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The plant hormone cytokinin plays essential roles in many aspects of growth and development. The cytokinin signal is transmitted by a multi‐step phosphorelay to the members of two functionally antagonistic classes of Arabidopsis response regulators (ARRs): type B ARRs (response activators) and type A ARRs (negative‐feedback regulators). Previous studies have shown that mutations in AXR1, encoding a subunit of the E1 enzyme in the RUB (related to ubiquitin) modification pathway, lead to decreased cytokinin sensitivity. Here we show that the cytokinin resistance of axr1 seedlings is suppressed by loss of function of the type A ARR family member ARR5. Based on the established role of the RUB pathway in ubiquitin‐dependent proteolysis, these data suggest that AXR1 promotes the cytokinin response by facilitating type A ARR degradation. Indeed, both genetic (axr1 mutants) and chemical (MLN4924) suppression of RUB E1 increased ARR5 stability, suggesting that the ubiquitin ligase that promotes ARR5 proteolysis requires RUB modification for optimal activity.  相似文献   

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The plant hormone cytokinin plays important roles in various aspects of plant growth and development.Cytokinin signaling is mediated by a multistep phosphorelay similar to bacterial two-component system.Type-B ARRs lie at the end of the cytokinin signaling,typically mediating the output response.However,it is still unclear how type-B ARRs are regulated in response to cytokinin.Typical type-B ARR contains an N-terminal receiver domain and a C-terminal effector domain.In this study,we performed a genome-wild comparative analysis by overexpressing full length and C-terminal effector domain of seven representative type-B ARRs.Our results indicated that overexpression of C-terminal effector domain causes short primary roots and short hypocotyls without the addition of cytokinin,suggesting that the inhibitory role of the receiver domain in the activity of the effector domain is a common mechanism in type-B ARRs.To investigate how the receiver domain inhibits the activity of the effector domain,we performed a deletion analysis.We found that deletion of the initial 45 residues of ARR18(the 45 residues from N-terminus) causes pleiotropic growth defects by directly inducing cytokinin responsive genes.Together,our results suggest that the initial 45 residues are critical for the inhibitory role of the receiver domain to the effector domain in ARR18.  相似文献   

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Type-A Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) response regulators (ARRs) are a family of 10 genes that are rapidly induced by cytokinin and are highly similar to bacterial two-component response regulators. We have isolated T-DNA insertions in six of the type-A ARRs and constructed multiple insertional mutants, including the arr3,4,5,6,8,9 hextuple mutant. Single arr mutants were indistinguishable from the wild type in various cytokinin assays; double and higher order arr mutants showed progressively increasing sensitivity to cytokinin, indicating functional overlap among type-A ARRs and that these genes act as negative regulators of cytokinin responses. The induction of cytokinin primary response genes was amplified in arr mutants, indicating that the primary response to cytokinin is affected. Spatial patterns of ARR gene expression were consistent with partially redundant function of these genes in cytokinin signaling. The arr mutants show altered red light sensitivity, suggesting a general involvement of type-A ARRs in light signal transduction. Further, morphological phenotypes of some arr mutants suggest complex regulatory interactions and gene-specific functions among family members.  相似文献   

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Cytokinin signaling in Arabidopsis thaliana utilizes a multi-step two-component signaling (TCS) system comprised of sensor histidine kinases (AHKs), histidine phosphotransfer proteins (AHPs), and response regulators (ARRs). Recent studies have suggested that the cytokinin TCS system is involved in a variety of other signaling and metabolic pathways. To further explore a potential function of the cytokinin TCS in the Arabidopsis dehydration stress response, we investigated the expression of all type-A ARR genes and a type-C ARR, ARR22, in both wild type and ahk single, double, and triple mutants in response to dehydration compared to cytokinin as well as dehydration tolerance of ahk mutants. We found that drought significantly induced the expression of a subset of ARR genes, ARR5, ARR7, ARR15, and ARR22. The results of expression analyses in ahk single, double, and triple mutants demonstrated that the cytokinin receptors AHK2 and AHK3 are redundantly involved in dehydration-inducible expression of ARR7, but not that of ARR5, ARR15, or ARR22. Dehydration tolerance assays showed that ahk2 and ahk3 single mutants exhibited enhanced dehydration tolerance compared with that of wild-type plants and ahk4 mutants, and that ahk2 ahk3 double mutants exhibited stronger drought tolerance than that of ahk3 ahk4, which exhibited more enhanced drought tolerance than that of wild-type plants and ahk single mutants. Taken together, these results demonstrate that while the cytokinin receptors AHK2 and AHK3 are critically involved in the dehydration tolerance response, both cytokinin receptor-dependent pathway and receptor-independent pathway occur in the dehydration response regulating ARR gene expression. In addition, preincubating ahk2, ahk3, ahk4, and the wild-type plants with cytokinin induced enhanced dehydration stress tolerance in these plants, demonstrating that cytokinins are involved in regulating plant response to dehydration stress.  相似文献   

