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ABI5-BINDING PROTEIN2 Coordinates CONSTANS to Delay Flowering by Recruiting the Transcriptional Corepressor TPR2.

Guanxiao ChangWenjuan YangQili ZhangJinling HuangYongping YangXiangyang Hu
Published in: Plant physiology (2018)
ABI5-BINDING PROTEIN2 (AFP2) negatively regulates the abscisic acid signal by accelerating ABI5 degradation during seed germination in Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana). The abscisic acid signal is reported to delay flowering by up-regulating Flowering Locus C expression, but the role of AFP2 in regulating flowering time is unknown. Here, we found that flowering time was markedly delayed and CONSTANS (CO) expression was reduced in a transgenic Arabidopsis line overexpressing AFP2 under LD conditions. Conversely, the loss-of-function afp2 mutant showed slightly earlier flowering, with higher CO expression. These data suggest that AFP2 negatively regulates photoperiod-dependent flowering time by modulating the CO signal. We then found that AFP2 exhibited circadian expression rhythms that peaked during the night. Furthermore, the C-terminus of AFP2 interacted with CO, while its N-terminal ethylene response factor-associated amphiphilic repression motif interacted with the transcriptional corepressor TOPLESS-related protein2 (TPR2). Thus, AFP2 bridges CO and TPR2 to form the CO-AFP2-TPR2 complex. Biochemical and genetic analyses showed that AFP2 mediated CO degradation during the night. AFP2 also recruited histone deacetylase activity at Flowering Locus T chromatin through its interaction with TPR2. Taken together, our results reveal an elaborate mechanism by which AFP2 modulates flowering time through coordinating the activity and stability of CO.
Keyphrases
  • arabidopsis thaliana
  • binding protein
  • poor prognosis
  • transcription factor
  • gene expression
  • long non coding rna
  • machine learning
  • depressive symptoms
  • artificial intelligence
  • electronic health record
  • copy number