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1.
Flowering plants have evolved various strategies for avoiding self-pollen to drive genetic diversity. These strategies include spatially separated sexual organs (herkogamy), timing differences between male pollen release and female pistil receptivity (dichogamy), and self-pollen rejection. Within the Brassicaceae, these outcrossing systems are the evolutionary default state, and many species display these traits, including Arabidopsis lyrata. In contrast to A. lyrata, closely related Arabidopsis thaliana has lost these self-pollen traits and thus represents an excellent system to test genes for reconstructing these evolutionary traits. We previously demonstrated that the ARC1 E3 ligase is required for self-incompatibility in two diverse Brassicaceae species, Brassica napus and A. lyrata, and is frequently deleted in self-compatible species, including A. thaliana. In this study, we examined ARC1’s requirement for reconstituting self-incompatibility in A. thaliana and uncovered an important role for ARC1 in promoting a strong and stable pollen rejection response when expressed with two other A. lyrata self-incompatibility factors. Furthermore, we discovered that ARC1 promoted an approach herkogamous phenotype in A. thaliana flowers. Thus, ARC1’s expression resulted in two different A. lyrata traits for self-pollen avoidance and highlights the key role that ARC1 plays in the evolution and retention of outcrossing systems.  相似文献   

2.
Following the identification of the male (S-locus Cysteine Rich/S-locus Protein 11) and female (S Receptor kinase [SRK]) factors controlling self-incompatibility in the Brassicaceae, research in this field has focused on understanding the nature of the cellular responses activated by these regulators. We previously identified the ARM Repeat Containing1 (ARC1) E3 ligase as a component of the SRK signaling pathway and demonstrated ARC1’s requirement in the stigma for self-incompatible pollen rejection in Brassica napus, Arabidopsis lyrata, and Arabidopsis thaliana. Here, we discuss our findings on the role of ARC1 in reconstructing a strong and stable A. thaliana self-incompatibility phenotype, in the context of the putative issues outlined in a commentary by Nasrallah and Nasrallah. Additionally, with their proposed standardized strategy for studying self-incompatibility in A. thaliana, we offer our perspective on what constitutes a strong and stable self-incompatibility phenotype in A. thaliana and how this should be investigated and reported to the greater community.With many angiosperms possessing hermaphroditic flowers, self-incompatibility (SI) systems have evolved to avoid the deleterious effects of inbreeding (Figures 1A and 1B). As defined by Charlesworth et al. (2005), “plant SI systems all prevent self-fertilization through recognition and rejection of pollen by pistils expressing ‘cognate’ allelic specificity.” In Brassicaceae species, the allele specificity is conferred by two well-characterized polymorphic genes encoding the female S Receptor kinase (SRK) and the male S-locus Protein 11/S-locus Cysteine Rich (SP11/SCR; hereby referred to as SCR) (reviewed in Iwano and Takayama, 2012). The major outstanding area in this field is identifying the signaling proteins activated by SRK, determining their function at the cellular level, and investigating whether these signaling proteins have conserved functions across the self-incompatible species in the Brassicaceae. Despite strong interest in finding these potential factors by us and other groups, only the Brassica rapa M Locus Protein Kinase (Murase et al., 2004; Kakita et al., 2007a, 2007b) and the ARM Repeat Containing1 (ARC1) E3 ligase have emerged as direct downstream signaling proteins. We demonstrated a conserved role for ARC1 in self-incompatible Brassica napus (Gu et al., 1998; Stone et al., 1999, 2003), self-incompatible Arabidopsis lyrata (Indriolo et al., 2012), and self-incompatible Arabidopsis thaliana expressing A. lyrata SCRb, SRKb, and ARC1 transgenes (Indriolo et al., 2014). The commentary by Nasrallah and Nasrallah (2014) focuses on our proposed role for ARC1 in reconstituting self-incompatibility in transgenic A. thaliana.Open in a separate windowFigure 1.Pathways for Compatible and Self-Incompatible Pollen Responses in A. thaliana.(A) Compatible (arrow) and self-incompatible (bar) pollen-pistil interactions.(B) Criteria for assessing compatible versus self-incompatible pollinations.(C) Model for the basal compatible pollen response. An unknown basal pollen response pathway is activated in the stigmatic papilla under the compatible pollen grain leading to the activation of vesicle secretion. Our research on Brassica and Arabidopsis Exo70A1 revealed a putative role for the exocyst complex in docking secretory vesicles at the stigmatic papillae plasma membrane (Samuel et al., 2009; Safavian and Goring, 2013; Safavian et al., 2014). Exo70A1 is proposed to assemble with the remaining subunits of the exocyst complex to dock secretory vesicles (reviewed in Zárský et al., 2013). SNARE proteins mediate vesicle fusion to the plasma membrane, and unknown cargo (ACA13 as one candidate; Iwano et al., 2014) are released to enable pollen hydration pollen tube entry through the stigmatic papillar cell wall (compatible pollen is accepted).