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Article Addendum

Phosphorylation of A-type ARR to function as negative regulator of cytokinin signal transduction

Jungmook Kim

volume 3 | issue 5

may 2008
Pages: 348 - 350

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The plant hormone cytokinins regulate diverse aspects of plant growth and development. In Arabidopsis, a multi-step TCS system similar to bacterial and yeast TCS is used for cytokinin signaling. In a TCS system, a His sensor kinase perceives the signal by autophosphorylating on a His residue in response to an output signal, and the phosphate group is transferred to a conserved Asp residue in the receiver domain of the response regulator. The response regulator then modulates downstream signaling. Cytokinin multi-step TCS system utilizes an additional component, histidine-containing phosphotransfer domain protein (HPT) to transfer the phosphate group from a sensor kinase to a response regulator in the nucleus. The typical response regulators are classified into either type A or B. The type-B ARRs are transcription activators that act as positive regulators of cytokinin signaling, whereas most of the type-A ARRs are negative regulators of cytokinin signaling. Histidyl-aspartidyl phosphorelays are presumed to be essential for this cytokinin signal transduction in plants. Our studies have shown that ARR7, an A-type response regulator, negatively regulates cytokinin signaling in various aspects by acting as a transcriptional repressor and that the phosphorylation of ARR7 is required for these ARR7-regulated cytokinin-responses. Here I propose potential mechanisms by which the phosphorylation of ARRs is involved in regulating cytokinin-mediated gene expression, mainly based on biochemical and structural studies of bacterial response regulators. Protein-protein interaction and DNA-binding studies using the phosphorylated and the un-phosphorylated forms of the ARR proteins with their structural determination will provide molecular understanding of cytokinin-responsive gene regulation by ARRs.

Authors

Jungmook Kim

Department of Plant Biotechnology, Agricultural Plant Stress Research Center, and Biotechnology Research Institute; Chonnam National University; Gwangju, Korea


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