A tale of two systems: Peptide ligand-receptor Pairs in plant development

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Abstract

Plants have developed intercellular signaling systems that use secreted peptides and plasma membrane-localized receptorlike kinases (RLKs). Although there has been little experimental evidence linking specific peptide ligands to receptors, recent studies of several ligand-receptor pairs have revealed their increasingly important roles in cell-cell communications during plant development. In this review, we focus on two specific families of plant peptides: the CLAVATA3/ENDOSPERM SURROUNDING REGION (CLE) peptide family and the EPIDERMAL PATTERING FACTOR (EPF) family, along with their corresponding RLKs. We discuss how these two unrelated peptide-mediated signaling systems control plant cell fate and development using similar receptor kinases as well as the mechanisms for how these peptide ligand-receptor pairs precisely regulate various distinct aspects of plant development at the level of ligand-receptor recognition and signal transduction. © 2012 Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press.

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Lee, J. S., & Torii, K. U. (2012). A tale of two systems: Peptide ligand-receptor Pairs in plant development. Cold Spring Harbor Symposia on Quantitative Biology, 77, 83–89. https://doi.org/10.1101/sqb.2012.77.014886

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