Brassinosteroids (BRs) are the sixth class of plant hormones that involved in numerous plant development processes such as leaf expansion, shoot elongation and pollen tube formation. Once the signal transduction is initiated by the membrane receptor kinase BRI1 (brassinosteroid insensitive 1), the signal transmits from the cytoplasm to the nucleus and a number of genes will be regulated. The downstream signaling pathway is realized by three proteins: BIN2 (brassinosteroid insensitive 2), BES1 (BRI1 ems suppressor1) and a kind of 14-3-3s protein . BRs signaling pathway have been extensively studied via genetics, proteomics, genomics and cell biology techniques. However, these bulk methods can't follow the transduction process in situ or resolve molecular details at a rate matching the true signaling time-scale. Here we use a single molecular assay based on Total-Internally Reflected Fluorescence (TIRF) microscopy to observe the interaction of these three proteins. The result shows that BIN2 can phosphorylate BES1 on the order of seconds, and the dimeric 14-3-3s can only bind with BES1 in its phosphorylated form. In addition, we have, for the first time, found that the interaction between BIN2 and BES1 is oxygen dependent. This result may have implications on BRs signaling pathway's involvement of stress acclimation in plants.
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