Publication | Closed Access
Molecular mechanisms of ethylene regulation of gene transcription
111
Citations
45
References
1997
Year
Ethylene RegulationPlant Defense GeneGeneticsMolecular BiologyGcc BoxGene TranscriptionPlant Molecular BiologyTranscriptional RegulationPlant BiologyPlant Gene ExpressionGene ExpressionPlant ProteomicsPlant HormoneTranscription RegulationPlant DefenseBiologyNatural SciencesEthylene Signal TransductionGene RegulationSeed StorageMedicinePlant Physiology
Ethylene‐regulated gene transcription has been studied in the context of plant defense, carnation flower petal senescence, and tomato fruit ripening. This review summarizes what is known about the molecular mechanisms of this process. Activation of plant defense genes in response to ethylene involves a promoter element called the GCC box, which interacts with ethylene‐responsive element‐binding proteins (EREBPs). Genes expressed in response to ethylene during petal senescence and fruit ripening use different promoter elements. For fruit ripening genes, two cooperative promoter elements are required for ethylene‐responsive transcription. DNA‐binding proteins of carnation and tomato that interact with ethylene‐responsive promoter elements have been studied, and in some cases cDNAs encoding such proteins have been isolated. The immediate goal of this work is to determine which DNA‐binding proteins are involved in mediating ethylene‐responsive gene transcription, and how they interact with other components of the ethylene signaling pathway. This work will lead to a more complete understanding of ethylene signal transduction.
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