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Research Project: MOLECULAR MECHANISMS OF PHYTOCHROME SIGNALING AND GENE REGULATION

Location: Plant Gene Expression Center Albany_CA

Title: Functional profiling identifies genes involved in organ specific branches of the PIF3 regulatory network in Arabidopsis

Authors
item Sentandreu, Maria -
item Martin, Guiomar -
item Gonzalez-Schain, Nahuel -
item Leviar, Pablo -
item Soy, Judit -
item Tepperman, James -
item Quail, Peter -
item Monte, Elana -

Submitted to: The Plant Cell
Publication Type: Peer Reviewed Journal
Publication Acceptance Date: June 20, 2011
Publication Date: November 23, 2011
Citation: Sentandreu, M., Martin, G., Gonzalez-Schain, N., Leviar, P., Soy, J., Tepperman, J.M., Quail, P.H., Monte, E. 2011. Functional profiling identifies genes involved in organ specific branches of the PIF3 regulatory network in Arabidopsis. The Plant Cell. 23:3974-3991.

Interpretive Summary: This paper identifies four genes that act in darkness to regulate different facets of the growth and development of post-germinative seedlings before they emerge into light. These results define branches in the regulatory network that controls early seedling behavior both before and after first exposure to light.

Technical Abstract: The phytochrome (phy)-interacting basic helix-loop-helix transcription factors (PIFs) constitutively sustain the etiolated state of dark-germinated seedlings by actively repressing deetiolation in darkness. This action is rapidly reversed upon light exposure by phy-induced proteolytic degradation of the PIFs. Here, we combined a microarray-based approach with a functional profiling strategy and identified four PIF3-regulated genes misexpressed in the dark (MIDAs) that are novel regulators of seedling deetiolation. We provide evidence that each one of these four MIDA genes regulates a specific facet of etiolation (hook maintenance, cotyledon appression, or hypocotyl elongation), indicating that there is branching in the signaling that PIF3 relays. Furthermore, combining inferred MIDA gene function from mutant analyses with their expression profiles in response to light-induced degradation of PIF3 provides evidence consistent with a model where the action of the PIF3/MIDA regulatory network enables an initial fast response to the light and subsequently prevents an overresponse to the initial light trigger, thus optimizing the seedling deetiolation process. Collectively, the data suggest that at least part of the phy/PIF system acts through these four MIDAs to initiate and optimize seedling deetiolation, and that this mechanism might allow the implementation of spatial (i.e., organ-specific) and temporal responses during the photomorphogenic program.

   

 
Project Team
Hake, Sarah
 
Publications
   Publications
 
Related National Programs
  Plant Genetic Resources, Genomics and Genetic Improvement (301)
 
Related Projects
   Agricultural Crop Improvement through Genomic and Molecular Research on Mechanisms of Plant Growth and Adaption to a Changing Environment
   Non-Funded Cooperative Agreement Between University of California, Berkeley and U.S. Department of Agriculture,Agricultural Research Service
 
 
Last Modified: 05/21/2013
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