Abstract

As sessile organisms, land plants experience various forms of environmental stresses throughout their life span. Therefore, plants have developed extensive and complicated defence mechanisms, including a robust DNA damage response (DDR) and DNA repair systems for maintaining genome integrity. In Arabidopsis, the NAC domain family transcription factor SUPPRESSOR OF GAMMA RESPONSE1 (SOG1) plays an important role in regulating DDR. Here, we show that SOG1 plays a key role in regulating the repair of salinity-induced DNA double-strand breaks (DSBs) via the homologous recombination (HR) pathway in Arabidopsis. The sog1-1 mutant seedlings display a considerably slower rate of repair of salinity-induced DSBs. Accumulation of SOG1 protein increases in wild-type Arabidopsis under salinity stress and it enhances the expression of HR pathway-related genes, including RAD51, RAD54, and BRCA1, respectively, as found in SOG1 overexpression lines. SOG1 binds specifically to the AtRAD54 promoter at the 5'-(N)4GTCAA(N)3C-3' consensus sequence and positively regulates its expression under salinity stress. The phenotypic responses of sog1-1/atrad54 double mutants suggest that SOG1 functions upstream of RAD54 and both these genes are essential in regulating DDR under salinity stress. Furthermore, SOG1 interacts directly with BRCA1, an important component of the HR-mediated DSB repair pathway in plants, where BRCA1 appears to facilitate the binding of SOG1 to the RAD54 promoter. At the genetic level, SOG1 and BRCA1 function interdependently in modulating RAD54 expression under salinity induced DNA damage. Together, our results suggest that SOG1 regulates the repair of salinity induced DSBs via the HR-mediated pathway through genetic interactions with RAD54 and BRCA1 in Arabidopsis.

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