Abstract

Protein hydrolysis plays an important role during seed germination and post-germination seedling establishment. In Arabidopsis thaliana, cathepsin B-like proteases are encoded by a gene family of three members, but only the AtCathB3 gene is highly induced upon seed germination and at the early post-germination stage. Seeds of a homozygous T-DNA insertion mutant in the AtCathB3 gene have, besides a reduced cathepsin B activity, a slower germination than the wild type. To explore the transcriptional regulation of this gene, we used a combined phylogenetic shadowing approach together with a yeast one-hybrid screening of an arrayed library of approximately 1200 transcription factor open reading frames from Arabidopsis thaliana. We identified a conserved CathB3-element in the promoters of orthologous CathB3 genes within the Brassicaceae species analysed, and, as its DNA-interacting protein, the G-Box Binding Factor1 (GBF1). Transient overexpression of GBF1 together with a PAtCathB3::uidA (β-glucuronidase) construct in tobacco plants revealed a negative effect of GBF1 on expression driven by the AtCathB3 promoter. In stable P35S::GBF1 lines, not only was the expression of the AtCathB3 gene drastically reduced, but a significant slower germination was also observed. In the homozygous knockout mutant for the GBF1 gene, the opposite effect was found. These data indicate that GBF1 is a transcriptional repressor of the AtCathB3 gene and affects the germination kinetics of Arabidopsis thaliana seeds. As AtCathB3 is also expressed during post-germination in the cotyledons, a role for the AtCathB3-like protease in reserve mobilization is also inferred.

Highlights

  • Seed germination begins with water uptake and is completed marks the onset of post-germination events, where seedling when the radicle protrudes through the layers surrounding growth is mainly supported by the hydrolysis of nutritional the embryo

  • In Arabidopsis thaliana, cathepsin B-like proteases are encoded by a gene family of three members, but only the AtCathB3 gene is highly induced upon seed germination and at the early post-germination stage

  • The AtCathB3 gene is highly expressed in Arabidopsis thaliana seeds upon germination

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Summary

Introduction

Seed germination begins with water uptake and is completed marks the onset of post-germination events, where seedling when the radicle protrudes through the layers surrounding growth is mainly supported by the hydrolysis of nutritional the embryo (germination sensu stricto). Seed germination and storage reserve mobilization are two distinct, highly controlled processes, independently regulated and influenced by genetic and environmental factors (Bewley, 1997; Pritchard et al, 2002; Vicente-Carbajosa and Carbonero, 2005; Finch-Savage and Leubner-Metzger, 2006; Nonogaki et al, 2007; Holdsworth et al, 2008; Piskurewicz et al, 2009; Iglesias-Fernández et al, 2011) Brassicaceae mature seeds, such as those of Arabidopsis thaliana, mainly accumulate reserves as lipids and seed storage proteins (SSPs). The synthesis of hydrolases, such as CysProt, takes place mainly during post-germination and is activated in response to GA diffused from the embryo These enzymes are secreted into the endosperm where they mobilize the bulk of the stored reserves (Sun and Gubler, 2004; Eastmond and Jones, 2005). The opposite behaviour is observed in the KO gbf mutant seeds

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