(D) Model for the reconstituted self-incompatibility signaling pathway in the Sha ecotype. Following self-pollination in transgenic SCR-SRK+ARC1 Sha ecotype flowers, the pollen SCR ligand binds to SRK at the stigmatic papillar plasma membrane, resulting in the activation of the downstream signaling pathway. The ARC1 E3 ligase is recruited by SRK and targets Exo70A1 for ubiquitination. Even though the basal compatible pollen response pathway has been also activated, ubiquitinated Exo70A1 is somehow inhibited so that exocyst-mediated vesicle secretion to the self-incompatible pollen grain is blocked. In addition, secretory vesicles are degraded in the vacuole through autophagy. An unknown signaling protein (yellow) also has activity in the Sha ecotype in blocking exocytosis (see Samuel et al. [2009], Safavian and Goring [2013], and Indriolo et al. [2014] for further details and references therein).(E) Transmission electron microscopy image of a self-incompatible pollen-stigmatic papillar interaction at 10 min postpollination from the transgenic SCRb-SRKb+ARC1 Sha ecotype. Pseudocoloring has been added to distinguish the pollen (brown) from the stigmatic papilla (green). Autophagy is detected with the autophagic vacuole in the vacuole (see Rose et al. [2006] and Indriolo et al. [2014] for details). (Figures 1C to 1E adapted from Indriolo et al. [2014], Figures 9 and 10.)  相似文献   

3.
The 3-hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl-CoA reductase (HMGR) enzyme catalyzes the major rate-limiting step of the mevalonic acid (MVA) pathway from which sterols and other isoprenoids are synthesized. In contrast with our extensive knowledge of the regulation of HMGR in yeast and animals, little is known about this process in plants. To identify regulatory components of the MVA pathway in plants, we performed a genetic screen for second-site suppressor mutations of the Arabidopsis thaliana highly drought-sensitive drought hypersensitive2 (dry2) mutant that shows decreased squalene epoxidase activity. We show that mutations in SUPPRESSOR OF DRY2 DEFECTS1 (SUD1) gene recover most developmental defects in dry2 through changes in HMGR activity. SUD1 encodes a putative E3 ubiquitin ligase that shows sequence and structural similarity to yeast Degradation of α factor (Doα10) and human TEB4, components of the endoplasmic reticulum–associated degradation C (ERAD-C) pathway. While in yeast and animals, the alternative ERAD-L/ERAD-M pathway regulates HMGR activity by controlling protein stability, SUD1 regulates HMGR activity without apparent changes in protein content. These results highlight similarities, as well as important mechanistic differences, among the components involved in HMGR regulation in plants, yeast, and animals.  相似文献   

4.
Toxoplasma gondii is a protist parasite of warm-blooded animals that causes disease by proliferating intracellularly in muscle and the central nervous system. Previous studies showed that a prolyl 4-hydroxylase related to animal HIFα prolyl hydroxylases is required for optimal parasite proliferation, especially at low O2. We also observed that Pro-154 of Skp1, a subunit of the Skp1/Cullin-1/F-box protein (SCF)-class of E3-ubiquitin ligases, is a natural substrate of this enzyme. In an unrelated protist, Dictyostelium discoideum, Skp1 hydroxyproline is modified by five sugars via the action of three glycosyltransferases, Gnt1, PgtA, and AgtA, which are required for optimal O2-dependent development. We show here that TgSkp1 hydroxyproline is modified by a similar pentasaccharide, based on mass spectrometry, and that assembly of the first three sugars is dependent on Toxoplasma homologs of Gnt1 and PgtA. Reconstitution of the glycosyltransferase reactions in extracts with radioactive sugar nucleotide substrates and appropriate Skp1 glycoforms, followed by chromatographic analysis of acid hydrolysates of the reaction products, confirmed the predicted sugar identities as GlcNAc, Gal, and Fuc. Disruptions of gnt1 or pgtA resulted in decreased parasite growth. Off target effects were excluded based on restoration of the normal glycan chain and growth upon genetic complementation. By analogy to Dictyostelium Skp1, the mechanism may involve regulation of assembly of the SCF complex. Understanding the mechanism of Toxoplasma Skp1 glycosylation is expected to help develop it as a drug target for control of the pathogen, as the glycosyltransferases are absent from mammalian hosts.  相似文献   

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6.
