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Rice tetraspanins express in specific domains of diverse tissues and regulate plant architecture and root growth.

Shanshan QinWei LiJiayue ZengYifan HuangQiang Cai
Published in: The Plant journal : for cell and molecular biology (2023)
Tetraspanins (TETs) are small transmembrane scaffold proteins that distribute proteins into highly organized microdomains, consisting of adaptors and signaling proteins, which play important roles in various biological events. In plants, understanding of tetraspanin is limited to the Arabidopsis TET genes' expression pattern and their function in leaf and root growth. Here, we comprehensively analyzed all rice tetraspanin (OsTET) family members, including their gene expression pattern, protein topology, and subcellular localization. We found that the core domain of OsTETs is conserved and shares a similar topology of four membrane-spanning domains with animal and plant TETs. OsTET genes are partially overlapping expressed in diverse tissue domains in vegetative and reproductive organs. OsTET proteins preferentially targeted the endoplasmic reticulum. Mutation analysis showed that OsTET5, OsTET6, OsTET9, and OsTET10 regulated plant height and tillering, and that OsTET13 controlled root growth in association with the jasmonic acid pathway. In summary, our work provides systematic new insights into the function of OsTETs in rice growth and development, and the data provides valuable resources for future research.
Keyphrases
  • gene expression
  • transcription factor
  • endoplasmic reticulum
  • genome wide
  • poor prognosis
  • dna methylation
  • body mass index
  • drug delivery
  • long non coding rna
  • cancer therapy
  • current status
  • deep learning
  • protein protein