OsbZIP18, a Positive Regulator of Serotonin Biosynthesis, Negatively Controls the UV-B Tolerance in Rice.
Yangyang SunBi WangJunxia RenYutong ZhouYu HanShuying NiuYuanyuan ZhangYuheng ShiJunjie ZhouChenkun YangXuemin MaXianqing LiuYuehua LuoCheng JinJie LuoPublished in: International journal of molecular sciences (2022)
Serotonin (5-hydroxytryptamine) plays an important role in many developmental processes and biotic/abiotic stress responses in plants. Although serotonin biosynthetic pathways in plants have been uncovered, knowledge of the mechanisms of serotonin accumulation is still limited, and no regulators have been identified to date. Here, we identified the basic leucine zipper transcription factor OsbZIP18 as a positive regulator of serotonin biosynthesis in rice. Overexpression of OsbZIP18 strongly induced the levels of serotonin and its early precursors (tryptophan and tryptamine), resulting in stunted growth and dark-brown phenotypes. A function analysis showed that OsbZIP18 activated serotonin biosynthesis genes (including tryptophan decarboxylase 1 (OsTDC1) , tryptophan decarboxylase 3 ( OsTDC3 ), and tryptamine 5-hydroxylase ( OsT5H )) by directly binding to the ACE-containing or G-box cis -elements in their promoters. Furthermore, we demonstrated that OsbZIP18 is induced by UV-B stress, and experiments using UV-B radiation showed that transgenic plants overexpressing OsbZIP18 exhibited UV-B stress-sensitive phenotypes. Besides, exogenous serotonin significantly exacerbates UV-B stress of OsbZIP18 _OE plants, suggesting that the excessive accumulation of serotonin may be responsible for the sensitivity of OsbZIP18 _OE plants to UV-B stress. Overall, we identified a positive regulator of serotonin biosynthesis and demonstrated that UV-B-stress induced serotonin accumulation, partly in an OsbZIP18-dependent manner.