Ubiquitination is one of the most common posttranslational modifications. A series of E3 ligases are implicated in plant abiotic stress signaling, regulating the degradation of multiple specific target proteins. Here, we showed that a novel gene ABA-RESPONSE KELCH PROTEIN 1 (AtARKP1), which encodes an F-box subunit of Skp-cullin-F-box (SCF) ubiquitin ligase complex, was localized in the nucleus and could be induced by phytohormone abscisic acid (ABA) in Arabidopsis. ARKP1 interacted with ASK1 and ASK2, which tethered the rest of the complex to an F-box protein, suggesting that they might form an SCF ubiquitin ligase complex. Further analysis revealed that ARKP1 was exclusively expressed in the seed, rosette leaf, and root. arkp1 T-DNA insertion mutant plants were insensitive to ABA, displaying reduced ABA-mediated inhibition of seed germination, root elongation, and water loss rate of detached leaves. In contrast, transgenic plants showed enhanced sensitivity to ABA and tolerance to water deficit. Accordingly, the expressions of ABA and drought responsive marker genes were markedly upregulated in ARKP1 overexpressing plants than the wild-type and arkp1 mutant plants. Taken together, our findings suggest that AtARKP1 plays a positive role in ABA signaling network.  相似文献   

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Ubiquitination is an important post-translational protein modification that is known to play critical roles in diverse biological processes in eukaryotes. The RING E3 ligases function in ubiquitination pathways, and are involved in a large diversity of physiological processes in higher plants. The RING domain-containing E3 ligase AtRDUF1 was previously identified as a positive regulator of ABA-mediated dehydration stress response in Arabidopsis. In this study, we report that AtRDUF1 is involved in plant responses to salt stress. AtRDUF1 expression is upregulated by salt treatment. Overexpression of AtRDUF1 in Arabidopsis results in an insensitivity to salt and osmotic stresses during germination and seedling growth. A double knock-out mutant of AtRDUF1 and its close homolog AtRDUF2 (atrduf1atrduf2) was hypersensitive to salt treatment. The expression levels of the stress-response genes RD29B, RD22, and KIN1 are more sensitive to salt treatment in AtRDUF1 overexpression plants. In summary, our data show that AtRDUF1 positively regulates responses to salt stress in Arabidopsis.  相似文献   

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11.
Dendritic cells (DCs) are potent antigen-presenting cells with a promising potential in cancer immunotherapy. Cbl proteins are E3 ubiquitin ligases and have been implicated in regulating the functional activity of various immune cells. As an example, c-Cbl negatively affects DC activation. We here describe that another member of the Cbl-protein family (i.e. Cbl-b) is highly expressed in murine bone-marrow-derived DCs (BMDCs). Differentiation of cblb−/− bone marrow mononuclear cells into classical BMDCs is unaltered, except enhanced induction of DEC-205 (CD205) expression. When tested in mixed-lymphocyte reaction (MLR), cblb−/− BMDCs exhibit increased allo-stimulatory capacity in vitro. BMDCs were next in vitro stimulated by various toll like receptor (TLR)-agonists (LPS, Poly(I:C), CpG) and exposed to FITC-labeled dextran. Upon TLR-stimulation, cblb−/− BMDCs produce higher levels of proinflammatory cytokines (IL-1α, IL-6 and TNF-α) and exhibit a slightly higher level of FITC-dextran uptake. To further characterize the functional significance of cblb−/− BMDCs we tested them in antigen-specific T cell