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A competition-attenuation mechanism modulates thermoresponsive growth at warm temperatures in plants.

Wei LiYing-Ying TianJin-Yu LiLi YuanLin-Lin ZhangZhi-Ye WangXiaodong XuSeth Jon DavisJian Xiang Liu
Published in: The New phytologist (2022)
Global warming has profound impact on growth and development, and plants constantly adjust their internal circadian clock to cope with external environment. However, how clock-associated genes fine-tune thermoresponsive growth in plants is little understood. We found that loss-of-function mutation of REVEILLE5 (RVE5) reduces the expression of circadian gene EARLY FLOWERING 4 (ELF4) in Arabidopsis, and confers accelerated hypocotyl growth under warm-temperature conditions. Both RVE5 and CIRCADIAN CLOCK ASSOCIATED 1 (CCA1) accumulate at warm temperatures and bind to the same EE cis-element presented on ELF4 promoter, but the transcriptional repression activity of RVE5 is weaker than that of CCA1. The binding of CCA1 to ELF4 promoter is enhanced in the rve5-2 mutant at warm temperatures, and overexpression of ELF4 in the rve5-2 mutant background suppresses the rve5-2 mutant phenotype at warm temperatures. Therefore, the transcriptional repressor RVE5 finetunes ELF4 expression via competing at a cis-element with the stronger transcriptional repressor CCA1 at warm temperatures. Such a competition-attenuation mechanism provides a balancing system for modulating the level of ELF4 and thermoresponsive hypocotyl growth under warm-temperature conditions.
Keyphrases
  • transcription factor
  • gene expression
  • poor prognosis
  • dna methylation
  • genome wide
  • genome wide identification
  • wild type
  • heat shock
  • dna binding
  • heat stress
  • intellectual disability