Abstract

AUXIN/INDOLE-3-ACETIC ACID (Aux/IAA) proteins are central regulators of auxin signal transduction. They control many aspects of plant development, share a conserved domain structure and are localized in the nucleus. In the present study, five maize Aux/IAA proteins (ZmIAA2, ZmIAA11, ZmIAA15, ZmIAA20 and ZmIAA33) representing the evolutionary, phylogenetic and expression diversity of this gene family were characterized. Subcellular localization studies revealed that ZmIAA2, ZmIAA11 and ZmIAA15 are confined to the nucleus while ZmIAA20 and ZmIAA33 are localized in both the nucleus and the cytoplasm. Introduction of specific point mutations in the degron sequence (VGWPPV) of domain II by substituting the first proline by serine or the second proline by leucine stabilized the Aux/IAA proteins. While protein half-life times between ∼11 min (ZmIAA2) to ∼120 min (ZmIAA15) were observed in wild-type proteins, the mutated forms of all five proteins were almost as stable as GFP control proteins. Moreover, all five maize Aux/IAA proteins repressed downstream gene expression in luciferase assays to different degrees. In addition, bimolecular fluorescence complementation (BiFC) analyses demonstrated interaction of all five Aux/IAA proteins with RUM1 (ROOTLESS WITH UNDETECTABLE MERISTEM 1, ZmIAA10) while only ZmIAA15 and ZmIAA33 interacted with the RUM1 paralog RUL1 (RUM-LIKE 1, ZmIAA29). Moreover, ZmIAA11, ZmIAA15 ZmIAA33 displayed homotypic interaction. Hence, despite their conserved domain structure, maize Aux/IAA proteins display a significant variability in their molecular characteristics which is likely associated with the wide spectrum of their developmental functions.

Highlights

  • Auxin plays an eminent role in plant development and controls processes such as patterning in embryogenesis, apical dominance, gravitropism and cell elongation [1,2,3]

  • Canonical AUXIN/INDOLE-3-ACETIC ACID (Aux/IAA) proteins consist of domains I, II and Phox and Bem1p (PB1) and contain a bipartite nuclear localization signal (NLS) [40]

  • The five Aux/IAA proteins characterized in the present study (ZmIAA2, ZmIAA11, ZmIAA15, ZmIAA20, and ZmIAA33) display the canonical domain structure

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Auxin plays an eminent role in plant development and controls processes such as patterning in embryogenesis, apical dominance, gravitropism and cell elongation [1,2,3]. The Aux/IAA gene family contains 34 members in maize [5], 29 in Arabidopsis thaliana [6] and 31 in rice [7]. Aux/IAA proteins are transcriptional repressors that share a conserved domain structure. They are confined to the nucleus [2,8]. Domain I confers transcriptional repression of target genes, once the Aux/IAA and auxin response factor (ARF) protein complex interacts with promoters of downstream genes [10]. The transcriptional repressor function of Aux/IAA proteins arises from the conserved ERF-associated amphiphilic repression motif (EAR) [11], which permits the interaction with the co-repressor protein TOPLESS (TPL) and TPL-related proteins (TPR) [12]. Recent studies revealed that the former domain complex III/IV may form a type I/II Phox and Bem1p (PB1) protein-protein interaction domain [13,14]

Objectives
Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call