responses against ovalbumin (OVA) protein and peptides, activating either CD8+ OT-I or CD4+ OT-II transgenic T cells. However, cblb−/− BMDCs are equally effective in inducing antigen-specific T cell responses when compared to wildtype BMDCs both in vitro and in vivo. The migratory capacity into lymph nodes during inflammation was similarly not affected by the absence of Cbl-b. In line with these observations, cblb−/− peptide-pulsed BMDCs are equally effective vaccines against OVA-expressing B16 tumors in vivo when compared to wildtype BMDCs. We conclude that in contrast to c-Cbl, Cbl-b plays only a limited role in the induction of Ag-specific T cell responses by murine BMDCs in vitro and in vivo.  相似文献   

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The timing of flowering is coordinated by a web of gene regulatory networks that integrates developmental and environmental cues in plants. Light and temperature are two major environmental determinants that regulate flowering time. Although prolonged treatment with low nonfreezing temperatures accelerates flowering by stable repression of FLOWERING LOCUS C (FLC), repeated brief cold treatments delay flowering. Here, we report that intermittent cold treatments trigger the degradation of CONSTANS (CO), a central activator of photoperiodic flowering; daily treatments caused suppression of the floral integrator FLOWERING LOCUS T (FT) and delayed flowering. Cold-induced CO degradation is mediated via a ubiquitin/proteasome pathway that involves the E3 ubiquitin ligase HIGH EXPRESSION OF OSMOTICALLY RESPONSIVE GENE 1 (HOS1). HOS1-mediated CO degradation occurs independently of the well established cold response pathways. It is also independent of the light signaling repressor CONSTITUTIVE PHOTOMORPHOGENIC 1 (COP1) E3 ligase and light wavelengths. CO has been shown to play a key role in photoperiodic flowering. Here, we demonstrated that CO served as a molecular hub, integrating photoperiodic and cold stress signals into the flowering genetic pathways. We propose that the HOS1-CO module contributes to the fine-tuning of photoperiodic flowering under short term temperature fluctuations, which often occur during local weather disturbances.  相似文献   

15.
Loss-of-function mutations in the Arabidopsis thaliana ENHANCED DISEASE RESISTANCE1 (EDR1) gene confer enhanced programmed cell death under a variety of abiotic and biotic stress conditions. All edr1 mutant phenotypes can be suppressed by missense mutations in the KEEP ON GOING gene, which encodes a trans-Golgi network/early endosome (TGN/EE)-localized E3 ubiquitin ligase. Here, we report that EDR1 interacts with a second E3 ubiquitin ligase, ARABIDOPSIS TOXICOS EN LEVADURA1 (ATL1), and negatively regulates its activity. Overexpression of ATL1 in transgenic Arabidopsis induced severe growth inhibition and patches of cell death, while transient overexpression in Nicotiana benthamiana leaves induced cell death and tissue collapse. The E3 ligase activity of ATL1 was required for both of these processes. Importantly, we found that ATL1 interacts with EDR1 on TGN/EE vesicles and that EDR1 suppresses ATL1-mediated cell death in N. benthamiana and Arabidopsis. Lastly, knockdown of ATL1 expression suppressed cell death phenotypes associated with the edr1 mutant and made Arabidopsis hypersusceptible to powdery mildew infection. Taken together, our data indicate that ATL1 is a positive regulator of programmed cell death and EDR1 negatively regulates ATL1 activity at the TGN/EE and thus controls stress responses initiated by ATL1-mediated ubiquitination events.  相似文献   

16.
