Plant hormones (Literature sources on phytohormones and plant signalling)
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NIN-like Protein7 and PROTEOLYSIS6 Functional Interaction Enhances Tolerance to Sucrose, ABA, and Submergence  

NIN-like Protein7 and PROTEOLYSIS6 Functional Interaction Enhances Tolerance to Sucrose, ABA, and Submergence   | Plant hormones (Literature sources on phytohormones and plant signalling) | Scoop.it

Authors: Mari-Cruz Castillo, Álvaro Costa-Broseta, Beatriz Gayubas and José León.


Plant Physiology (2021)


Abstract: "Nitrate assimilation and signaling regulate plant growth through the relevant function of the transcription factor NIN-like Protein7 (NLP7). Nitrate is also the main source for plants to produce nitric oxide (NO), which regulates growth and stress responses. NO-mediated regulation requires efficient sensing via the PROTEOLYSIS6 (PRT6)-mediated proteasome-triggered degradation of group VII of ethylene response transcription factors (ERFVIIs) through the Cys/Arg N-degron pathway. The convergence of nitrate signaling and N-degron proteolysis on NO-mediated regulation remains largely unknown. Here, we investigated the functional interaction between NLP7 and PRT6 using Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) double prt6 nlp7 mutant plants as well as complementation lines overexpressing NLP7 in different mutant genetic backgrounds. prt6 nlp7 mutant plants displayed several potentiated prt6 characteristic phenotypes, including slower vegetative growth, increased NO content, and diminished tolerance to abiotic stresses such as high sucrose concentration, abscisic acid (ABA) and hypoxia-reoxygenation. Although NLP7 has an N-terminus that could be targeted by the N-degron proteolytic pathway, it was not a PRT6 substrate. The potential PRT6- and NO-regulated nucleocytoplasmic translocation of NLP7, which is likely modulated by post-translational modifications, is proposed to act as a regulatory loop to control NO homeostasis and action."

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Heterotrimeric G-protein α subunit (RGA1) regulates tiller development, yield, cell wall, nitrogen response and biotic stress in rice

Heterotrimeric G-protein α subunit (RGA1) regulates tiller development, yield, cell wall, nitrogen response and biotic stress in rice | Plant hormones (Literature sources on phytohormones and plant signalling) | Scoop.it

Authors: Ravi Ramesh Pathak, Vikas Kumar Mandal, Annie Prasanna Jangam, Narendra Sharma, Bhumika Madan, Dinesh Kumar Jaiswal and Nandula Raghuram.


Scientific Reports (2021)


Abstract: "G-proteins are implicated in plant productivity, but their genome-wide roles in regulating agronomically important traits remain uncharacterized. Transcriptomic analyses of rice G-protein alpha subunit mutant (rga1) revealed 2270 differentially expressed genes (DEGs) including those involved in C/N and lipid metabolism, cell wall, hormones and stress. Many DEGs were associated with root, leaf, culm, inflorescence, panicle, grain yield and heading date. The mutant performed better in total weight of filled grains, ratio of filled to unfilled grains and tillers per plant. Protein–protein interaction (PPI) network analysis using experimentally validated interactors revealed many RGA1-responsive genes involved in tiller development. qPCR validated the differential expression of genes involved in strigolactone-mediated tiller formation and grain development. Further, the mutant growth and biomass were unaffected by submergence indicating its role in submergence response. Transcription factor network analysis revealed the importance of RGA1 in nitrogen signaling with DEGs such as Nin-like, WRKY, NAC, bHLH families, nitrite reductase, glutamine synthetase, OsCIPK23 and urea transporter. Sub-clustering of DEGs-associated PPI network revealed that RGA1 regulates metabolism, stress and gene regulation among others. Predicted rice G-protein networks mapped DEGs and revealed potential effectors. Thus, this study expands the roles of RGA1 to agronomically important traits and reveals their underlying processes."

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