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SnRK2 protein kinases represent an ancient system in plants for adaptation to a terrestrial environment.

Akihisa ShinozawaRyoko OtakeDaisuke TakezawaTaishi UmezawaKenji KomatsuKeisuke TanakaAnna AmagaiShinnosuke IshikawaYurie HaraYasuko KamisugiAndrew C CumingKoichi HoriHiroyuki OhtaFuminori TakahashiKazuo ShinozakiTakahisa HayashiTeruaki TajiYoichi Sakata
Published in: Communications biology (2019)
The SNF1-related protein kinase 2 (SnRK2) family includes key regulators of osmostress and abscisic acid (ABA) responses in angiosperms and can be classified into three subclasses. Subclass III SnRK2s act in the ABA response while ABA-nonresponsive subclass I SnRK2s are regulated through osmostress. Here we report that an ancient subclass III SnRK2-based signalling module including ABA and an upstream Raf-like kinase (ARK) exclusively protects the moss Physcomitrella patens from drought. Subclass III SnRK2s from both Arabidopsis and from the semiterrestrial alga Klebsormidium nitens, which contains all the components of ABA signalling except ABA receptors, complement Physcomitrella snrk2 - mutants, whereas Arabidopsis subclass I SnRK2 cannot. We propose that the earliest land plants developed the ABA/ARK/subclass III SnRK2 signalling module by recruiting ABA to regulate a pre-existing dehydration response and that subsequently a novel subclass I SnRK2 system evolved in vascular plants conferring osmostress protection independently from the ancient system.
Keyphrases
  • transcription factor
  • arabidopsis thaliana
  • protein kinase
  • climate change
  • tyrosine kinase
  • small molecule
  • wild type