Self-incompatibility (SI) is the primary determinant of the outbreeding mode of sexual reproduction in the Brassicaceae. All Arabidopsis thaliana accessions analyzed to date carry mutations that disrupt SI functions by inactivating the SI specificity-determining S locus or SI modifier loci. S-locus genes isolated from self-incompatible close relatives of A. thaliana restore robust SI in several accessions that harbor only S-locus mutations and confer transient SI in accessions that additionally harbor mutations at modifier loci. Self-incompatible transgenic A. thaliana plants have proved to be valuable for analysis of the recognition and signaling events that underlie SI in the Brassicaceae. Here, we review results demonstrating that S-locus genes are necessary and sufficient for SI signaling and for restoration of a strong and developmentally stable SI phenotype in several accessions of A. thaliana. The data indicate that introduction of a functional E3 ligase-encoding ARC1 gene, which is deleted in all accessions that have been analyzed to date, is not required for SI signaling leading to inhibition of self pollen or for reversion of A. thaliana to its fully self-incompatible ancestral state.It is well established that specific pollen recognition in the self-incompatibility (SI) response of the Brassicaceae is determined by allele-specific interactions that occur at the stigma surface between two highly polymorphic proteins encoded in the S locus: the S-locus receptor kinase SRK and its ligand, the S-locus cysteine-rich protein SCR. Arabidopsis thaliana lacks a functional SI system and harbors nonfunctional S-locus variants that contain defective alleles of the SRK and/or SCR genes (Kusaba et al., 2001; Sherman-Broyles et al., 2007; Tang et al., 2007; Shimizu et al., 2008; Boggs et al., 2009a; Tsuchimatsu et al., 2010; Dwyer et al., 2013). Despite being highly self-fertile, A. thaliana can be made to express SI upon transformation with functional SRK-SCR gene pairs isolated from its self-incompatible close relatives (Nasrallah et al., 2002, 2004; Boggs et al., 2009a, 2009b). The first transfer of the SI trait into A. thaliana was achieved using the SRKb-SCRb gene pair isolated from the Sb locus of Arabidopsis lyrata (Kusaba et al., 2001; Nasrallah et al., 2002, 2004). Many of the subsequent studies that have been performed in the transgenic A. thaliana SRK-SCR system have used plants transformed with p548, a plasmid that we constructed by inserting the A. lyrata SRKb and SCRb genes with their 5′ and 3′ regulatory sequences into the pBIN+ binary vector (Nasrallah et al., 2004).Indriolo et al. (2014) recently used the p548 plasmid to generate SRKb-SCRb transformants and test the role of the ARM Repeat Containing1 (ARC1) gene in SI. ARC1 was originally identified as a Brassica napus protein that interacts with the SRK kinase domain in yeast (Gu et al., 1998), and it was subsequently inferred to be required for SI because downregulation of the ARC1 gene in B. napus (Stone et al., 1999) and A. lyrata (Indriolo et al., 2012), as well as overexpression of ARC1’s target, Exo70A1, in B. napus (Samuel et al., 2009), caused partial breakdown of the SI response. However, the involvement of the proposed SRK-ARC1-Exo70A1 pathway in SI has been questioned because the ARC1 gene was found to be deleted in all A. thaliana accessions analyzed to date (Kitashiba et al., 2011; Indriolo et al., 2012), including those in which the SRKb-SCRb transgenes confer a strong SI phenotype (Kitashiba et al., 2011). Additionally, overexpression of Exo70A1 did not cause weakening of the SI response in A. thaliana SRKb-SCRb plants (Kitashiba et al., 2011).Indriolo et al. (2014) reported on their characterization of the SI response in plants of the Sha and Columbia-0 (Col-0) accessions, which they either transformed with the p548 plasmid alone or cotransformed with p548 and a plasmid containing an ARC1 gene isolated from A. lyrata or B. napus. They concluded that, along with SRK and SCR, “ARC1 is the third component that is required to return A. thaliana to its ancestral self-incompatibility state.” However, this conclusion is inconsistent with results of previous studies of SI in transgenic A. thaliana SRK-SCR transformants, which have shown that several A. thaliana accessions are rendered fully self-incompatible by transformation with the p548 plasmid without the addition of a functional ARC1 gene. Contrary to Indriolo et al.’s assertion that in previous studies of A. thaliana SRK-SCR transformants, “the self-pollen rejection response was incomplete,” we reported that among 11 A. thaliana accessions tested by transformation with the p548 plasmid, five accessions (C24, Cvi-0, Hodja, Kas-2, and Sha) were converted to full SI by expression of the SRKb and SCRb genes alone (Nasrallah et al., 2004; Boggs et al., 2009a). Importantly, the SI phenotype of these self-incompatible SRKb-SCRb transformants faithfully recapitulates the SI phenotype of naturally self-incompatible Brassicaceae with respect to the four defining features of SI in this family: (1) site of pollen inhibition at the stigma surface, (2) intensity of the response, (3) developmental regulation over the course of stigma maturation, and (4) heritability. These features suggest that the inhibition of self pollen in self-incompatible A. thaliana SRK-SCR transformants is achieved via the same signaling pathway as that utilized by other self-incompatible Brassicaceae species.  相似文献   

17.
