Title
A molecular framework for light and gibberellin control of cell elongation
Date Issued
24 January 2008
Access level
open access
Resource Type
journal article
Author(s)
De Lucas M.
Davière J.M.
Rodríguez-Falcón M.
Pontin M.
Lorrain S.
Fankhauser C.
Blázquez M.A.
Titarenko E.
Prat S.
Centro Nacional de Biotecnología-CSIC
Publisher(s)
Nature Publishing Group
Abstract
Cell elongation during seedling development is antagonistically regulated by light and gibberellins (GAs). Light induces photomorphogenesis, leading to inhibition of hypocotyl growth, whereas GAs promote etiolated growth, characterized by increased hypocotyl elongation. The mechanism underlying this antagonistic interaction remains unclear. Here we report on the central role of the Arabidopsis thaliana nuclear transcription factor PIF4 (encoded by PHYTOCHROME INTERACTING FACTOR 4) in the positive control of genes mediating cell elongation and show that this factor is negatively regulated by the light photoreceptor phyB (ref. 4) and by DELLA proteins that have a key repressor function in GA signalling. Our results demonstrate that PIF4 is destabilized by phyB in the light and that DELLAs block PIF4 transcriptional activity by binding the DNA-recognition domain of this factor. We show that GAs abrogate such repression by promoting DELLA destabilization, and therefore cause a concomitant accumulation of free PIF4 in the nucleus. Consistent with this model, intermediate hypocotyl lengths were observed in transgenic plants over-accumulating both DELLAs and PIF4. Destabilization of this factor by phyB, together with its inactivation by DELLAs, constitutes a protein interaction framework that explains how plants integrate both light and GA signals to optimize growth and development in response to changing environments. ©2008 Nature Publishing Group.
Start page
480
End page
484
Volume
451
Issue
7177
Language
English
OCDE Knowledge area
Bioquímica, Biología molecular
Scopus EID
2-s2.0-38549167870
PubMed ID
Source
Nature
ISSN of the container
00280836
Sponsor(s)
Acknowledgements We thank P. Quail for the yeast PIF3 construct and 35S-PIF4 and pif4 lines, and P. Hedden for the 20ox lines. We also acknowledge F. Parcy for providing the BiFC vectors, J. A. Jarillo for advice with light treatments and the use of the red light irradiation chamber and D. Alabadífor critical reading of the manuscript. We thank J. Paz-Ares for his helpful suggestions concerning this work. This work was supported by a grant from the Spanish Ministerio de Educación y Ciencia. Work from the C.F. group was supported by an SNF grant. M.d.L. is a recipient of a predoctoral fellowship from the Spanish M.E.C. M.R.-F. was supported by a grant from the University of Talca and M.P. by a pre-doctoral fellowship from the Spanish A.E.C.I. J.-M.D. is a recipient of a CSIC I3P post-doctoral contract and S.L. of a Roche post-doctoral fellowship.
Sources of information: Directorio de Producción Científica Scopus