Publication | Open Access
The Pleiotropic Role of the 26S Proteasome Subunit RPN10 in Arabidopsis Growth and Development Supports a Substrate-Specific Function in Abscisic Acid Signaling
263
Citations
53
References
2003
Year
GeneticsAbscisic AcidProteasomeMolecular BiologyPlant BiochemistryMolecular GeneticsPlant Molecular BiologyProteomicsPlant BiologyArabidopsis MutantCell DivisionArabidopsis GrowthProteasome FunctionGene ExpressionCell BiologyPlant HormoneProteasome Subunit Rpn10Natural SciencesSystems BiologyMedicinePlant Physiology
The 26S proteasome is an essential protease complex responsible for removing most short-lived intracellular proteins, especially those modified with polyubiquitin chains. We show here that an Arabidopsis mutant expressing an altered RPN10 subunit exhibited a pleiotropic phenotype consistent with specific changes in 26S proteasome function. rpn10-1 plants displayed reduced seed germination, growth rate, stamen number, genetic transmission through the male gamete, and hormone-induced cell division, which can be explained partially by a constitutive downregulation of the key cell cycle gene CDKA;1. rpn10-1 also was more sensitive to abscisic acid (ABA), salt, and sucrose stress and to DNA-damaging agents and had decreased sensitivity to cytokinin and auxin. Most of the phenotypes can be explained by a hypersensitivity to ABA, which is reflected at the molecular level by the selective stabilization of the short-lived ABA-signaling protein ABI5. Collectively, these results indicate that RPN10 affects a number of regulatory processes in Arabidopsis likely by directing specific proteins to the 26S proteasome for degradation. A particularly important role may be in regulating the responses to signals promulgated by ABA.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1