It is widely appreciated that short tandem repeat (STR) variation underlies substantial phenotypic variation in organisms. Some propose that the high mutation rates of STRs in functional genomic regions facilitate evolutionary adaptation. Despite their high mutation rate, some STRs show little to no variation in populations. One such STR occurs in the Arabidopsis thaliana gene PFT1 (MED25), where it encodes an interrupted polyglutamine tract. Although the PFT1 STR is large (∼270 bp), and thus expected to be extremely variable, it shows only minuscule variation across A. thaliana strains. We hypothesized that the PFT1 STR is under selective constraint, due to previously undescribed roles in PFT1 function. We investigated this hypothesis using plants expressing transgenic PFT1 constructs with either an endogenous STR or synthetic STRs of varying length. Transgenic plants carrying the endogenous PFT1 STR generally performed best in complementing a pft1 null mutant across adult PFT1-dependent traits. In stark contrast, transgenic plants carrying a PFT1 transgene lacking the STR phenocopied a pft1 loss-of-function mutant for flowering time phenotypes and were generally hypomorphic for other traits, establishing the functional importance of this domain. Transgenic plants carrying various synthetic constructs occupied the phenotypic space between wild-type and pft1 loss-of-function mutants. By varying PFT1 STR length, we discovered that PFT1 can act as either an activator or repressor of flowering in a photoperiod-dependent manner. We conclude that the PFT1 STR is constrained to its approximate wild-type length by its various functional requirements. Our study implies that there is strong selection on STRs not only to generate allelic diversity, but also to maintain certain lengths pursuant to optimal molecular function.  相似文献   

18.
Ariadne (ARI) subfamily of RBR (Ring Between Ring fingers) proteins have been found as a group of putative E3 ubiquitin ligases containing RING (Really Interesting New Gene) finger domains in fruitfly, mouse, human and Arabidopsis. Recent studies showed several RING-type E3 ubiquitin ligases play important roles in plant response to abiotic stresses, but the function of ARI in plants is largely unknown. In this study, an ariadne-like E3 ubiquitin ligase gene was isolated from soybean, Glycine max (L.) Merr., and designated as GmARI1. It encodes a predicted protein of 586 amino acids with a RBR supra-domain. Subcellular localization studies using Arabidopsis protoplast cells indicated GmARI protein was located in nucleus. The expression of GmARI1 in soybean roots was induced as early as 2–4 h after simulated stress treatments such as aluminum, which coincided with the fact of aluminum toxicity firstly and mainly acting on plant roots. In vitro ubiquitination assay showed GmARI1 protein has E3 ligase activity. Overexpression of GmARI1 significantly enhanced the aluminum tolerance of transgenic Arabidopsis. These findings suggest that GmARI1 encodes a RBR type E3 ligase, which may play important roles in plant tolerance to aluminum stress.  相似文献   

19.
Sugars, such as sucrose and glucose, have been implicated in the regulation of diverse developmental events in plants and other organisms. We isolated an Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) mutant, sugar-insensitive3 (sis3), that is resistant to the inhibitory effects of high concentrations of exogenous glucose and sucrose on early seedling development. In contrast to wild-type plants, sis3 mutants develop green, expanded cotyledons and true leaves when sown on medium containing high concentrations (e.g. 270 mm) of sucrose. Unlike some other sugar response mutants, sis3 exhibits wild-type responses to the inhibitory effects of abscisic acid and paclobutrazol, a gibberellic acid biosynthesis inhibitor, on seed germination. Map-based cloning revealed that SIS3 encodes a RING finger protein. Complementation of the sis3-2 mutant with a genomic SIS3 clone restored sugar sensitivity of sis3-2, confirming the identity of the SIS3 gene. Biochemical analyses demonstrated that SIS3 is functional in an in vitro ubiquitination assay and that the RING motif is sufficient for its activity. Our results indicate that SIS3 encodes a ubiquitin E3 ligase that is a positive regulator of sugar signaling during early seedling development.Almost all living organisms rely on the products of plant photosynthesis for sustenance, either directly or indirectly. Carbohydrates, the