateral root founder cells results in increased lateral root formation. We observed that cytokinins perturb the expression of PIN genes in lateral root founder cells and prevent the formation of an auxin gradient that is required to pattern lateral root primordia.


Plant Physiology | 2003

Changes in Gene Expression in Arabidopsis Shoots during Phosphate Starvation and the Potential for Developing Smart Plants

John P. Hammond; Malcolm J. Bennett; Helen C. Bowen; Martin R. Broadley; Daniel C. Eastwood; Sean T. May; Clive Rahn; Ranjan Swarup; Kathryn E. Woolaway; Philip J. White

Our aim was to generate and prove the concept of “smart” plants to monitor plant phosphorus (P) status in Arabidopsis. Smart plants can be genetically engineered by transformation with a construct containing the promoter of a gene up-regulated specifically by P starvation in an accessible tissue upstream of a marker gene such as β-glucuronidase (GUS). First, using microarrays, we identified genes whose expression changed more than 2.5-fold in shoots of plants growing hydroponically when P, but not N or K, was withheld from the nutrient solution. The transient changes in gene expression occurring immediately (4 h) after P withdrawal were highly variable, and many nonspecific, shock-induced genes were up-regulated during this period. However, two common putative cis-regulatory elements (a PHO-like element and a TATA box-like element) were present significantly more often in the promoters of genes whose expression increased 4 h after the withdrawal of P compared with their general occurrence in the promoters of all genes represented on the microarray. Surprisingly, the expression of only four genes differed between shoots of P-starved and -replete plants 28 h after P was withdrawn. This lull in differential gene expression preceded the differential expression of a new group of 61 genes 100 h after withdrawing P. A literature survey indicated that the expression of many of these “late” genes responded specifically to P starvation. Shoots had reduced P after 100 h, but growth was unaffected. The expression of SQD1, a gene involved in the synthesis of sulfolipids, responded specifically to P starvation and was increased 100 h after withdrawing P. Leaves of Arabidopsis bearing a SQD1::GUS construct showed increased GUS activity after P withdrawal, which was detectable before P starvation limited growth. Hence, smart plants can monitor plant P status. Transferring this technology to crops would allow precision management of P fertilization, thereby maintaining yields while reducing costs, conserving natural resources, and preventing pollution.


Current Biology | 2009

Gibberellin Signaling in the Endodermis Controls Arabidopsis Root Meristem Size

Susana Ubeda-Tomás; Fernán Federici; Ilda Casimiro; Gerrit T.S. Beemster; Rishikesh P. Bhalerao; Ranjan Swarup; Peter Doerner; Jim Haseloff; Malcolm J. Bennett

Plant growth is driven by cell proliferation and elongation. The hormone gibberellin (GA) regulates Arabidopsis root growth by controlling cell elongation, but it is currently unknown whether GA also controls root cell proliferation. Here we show that GA biosynthetic mutants are unable to increase their cell production rate and meristem size after germination. GA signals the degradation of the DELLA growth repressor proteins GAI and RGA, promoting root cell production. Targeting the expression of gai (a non-GA-degradable mutant form of GAI) in the root meristem disrupts cell proliferation. Moreover, expressing gai in dividing endodermal cells was sufficient to block root meristem enlargement. We report a novel function for GA regulating cell proliferation where this signal acts by removing DELLA in a subset of, rather than all, meristem cells. We suggest that the GA-regulated rate of expansion of dividing endodermal cells dictates the equivalent rate in other root tissues. Cells must double in size prior to dividing but cannot do so independently, because they are physically restrained by adjacent tissues with which they share cell walls. Our study highlights the importance of probing regulatory mechanisms linking molecular- and cellular-scale processes with tissue and organ growth responses.


The Plant Cell | 2004

Structure-Function Analysis of the Presumptive Arabidopsis Auxin Permease AUX1

Ranjan Swarup; Joanna Kargul; Alan Marchant; Daniel Zadik; Abidur Rahman; Rebecca F. Mills; Anthony Yemm; Sean T. May; Lorraine E. Williams; Paul A. Millner; Seiji Tsurumi; Ian Moore; Richard M. Napier; Ian D. Kerr; Malcolm J. Bennett

We have investigated the subcellular localization, the domain topology, and the amino acid residues that are critical for the function of the presumptive Arabidopsis thaliana auxin influx carrier AUX1. Biochemical fractionation experiments and confocal studies using an N-terminal yellow fluorescent protein (YFP) fusion observed that AUX1 colocalized with plasma membrane (PM) markers. Because of its PM localization, we were able to take advantage of the steep pH gradient that exists across the plant cell PM to investigate AUX1 topology using YFP as a pH-sensitive probe. The YFP-coding sequence was inserted in selected AUX1 hydrophilic loops to orient surface domains on either apoplastic or cytoplasmic faces of the PM based on the absence or presence of YFP fluorescence, respectively. We were able to demonstrate in conjunction with helix prediction programs that AUX1 represents a polytopic membrane protein composed of 11 transmembrane spanning domains. In parallel, a large aux1 allelic series containing null, partial-loss-of-function, and conditional mutations was characterized to identify the functionally important domains and amino acid residues within the AUX1 polypeptide. Whereas almost all partial-loss-of-function and null alleles cluster in the core permease region, the sole conditional allele aux1-7 modifies the function of the external C-terminal domain.

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Kamal Swarup

University of Nottingham

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Karin Ljung

Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences

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Alan Marchant

University of Southampton

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Ilda Casimiro

University of Extremadura

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Laurent Laplaze

Institut de recherche pour le développement

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Rahul Bhosale

University of Nottingham

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