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The ubiquitin/26S proteasome-dependent proteolysis of response regulators is a critical element of many plant hormone signaling pathways. We have recently shown that cytokinin signaling requires the AXR1 component of the related to ubiquitin (RUB) protein modification pathway to promote the proteasome-dependent degradation of the cytokinin response inhibitor ARR5. Here, we show that ARR5 also accumulates in the 26S proteasome mutant rpn12a-1, and leads to a marked resistance to cytokinins. Collectively, these results suggest that proteasome-dependent proteolysis of feedback inhibitors such as ARR5 is essential for the maintenance of optimal responsivity and plasticity in cytokinin signaling.  相似文献   

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Key message

We have expressed, purified, and biophysically characterized recombinant AHP1 and AHP2. Also, using computational homology models for AHP1, ARR7, and AHP1–ARR7 complex, we identified three-dimensional positioning of key amino acids.

Abstract

Cytokinin signaling involves activation of Arabidopsis Response Regulators (ARRs) by Arabidopsis Histidine Phosphotransfer Proteins (AHPs) by phosphorylation. Type-A ARRs are key regulators of several developmental pathways, but the mechanism underlying this phosphorylation and activation is not known in plants. In this study, we report the successful expression and purification of recombinant AHP1 and AHP2. Biophysical characterization shows that these two recombinant proteins were purified to homogeneity and possess well-defined secondary structures. Brief attempts to purify recombinant ARR7 posed problems during size-exclusion chromatography. Nevertheless, we generated computational homology models for AHP1, ARR7, and AHP1–ARR7 complex using crystal structures of homologous proteins from other organisms. The homology models helped to identify the three-dimensional positioning of the key conserved residues of AHP1 and ARR7 involved in phosphorylation. The similarity in positioning of these residues to other homologous proteins suggests that AHPs and type-A ARRs could be structurally conserved across kingdoms. Thus, our homology models can serve as valuable tools to gain structural insights into the phosphorylation and activation of cytokinin response regulators in plants.  相似文献   

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The Arabidopsis thaliana AHK4 histidine kinase (also known as CRE1 or WOL) acts as a cytokinin signal transducer, presumably, in concert with downstream components, such as histidine-containing phosphotransfer factors (AHPs) and response regulators (ARRs), through the histidine-to-aspartate (His-->Asp) phosphorelay. Among 10 members of the type-A ARR family, the cytokinin-induced expression of ARR15 in roots is selectively impaired in the cre1-1 mutant, which carries a mutation in the AHK4 gene, suggesting a link between this type-A response regulator and the AHK4-mediated cytokinin signal transduction in roots. To address this issue further, we characterized a T-DNA insertion mutant of ARR15, and also constructed transgenic lines (referred to as ARR15-ox) that overexpress the ARR15 gene in a manner independent of cytokinin. While the T-DNA insertion mutant (arr15-1) showed no apparent phenotype, the cytokinin-independent overexpression of ARR15 in ARR15-ox plants resulted in a reduced sensitivity toward exogenously applied cytokinin, not only in elongation of roots in plants, but also in green callus formation (or shoot formation) in explants. Cytokinin-induced expressions of certain type-A ARRs were also down-regulated in ARR15-ox plants. These results support the view that ARR15 acts as a repressor that mediates a negative feedback loop in the cytokinin and AHK4-mediated His-->Asp phosphorelay.  相似文献   

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The cytokinin receptor AHK4 histidine kinase, identified in Arabidopsis thaliana, presumably acts in concert with downstream components, such as histidine-containing phosphotransfer (HPt) factors (AHPs) and response regulators (ARRs). In this respect, we characterized a loss-of-function mutant of the AHK4 gene, named cre1-1, which showed a reduced cell number within the vascular tissues in roots. Among the 10 type-A ARR members, the expression of ARR15 and ARR16 in roots was specifically and markedly reduced in cre1-1, suggesting a link between these response regulators and the AHK4-mediated signal transduction in roots. The results for transgenic plants expressing promoter::GUS or promoter::LUC fusion genes showed that both the ARR15 and the ARR16 gene products are accumulated upon cytokinin treatment in roots. The results of GFP-fusion experiments with onion epidermal cells further showed that ARR15 was found in the nucleus, and ARR16 mainly in the cytoplasm. Together, it was suggested that ARR15 and ARR16 are distinctly implicated in the presumed AHK4-mediated signaling pathway in roots.  相似文献   

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Expression profiling of cytokinin action in Arabidopsis   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
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