(Press-News.org) Flowers grow stems, leaves and petals in a perfect pattern again and again. A new Cornell study shows that even in this precise, patterned formation in plants, gene activity inside individual cells is far more chaotic than it appears from the outside.
This finding has important implications for plant engineering, where scientists design artificial gene switches to control growth or behavior. Understanding how plants manage genetic “noise” could also inform research in other fields, from synthetic biology, where predictability is crucial, to research on cancer, where random gene activity can drive tumor evolution.
The research published May 20 in Nature Communications.
“Ultimately, the research challenges the idea that biological precision requires perfect control,” Adrienne Roeder, professor in the Section of Plant Biology in the School of Integrative Plant Science, in the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences and at the Weill Institute for Cell and Molecular Biology, who is corresponding author in the study. “Instead, it shows that nature doesn’t eliminate randomness – it builds reliable systems and processes that work despite it.”
Co-author Shuyao Kong initiated and conducted the work as a graduate student in Roeder’s lab at the Weill Institute for Cell and Molecular Biology. Kong is now a postdoctoral researcher at Harvard Medical School.
The researchers examined thale cress (Arabidopsis thaliana), a small plant in the mustard family, to look at stochastic gene expression – the process through which genes can randomly turn on or off. The team found that genes responding to auxin – a hormone that directs flower growth – were activated in a surprisingly random way from cell to cell, even when the hormone signal was the same. Despite identical instructions, the cells behaved unpredictably.
The team used glowing reporters – molecules that light up with fluorescence when genes turn on – to track three auxin-responsive genes, including one called DR5. They found that even though DR5 activity was ‘turned on’ by auxin, it varied wildly from one cell to the next – not because of differences in auxin levels, but due to random fluctuations inside the cells themselves.
They saw this dynamic taking place at the plant’s sepals, the sturdy green leaf-like organs at the base of the bud that protect the emerging flower. Even though the cells are individually “noisy” and unpredictable, the plant repeatedly produces four protective sepals in a perfect pattern.
“I really thought by the time we got to these four [sepal forming] regions, there would be a lot less randomness – but there’s not,” Roeder said. “Somehow, despite the noise, you still get these very clear patches where sepal organs initiate.”
Although scientists have known that gene activity can be noisy at the molecular level, this study reveals that even important developmental genes triggered by the plant hormone auxin show randomness in individual cells, offering new insight into how plants manage such variability during organ formation.
The study found that two auxin-responsive genes, AHP6 and DOF5.8, showed less randomness than DR5, suggesting that plants may have built-in mechanisms to dampen noise when needed.
The key, the team said, is a process called “spatial averaging.” While individual cells behave inconsistently, groups of cells work together to smooth out the noise, creating a stable, collective signal that the plant can use to guide development.
“The organism can use this randomness when it wants to and ignore it when it doesn’t,” Roeder said. “That’s super powerful.”
The study raises important questions, she said. “Spatial averaging is one way that plants manage gene expression noise, but how exactly does that buffering happen, and under what conditions does it fail?” Roeder said. “How can we incorporate that when we’re trying to engineer our favorite gene to express in interesting places?”
Contributing authors include Byron Rusnak, graduate student in the School of Integrative Plant Science (CALS), and Mingyuan Zhu, postdoctoral associate at Duke University.
The research was supported by the National Institute of General Medical Sciences at the National Institutes of Health.
Stephen D’Angelo is communications manager for Biological Systems at Cornell Research and Innovation.
END
Flowers unfold with surprising precision, despite unruly genes
2025-05-23
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Research spotlight: Study provides a window into public perceptions about technological treatment options for brain conditions
2025-05-23
Q: How would you summarize your study for a lay audience?
Given the rise in brain-based conditions and the growing development and investment in neurotechnologies to target them, it is important to understand how the public views these interventions and whether they would be willing to use them. To explore this, we conducted a survey of over 1,000 U.S. adults to examine perceptions of four neurotechnologies designed to treat severe mood, memory, or motor symptoms.
Q: What question were you investigating?
One of the goals of the recently created Neurotech Justice Accelerator at Mass General Brigham (NJAM), a Dana Center for Neuroscience & Society, is to better ...
Sound insulation tiles at school help calm crying children #ASA188
2025-05-23
NEW ORLEANS, May 23, 2025 – When children are dropped off at a school or day care for the first time, there can be a lot of feelings and sometimes meltdowns caused by being separated from parents, meeting new people, and hearing new noises. Could the architecture of the room help to soothe at least some of the children’s concerns?
