Promoter-Based Integration in Plant Defense Regulation

Author:

Li Baohua1,Gaudinier Allison2,Tang Michelle12,Taylor-Teeples Mallorie2,Nham Ngoc T.1,Ghaffari Cyrus1,Benson Darik Scott1,Steinmann Margaret1,Gray Jennifer A.2,Brady Siobhan M.2,Kliebenstein Daniel J.13

Affiliation:

1. Departments of Plant Sciences (B.L., M.T., N.T.N. C.G., D.S.B., M.S., J.A.G., D.J.K.) and

2. Plant Biology (A.G., M.T., M.T.-T., J.A.G., S.M.B.) and Genome Center (A.G., M.T., M.T.-T., J.A.G., S.M.B.), University of California, Davis, California 95616; and

3. DynaMo Center of Excellence, University of Copenhagen, DK–1871 Frederiksberg C, Denmark (D.J.K.)

Abstract

Abstract A key unanswered question in plant biology is how a plant regulates metabolism to maximize performance across an array of biotic and abiotic environmental stresses. In this study, we addressed the potential breadth of transcriptional regulation that can alter accumulation of the defensive glucosinolate metabolites in Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana). A systematic yeast one-hybrid study was used to identify hundreds of unique potential regulatory interactions with a nearly complete complement of 21 promoters for the aliphatic glucosinolate pathway. Conducting high-throughput phenotypic validation, we showed that >75% of tested transcription factor (TF) mutants significantly altered the accumulation of the defensive glucosinolates. These glucosinolate phenotypes were conditional upon the environment and tissue type, suggesting that these TFs may allow the plant to tune its defenses to the local environment. Furthermore, the pattern of TF/promoter interactions could partially explain mutant phenotypes. This work shows that defense chemistry within Arabidopsis has a highly intricate transcriptional regulatory system that may allow for the optimization of defense metabolite accumulation across a broad array of environments.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Plant Science,Genetics,Physiology

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