New Phytologist

Volume 205, Issue 1
Full paper
Free Access

Photoreceptor‐mediated kin recognition in plants

María A. Crepy

IFEVA, Facultad de Agronomía, Universidad de Buenos Aires and CONICET, Av. San Martín 4453, 1417 Buenos Aires, Argentina

Search for more papers by this author
Jorge J. Casal

Corresponding Author

IFEVA, Facultad de Agronomía, Universidad de Buenos Aires and CONICET, Av. San Martín 4453, 1417 Buenos Aires, Argentina

Fundación Instituto Leloir, Instituto de Investigaciones Bioquímicas de Buenos Aires–CONICET, 1405 Buenos Aires, Argentina

Author for correspondence:

Jorge J. Casal

Tel: +54 11 4524 8070 ×8123

Email: casal@ifeva.edu.ar

Search for more papers by this author
First published: 29 September 2014
Cited by: 49

Summary

  • Although cooperative interactions among kin have been established in a variety of biological systems, their occurrence in plants remains controversial.
  • Plants of Arabidopsis thaliana were grown in rows of either a single or multiple accessions.
  • Plants recognized kin neighbours and horizontally reoriented leaf growth, a response not observed when plants were grown with nonkin. Plant kin recognition involved the perception of the vertical red/far‐red light and blue light profiles. Disruption of the light profiles, mutations at the PHYTOCHROME B, CRYPTOCHROME 1 or 2, or PHOTOTROPIN 1 or 2 photoreceptor genes or mutations at the TRYPTOPHAN AMINOTRANSFERASE OF ARABIDOPSIS1 gene required for auxin (growth hormone) synthesis impaired the response. The leaf‐position response increases plant self‐shading, decreases mutual shading between neighbours and increases fitness.
  • Light signals from neighbours are known to shape a more competitive plant body. Here we show that photosensory receptors mediate cooperative rather than competitive interactions among kin neighbours by reducing the competition for local pools of resources.