major photosynthates, provide both energy and carbon skeletons for fungi, plants, and animals. In addition, sugars, such as Suc and Glc, function as signaling molecules to regulate plant growth, development, gene expression, and metabolic processes. Sugar response pathways are integrated with other signaling pathways, such as those for light, phytohormones, stress, and nitrogen (Dijkwel et al., 1997; Zhou et al., 1998; Roitsch, 1999; Arenas-Huertero et al., 2000; Huijser et al., 2000; Laby et al., 2000; Coruzzi and Zhou, 2001; Rook et al., 2001; Rolland et al., 2006).Several components of plant sugar response pathways have been identified based on the conservation of sugar-sensing mechanisms among eukaryotic cells (Rolland et al., 2001, 2006) or by mutant screens. Yeast HEXOKINASE2 functions in the Glc-mediated catabolite repression pathway (Entian, 1980). In Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana), mutations in HEXOKINASE1 (HXK1) cause a Glc-insensitive phenotype, and HXK1 demonstrates dual functions in Glc sensing and metabolism (Moore et al., 2003; Cho et al., 2006). Recent studies revealed the involvement of G-protein-coupled receptor systems in sugar response in yeast and Arabidopsis (Chen et al., 2003; Lemaire et al., 2004). Arabidopsis regulator of G-protein signaling1 (rgs1) mutant seedlings are insensitive to 6% Glc (Chen and Jones, 2004), whereas G-protein α-subunit (gpa1) null mutant seedlings are hypersensitive to Glc (Chen et al., 2003). The SNF1/AMPK/SnRK1 protein kinases are postulated to be global regulators of energy control (Polge and Thomas, 2007). Studies conducted on two members of the Arabidopsis SnRK1 (for SNF1-Related Protein Kinases1) family, AKIN10 and AKIN11, have revealed their pivotal roles in stress and sugar signaling (Baena-González et al., 2007). A genetic screen for reduced seedling growth on 175 mm Suc identified the pleiotropic regulatory locus1 (prl1) mutant, which encodes a nuclear WD protein. Further analyses revealed that PRL1 functions in Glc and phytohormone responses (Németh et al., 1998). Interestingly, PRL1 negatively regulates the Arabidopsis SnRK1s AKIN10 and AKIN11 in vitro (Bhalerao et al., 1999).Isolation of additional mutants defective in sugar response has revealed cross talk between sugar and phytohormone response pathways. For example, abscisic acid (ABA) biosynthesis and signaling mutants have been isolated by several genetic screens for seedlings with reduced responses to the inhibitory effects of high levels of Suc or Glc on seedling development. These mutants include abscisic acid-deficient1 (aba1), aba2, aba3, salt-tolerant1/nine-cis-epoxycarotenoid dioxygenase3, abscisic acid-insensitive3 (abi3), and abi4 (Arenas-Huertero et al., 2000; Huijser et al., 2000; Laby et al., 2000; Rook et al., 2001; Cheng et al., 2002; Rolland et al., 2002; Huang et al., 2008), indicating interplay between ABA- and sugar-mediated signaling. Ethylene also exhibits interactions with sugars in controlling seedling development. Both the ethylene overproduction mutant eto1 and the constitutive ethylene response mutant ctr1 exhibit Glc (Zhou et al., 1998) and Suc (Gibson et al., 2001) insensitivity, whereas the ethylene-insensitive mutants etr1, ein2, and ein4 show sugar hypersensitivity (Zhou et al., 1998; Gibson et al., 2001; Cheng et al., 2002).Further characterization of sugar response factors has suggested that ubiquitin-mediated protein degradation may play a role in sugar response. In particular, the PRL1-binding domains of SnRK1s have been shown to recruit SKP1/ASK1, a conserved SCF ubiquitin ligase subunit, as well as the α4/PAD1 proteasomal subunit, indicating a role for SnRK1s in mediating proteasomal binding of SCF ubiquitin ligases (Farrás et al., 2001). In addition, recent studies indicate that PRL1 is part of a CUL4-based E3 ligase and that AKIN10 exhibits decreased rates of degradation in prl1 than in wild-type extracts (Lee et al., 2008). The ubiquitin/26S proteasome pathway plays important roles in many cellular processes and signal transduction pathways in yeast, animals, and plants (Hochstrasser, 1996; Hershko and Ciechanover, 1998; Smalle and Vierstra, 2004). The key task of the pathway is to selectively ubiquitinate substrate proteins and target them for degradation by the 26S proteasome. In short, the multistep ubiquitination process starts with the formation of a thiol-ester linkage between ubiquitin and a ubiquitin-activating enzyme (E1). The activated