Abstract

Gibberellin (GA) plays important roles in regulating many aspects of plant development. GA derepresses its signaling pathway by promoting the degradation of DELLA proteins, a family of nuclear growth repressors. Although the floral organ identity is established in flowers of the GA-deficient mutant ga1-3, the growth of all floral organs is severely retarded. In particular, abortive anther development in ga1-3 results in male sterility. Genetic analysis has revealed that various combinations of null mutants of DELLA proteins could gradually rescue floral organ defects in ga1-3 and that RGA is the most important DELLA protein involved in floral organ development. To elucidate the early molecular events controlled by RGA during flower development, we performed whole-genome microarray analysis to identify genes in response to the steroid-inducible activation of RGA in ga1-3 rgl2 rga 35S:RGA-GR. Although DELLA proteins were suggested as transcriptional repressors, similar numbers of genes were down-regulated or up-regulated by RGA during floral organ development. More than one-third of RGA down-regulated genes were specifically or predominantly expressed in stamens. A significant number of RGA-regulated genes are involved in phytohormone signaling or stress response. Further expression analysis through activation of RGA by steroid induction combined with cycloheximide identified eight genes as immediate targets of RGA. In situ hybridization and transgenic studies further showed that the expression pattern and function of several selected genes were consistent with the predictions from microarray analysis. These results suggest that DELLA regulation of floral organ development is modulated by multiple phytohormones and stress signaling pathways.

Highlights

  • Gibberellin (GA) plays important roles in regulating many aspects of plant development

  • Since DELLA proteins integrate responses to various hormonal and environmental signals of adverse conditions (Achard et al, 2006), we further investigated the relationship between RGA-regulated genes and stress-response pathways by comparing our microarray data with the transcriptomes controlled by the Snf1-related protein kinase KIN10, which is the central integrator of transcription networks in plant stress and energy signaling in Arabidopsis (BaenaGonzalez et al, 2007)

  • The interaction between DELLA proteins and phytochrome-interacting factors (PIFs), a group of bHLH-type transcription factors, prevents PIFs from binding to their target gene promoters, affecting the expression of genes involved in PIF-mediated light control of plant development such as hypocotyl elongation

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Summary

Introduction

Gibberellin (GA) plays important roles in regulating many aspects of plant development. DELLA proteins were suggested as transcriptional repressors, similar numbers of genes were down-regulated or up-regulated by RGA during floral organ development. In situ hybridization and transgenic studies further showed that the expression pattern and function of several selected genes were consistent with the predictions from microarray analysis. These results suggest that DELLA regulation of floral organ development is modulated by multiple phytohormones and stress signaling pathways. Recent studies have demonstrated that environmental signals, such as salt and light, and other phytohormones, such as ethylene, auxin, and abscisic acid (ABA), regulate plant growth by affecting the GAinduced destabilization of DELLA proteins

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