Interplay Between NIN-LIKE PROTEINs 6 and 7 in Nitrate Signaling.
Yu-Hsuan ChengMickaël DurandVirginie BrehautFu-Chiun HsuZsolt KelemenYves TexierAnne KrappYi-Fang TsayPublished in: Plant physiology (2023)
NLP7 (NIN-LIKE-PROTEIN 7) is the major transcriptional factor responsible for the primary nitrate response (PNR), but the role of its homologue, NLP6, in nitrogen signaling and the interplay between NLP6 and NLP7 remain to be elucidated. In this study, we show that, like NLP7, nuclear localization of NLP6 via a nuclear retention mechanism is nitrate-dependent, but nucleocytosolic shuttling of both NLP6 and NLP7 is independent of each other. Compared to single mutants, the nlp6 nlp7 double mutant displays a synergistic growth retardation phenotype in response to nitrate. The transcriptome analysis of the PNR showed that NLP6 and NLP7 govern ∼50% of nitrate-induced genes, with cluster analysis highlighting two distinct patterns. In the A1 cluster, NLP7 plays the major role, whereas in the A2 cluster, NLP6 and NLP7 are partially functionally redundant. Interestingly, comparing the growth phenotype and PNR under high and low nitrate conditions demonstrated that NLP6 and NLP7 exert a more dominant role in the response to high nitrate. Apart from nitrate signaling, NLP6 and NLP7 also participated in high ammonium conditions. Growth phenotypes and transcriptome data revealed that NLP6 and NLP7 are completely functionally redundant and may act as repressors in response to ammonium. Other NLP family members also participated in the PNR, with NLP2 and NLP7 acting as broader regulators and NLP4, -5, -6, and -8 regulating PNR in a gene-dependent manner. Thus, our findings indicate that multiple modes of interplay exist between NLP6 and NLP7 that differ depending on nitrogen sources and gene clusters.