ubiquitin is then transferred to a ubiquitin-conjugating enzyme (E2), and a ubiquitin protein ligase (E3) then mediates the covalent attachment of ubiquitin to the substrate protein. The specificity of the pathway is largely realized by the E3s, which recognize the substrates that should be ubiquitinated. In Arabidopsis, more than 1,300 genes encode putative E3 subunits and the E3 ligases can be grouped into defined families based upon the presence of HECT (for Homology to E6-AP C Terminus), RING (for Really Interesting New Gene), or U-box domains (Smalle and Vierstra, 2004). The RING-type E3s can be subdivided into single-subunit E3s, which contain the substrate recognition and RING finger domains on the same protein, and multisubunit E3s, which include the SCF (for Skp1-Cullin-F-box), CUL3-BTB (for Broad-complex, Tramtrack, Bric-a-Brac), and APC (for Anaphase-Promoting Complex) complexes (Weissman, 2001; Moon et al., 2004).The Cys-rich RING finger was first described in the early 1990s (Freemont et al., 1991). It is defined as a linear series of conserved Cys and His residues (C3HC/HC3) that bind two zinc atoms in a cross-brace arrangement. RING fingers can be divided into two types, C3HC4 (RING-HC) and C3H2C3 (RING-H2), depending on the presence of either a Cys or a His residue in the fifth position of the motif (Lovering et al., 1993; Freemont, 2000). A recent study of the RING finger ubiquitin ligase family encoded by the Arabidopsis genome resulted in the identification of 469 predicted proteins containing one or more RING domains (Stone et al., 2005). However, the in vivo biological functions of all but a few of the RING proteins remain unknown. Recent studies have implicated several Arabidopsis RING proteins in a variety biological processes, including COP1 and CIP8 (photomorphogenesis; Hardtke et al., 2002; Seo et al., 2004), SINAT5 (auxin signaling; Xie et al., 2002), ATL2 (defense signaling; Serrano and Guzman, 2004), BRH1 (brassinosteroid response; Molnár et al., 2002), RIE1 (seed development; Xu and Li, 2003), NLA (nitrogen limitation adaptation; Peng et al., 2007), HOS1 (cold response; Dong et al., 2006), AIP2 (ABA signaling; Zhang et al., 2005), KEG (ABA signaling; Stone et al., 2006), and SDIR1 (ABA signaling; Zhang et al., 2007).Here, we report the isolation, identification, and characterization of an Arabidopsis mutant, sugar-insensitive3 (sis3), which is resistant to the early seedling developmental arrest caused by high exogenous sugar levels. The responsible locus, SIS3, was identified through a map-based cloning approach and confirmed with additional T-DNA insertional mutants and complementation tests. The SIS3 gene encodes a protein with a RING-H2 domain and three putative transmembrane domains. Glutathione S-transferase (GST)-SIS3 recombinant proteins exhibit in vitro ubiquitin E3 ligase activity. Together, these results indicate that a ubiquitination pathway involving the SIS3 RING protein is required to mediate the sugar response during early seedling development.  相似文献   

20.
Fe is an essential micronutrient for plant growth and development; plants have developed sophisticated strategies to acquire ferric Fe from the soil. Nongraminaceous plants acquire Fe by a reduction-based mechanism, and graminaceous plants use a chelation-based mechanism. In Arabidopsis thaliana, which uses the reduction-based method, IRON-REGULATED TRANSPORTER1 (IRT1) functions as the most important transporter for ferrous Fe uptake. Rapid and constitutive degradation of IRT1 allows plants to quickly respond to changing conditions to maintain Fe homeostasis. IRT1 degradation involves ubiquitination. To identify the specific E3 ubiquitin ligases involved in IRT1 degradation, we screened a set of insertional mutants in RING-type E3 ligases and identified a mutant that showed delayed degradation of IRT1 and loss of IRT1-ubiquitin complexes. The corresponding gene was designated IRT1 DEGRADATION FACTOR1 (IDF1). Evidence of direct interaction between IDF1 and IRT1 in the plasma membrane supported the role of IDF1 in IRT1 degradation. IRT1 accumulation was reduced when coexpressed with IDF1 in yeast or Xenopus laevis oocytes. IDF1 function was RING domain dependent. The idf1 mutants showed increased tolerance to Fe deficiency, resulting from increased IRT1 levels. This evidence indicates that IDF1 directly regulates IRT1 degradation through its RING-type E3 ligase activity.  相似文献   

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