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Hemoglobin is essential for normal growth of Arabidopsis organs
Authors:Kim Henrik Hebelstrup,Peter Hunt,Elizabeth Dennis,Susie Bjerregaard Jensen, Erik Ø  stergaard Jensen
Affiliation:Department of Molecular Biology, University of Aarhus, Gustav Wied's vej 10C, DK-8000 Aarhus C, Denmark; CSIRO Plant Industry, Black Mountain, Canberra, Australia; Present address: CSIRO Livestock Industries, FD McMaster Laboratory, Armidale, Australia
Abstract:In Arabidopsis thaliana , the class I hemoglobin AHb1 is transiently expressed in the hydathodes of leaves and in floral buds from young inflorescences. Nitric oxide (NO) accumulates to high levels in these organs when AHb1 is silenced, indicating an important role in metabolizing NO. AHb1 -silenced lines are viable but show a mutant phenotype affecting the regions where AHb1 is expressed. Arabidopsis lines with an insertional knockout or overexpression of AHb2, a class II 3-on-3 hemoglobin, were generated. Seedlings overexpressing AHb2 show enhanced survival of hypoxic stress. The AHb2 knockout lines develop normally. However, when AHb2 knockout is combined with AHb1 silencing, seedlings die at an early vegetative stage suggesting that the two 3-on-3 hemoglobins, AHb1 and AHb2, together play an essential role for normal development of Arabidopsis seedlings. In conclusion, these results suggests that 3-on-3 hemoglobins apart from a role in hypoxic stress play a general role under non-stressed conditions where they are essential for normal development by controlling the level of NO which tends to accumulate in floral buds and leaf hydathodes of plants.
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