“Classrooms without any sound absorption are the majority in Japan,” said Ikuri Matsuoka, a master’s student at Kumamoto University in Japan. “My motivation was to make people aware of the importance of acoustics in classrooms because in Japan, there are no standards ...
More young adults than ever take HIV-prevention medication, but gaps remain
2025-05-23
Eight times more American young adults now take medication to protect them from HIV than a decade ago, a new study finds.
But even with this positive news about increasing use of pre-exposure prophylaxis or PrEP, the study also suggests that health care providers and public health agencies could do more to promote consistent use of these medications.
The new study, done by a team at the University of Michigan Medical School, uses national pharmacy data to look at prescriptions for oral PrEP from 2016 to 2023 among people ages 18 to 25. It’s published in the Journal of General Internal Medicine.
At the start of the study period, 26 of every 100,000 U.S. young ...
Why are some rocks on the moon highly magnetic? MIT scientists may have an answer
2025-05-23
Where did the moon’s magnetism go? Scientists have puzzled over this question for decades, ever since orbiting spacecraft picked up signs of a high magnetic field in lunar surface rocks. The moon itself has no inherent magnetism today.
Now, MIT scientists may have solved the mystery. They propose that a combination of an ancient, weak magnetic field and a large, plasma-generating impact may have temporarily created a strong magnetic field, concentrated on the far side of the moon.
In a study appearing in the journal Science Advances, the researchers show through detailed simulations that ...
Unique chemistry discovered in critical lithium deposits
2025-05-23
Much of the world’s lithium occurs in salty waters with fundamentally different chemistry than other naturally saline waters like the ocean, according to a study published on May 23 in Science Advances. The finding has implications for lithium mining technologies and wastewater assessment and management.
Lithium is a critical mineral in the renewable energy sector. About 40% of global lithium production comes from large salt pans, called salars, in the central Andes Mountains in South America and the Tibetan Plateau ...
Numerical simulations reveal the origin of barred olivine crystals in early solar system
2025-05-23
Researchers from Nagoya City University, Tohoku University, and other institutions have used numerical simulations to replicate how a peculiar mineral texture called barred olivine forms inside chondrules—millimeter-sized spherical particles found in meteorites. These chondrules are considered time capsules from the early solar system, and barred olivine is a rare mineral texture not seen in Earth rocks.
Associate Professor Hitoshi Miura of Nagoya City University and the team was the first to reproduce this texture using numerical simulations and ...
Daytime boosts immunity, scientists find
2025-05-23
Embargoed to 14:00 (2:00 pm) US Eastern Time Friday, 23 May 2025 or NZT 06:0 6am Saturday 24 May 2025:
A breakthrough study, led by scientists at Waipapa Taumata Rau, University of Auckland, has uncovered how daylight can boost the immune system’s ability to fight infections.
The team focused on the most abundant immune cells in our bodies, called ‘neutrophils’, which are a type of white blood cell. These cells move quickly to the site of an infection and kill invading bacteria.
The researchers used zebrafish, a small freshwater fish, as a model organism, because its genetic ...
How marine plankton adapts to a changing world
2025-05-23
The study, a collaboration between MARUM – Center for Marine Environmental Sciences at the University of Bremen and the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution (WHOI), reanalyzed massive datasets of large-scale distributions of plankton-derived lipids in the ocean, which were initially published by WHOI in 2022. “This study shows the value of open science,” says first author Dr. Weimin Liu from MARUM. “Using new methods on open-access data, we uncovered previously hidden patterns of plankton adaptation.”
The datasets, totaling over 200 GB ...
Charge radius of Helium-3 measured with unprecedented precision
2025-05-23
A research team led by Professor Randolf Pohl from the Institute of Physics at Johannes Gutenberg University Mainz (JGU) has achieved a significant breakthrough in determining fundamental properties of atomic nuclei. For the first time, the team conducted laser spectroscopy experiments on muonic helium-3 at the Paul Scherrer Institute in Switzerland. Muonic helium-3 is a special form of helium in which the atom’s two electrons are replaced by a single, much heavier muon. Yesterday, the results ...
Oral microbiota transmission partially mediates depression and anxiety in newlywed couples
2025-05-23
Background and objectives
Oral microbiota dysbiosis and altered salivary cortisol levels have been linked to depression and anxiety. Given that bacterial transmission can occur between spouses, this study aimed to investigate whether the transmission of oral microbiota between newlywed couples mediates symptoms of depression and anxiety.
Methods
Validated Persian versions of the Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index, Beck Depression Inventory-II, and Beck Anxiety Inventory were administered to 1,740 couples who had been married for six months. The researchers compared 268 healthy control spouses with 268 affected cases in a cross-sectional study. Data were analyzed using appropriate ...