info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Function of B-BOX under shade
Fecha
2014-10Registro en:
Crocco, Carlos Daniel; Holm, Magnus; Yanovsky, Marcelo Javier; Botto, Javier Francisco; Function of B-BOX under shade; Taylor & Francis; Plant Signaling & Behavior; 6; 1; 10-2014; 101-104
1559-2324
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
Crocco, Carlos Daniel
Holm, Magnus
Yanovsky, Marcelo Javier
Botto, Javier Francisco
Resumen
Plants are capable of perceiving changes in the light environment and finely adjust their growth and development. Reductions of red to far-red ratio (R:FR) generated by an increase of the plant canopy above the plant are sensed by the phytochrome system triggering the shade-avoidance syndrome (SAS) that includes elongation of vegetative structures, reduction of branching and acceleration of flowering. Albeit the SAS is a strategy of major adaptative significance in plant communities, involving massive changes in gene expression, our knowledge of the SAS signaling network is still fragmented. By a selection and characterization of a T-DNA mutant with a long hypocotyl under shade, we identified BBX21, a protein with two B-box domains involved in the SAS. BBX21 belongs to a small eight member family of B-box containing proteins with both opposite and additive functions in the SAS signaling. BBX21 down-regulates the gene expression of auxin, brassinosteroid and ethylene signaling pathway components under shade. Furthermore BBX21 is a transcription factor that interacts genetically with COP1. We propose a model in which a dynamic balance of positive and negative B-box transcriptional regulators acts as a gas-and-brake mechanism into the COP1 signaling to regulate the expression of SAS.