Abstract

A protein which binds to the regulatory domain B necessary for expression of the plant oncogene rolB in (root) meristems contains a single zinc finger of a novel type conserved in dicots and monocots. Band shift analysis revealed the presence in tobacco nuclei of a protein selectively binding to domain B, a tetramer of which was used to isolate a cDNA (NtBBF1, Nicotiana tabacum rolB domain B Factor 1) from a tobacco expression library. The corresponding genomic clone was also isolated. The protein encoded by NtBBF1 contains a single C2C2 zinc finger, and its target sequence in domain B was identified by means of mutagenized oligonucleotides. The DNA-binding capability of the zinc finger was assessed by means of a fusion of this latter with the glutathione-S-transferase protein, that was shown to bind the same target sequence as NtBBF1. A number of other tobacco cDNAs encoding different proteins with a domain (BBF domain) encompassing the zinc finger identical to NtBBF1 were also isolated. Furthermore, a cDNA encoding a protein with an almost identical single zinc finger was isolated from Arabidopsis. A very closely related zinc finger has very recently been identified in maize transcription factors and termed the Dof domain. It is proposed that the tobacco, Arabidopsis and maize BBF/Dof domain proteins are members of a new broad family of plant transcription factors acting through a single zinc finger widely utilized in the plant kingdom.

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