ARABIDOPSIS MUTANTS DEFINE DOWNSTREAM BRANCHES IN THE PHOTOTRANSDUCTION PATHWAY

被引:75
|
作者
LI, HM [1 ]
ALTSCHMIED, L [1 ]
CHORY, J [1 ]
机构
[1] SALK INST, PLANT BIOL LAB, SAN DIEGO, CA 92186 USA
关键词
PHOTOMORPHOGENESIS; LIGHT-REGULATED GENE EXPRESSION; CHLOROPHYLL A/B-BINDING PROTEIN; ARABIDOPSIS MUTANTS;
D O I
10.1101/gad.8.3.339
中图分类号
Q2 [细胞生物学];
学科分类号
071009 ; 090102 ;
摘要
Light regulates the development of Arabidopsis seedlings in a variety of ways, including inhibition of hypocotyl growth and promotion of leaf development, chloroplast differentiation, and light-responsive gene expression. Mutations that uncouple most or all of these responses from light control have been described, for example, det1, det2, and cop1. To identify regulatory components that define downstream branches in the light-regulated signal transduction pathway, mutants specifically affected in only one light-regulated response were isolated. A screen was designed to isolate mutants that overexpressed the CAB (photosystem II type I chlorophyll alb-binding proteins) genes in the dark, by use of a transgenic line containing a T-DNA construct with two CAB3 promoter-reporter fusions. Eight mutants that showed aberrant expression of both CAB3 promoters were isolated and were designated doc mutants (for dark overexpression of CAB). All of the mutants have normal etiolated morphology in the dark. Genetic and phenotypic analyses indicate that most of the mutations are recessive and define at least three loci (doc1,doc2, doc3). Unlike det1 and det2 mutants, which affect the expression of CAB and RBCS (the small subunit of RuBP carboxylase) to approximately the same extent, all three doc mutations are much more specific in derepressing the expression of CAB. The phenotypes of doc mutants suggest that morphological changes can be genetically separated from changes in CAB gene expression. Moreover, the regulation of CAB gene expression can be separated further from the regulation of RBCS gene expression. Epistasis studies suggest that DOC1 and DET3 act downstream from DET1 on two separate branches in the phototransduction pathway. In contrast, DOC2 appears to act on a distinct pathway from DET1. Mutations in doc1, doc2, or doc3 also impair plant growth under short-day conditions.
引用
收藏
页码:339 / 349
页数:11
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] ARABIDOPSIS-THALIANA MUTANTS DEFICIENT IN AN ENZYME OF THE PURINE SALVAGE PATHWAY ARE MALE STERILE
    MOFFATT, B
    SOMERVILLE, CR
    JOURNAL OF CELLULAR BIOCHEMISTRY, 1987, : 22 - 22
  • [32] Arabidopsis onset of leaf death mutants identify a regulatory pathway controlling leaf senescence
    Jing, HC
    Sturre, MJG
    Hille, J
    Dijkwel, PP
    PLANT JOURNAL, 2002, 32 (01): : 51 - 63
  • [33] Downstream divergence of the ethylene signaling pathway for harpin-stimulated Arabidopsis growth and insect defense
    Dong, HP
    Peng, JL
    Bao, ZL
    Meng, XD
    Bonasera, JM
    Chen, GY
    Beer, SV
    Dong, HS
    PLANT PHYSIOLOGY, 2004, 136 (03) : 3628 - 3638
  • [34] Cellular mutants define a common mRNA degradation pathway targeting cytokine AU-rich elements
    Stoecklin, G
    Stoeckle, P
    Lu, M
    Muehlemann, O
    Moroni, C
    RNA, 2001, 7 (11) : 1578 - 1588
  • [35] SENSITIVITY AND ADAPTATION IN THE DROSOPHILA PHOTOTRANSDUCTION AND PHOTORECEPTOR DEGENERATION MUTANTS TRP AND RDGB
    CHEN, DM
    STARK, WS
    JOURNAL OF INSECT PHYSIOLOGY, 1983, 29 (02) : 133 - 140
  • [36] Investigating g protein coupled phototransduction signaling in Drosophila mutants.
    Ballard, LM
    Li, HS
    Lee, SJ
    Montell, C
    ABSTRACTS OF PAPERS OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY, 2002, 223 : U211 - U211
  • [37] miR156-Regulated SPL Transcription Factors Define an Endogenous Flowering Pathway in Arabidopsis thaliana
    Wang, Jia-Wei
    Czech, Benjamin
    Weigel, Detlef
    CELL, 2009, 138 (04) : 738 - 749
  • [38] Identification of Arabidopsis rat mutants
    Zhu, YM
    Nam, J
    Humara, JM
    Mysore, KS
    Lee, LY
    Cao, HB
    Valentine, L
    Li, JL
    Kaiser, AD
    Kopecky, AL
    Hwang, HH
    Bhattacharjee, S
    Rao, PK
    Tzfira, T
    Rajagopal, J
    Yi, HC
    Veena
    Yadav, BS
    Crane, YM
    Lin, K
    Larcher, Y
    Gelvin, MJK
    Knue, M
    Ramos, C
    Zhao, XW
    Davis, SJ
    Kim, SI
    Ranjith-Kumar, CT
    Choi, YJ
    Hallan, VK
    Chattopadhyay, S
    Sui, XZ
    Ziemienowicz, A
    Matthysse, AG
    Citovsky, V
    Hohn, B
    Gelvin, SB
    PLANT PHYSIOLOGY, 2003, 132 (02) : 494 - 505
  • [39] Microbody defective mutants of arabidopsis
    Mikio Nishimura
    Makoto Hayashi
    Kanako Toriyama
    Akira Kato
    Shoji Mano
    Katsushi Yamaguchi
    Maki Kondo
    Hiroshi Hayashi
    Journal of Plant Research, 1998, 111 : 329 - 332
  • [40] Floral transition mutants in Arabidopsis
    Koornneef, M
    Peeters, AJM
    PLANT CELL AND ENVIRONMENT, 1997, 20 (06): : 779 - 784