Plants adapt to adverse environments by turning on defense against abiotic stresses, which is mainly orchestrated by the phytohormone abscisic acid (ABA). But how ABA homeostasis is modulated to balance growth and stress responses is still largely unknown. Here we report that prior treatment of Arabidopsis seedling with high copper retardates growth but enhances draught tolerance at later stages by modulating ABA accumulation. Subsequent genetic, physiological, transcriptomic, and molecular investigations revealed that the copper responsive transcription factor SQUAMOSA PROMOTER BINDING PROTEIN-LIKE 7 (SPL7) is a strong regulator of ABA accumulation. We showed that SPL7 is destabilized by high copper and consistently suppresses genes encoding three key oxygenases in the ABA biosynthetic pathway of land plants via binding to the GTAC copper response motifs in their promoters. These results revealed a new mechanism whereby copper availability, inversely reflected by SPL7 abundance, modulates de novo ABA biosynthesis to balance growth and drought tolerance. One-sentence summaryHigh copper availability represses SPL7, releasing its suppression on key ABA biosynthetic genes and leading to increased ABA accumulation that inhibits growth but enhances drought tolerance.
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