The Arabidopsis gai mutant allele confers a reduction in gibberellin (GA) responsiveness. Here we report the molecular cloning of GAI and a closely related gene GRS. The predicted GAI (wild-type) and gai (mutant) proteins differ only by the deletion of a 17-amino-acid segment from within the amino-terminal region. GAI and GRS contain nuclear localization signals, a region of homology to a putative transcription factor, and motifs characteristic of transcriptional coactivators. Genetic analysis indicates that GAI is a repressor of GA responses, that GA can release this repression, and that gai is a mutant repressor that is relatively resistant to the effects of GA. Mutations at SPY and GAR2 suppress the gai phenotype, indicating the involvement of GAI, SPY, and GAR2 in a signaling pathway that regulates GA responses negatively. The existence of this pathway suggests that GA modulates plant growth through derepression rather than through simple stimulation.
The gibberellins (GAs) are a complex family of diterpenoid compounds, some of which are potent endogenous regulators of plant growth. As part of a feedback control of endogenous GA levels, active GAs negatively regulate the abundance of mRNA transcripts encoding GA biosynthesis enzymes. For example, Arabidopsis GA4 gene transcripts encode GA 3-hydroxylase, an enzyme that catalyzes the conversion of inactive to active GAs. Here we show that active GAs regulate GA4 transcript abundance in a dose-dependent manner, and that down-regulation of GA4 transcript abundance is effected by GA 4 (the product of 3-hydroxylation) but not by its immediate precursor GA 9 (the substrate). Comparison of several different GA structures showed that GAs active in promoting hypocotyl elongation were also active in regulating GA4 transcript abundance, suggesting that similar GA:receptor and subsequent signal transduction processes control these two responses. It is interesting that these activities were not restricted to 3-hydroxylated GAs, being also exhibited by structures that were not 3-hydroxylated but that had another electronegative group at C-3. We also show that GA-mediated control of GA4 transcript abundance is disrupted in the GA-response mutants gai and spy-5. These observations define a sensitive homeostatic mechanism whereby plants may regulate their endogenous GA levels.
The interleukin 7 receptor (IL7R), which contains a unique alpha chain and a gamma chain shared by other cytokine receptors, is indispensable for normal lymphocyte development. The basis for this role is poorly understood. Here we show that the IL7R alpha chain not only causes progenitors to proliferate, but also has a distinct activity in inducing differentiation. First, we identify a single cytoplasmic tyrosine residue in the IL7R alpha chain that is essential for cell cycle entry and proliferation dependent on phosphatidylinositol 3‐kinase. We use a mutant alpha chain in which this residue has been altered to reconstitute B lymphopoiesis by retrovirus‐mediated gene transfer in cultures of bone marrow from mice deficient in IL7R alpha chain. The mutation abrogates the proliferation of B‐lymphocyte progenitors, but reveals a novel function of the alpha chain in promoting immunoglobulin heavy chain gene rearrangement leading to B‐cell differentiation. This function is lost (but proliferation sustained) when the cytoplasmic domain of IL7R alpha is replaced by corresponding sequences from the IL2R, despite the similarity on their signalling mechanisms. Thus, the signals which mediate a differentiative function of the IL7R in B lymphopoiesis are specific and distinct from those causing proliferation.
The pasticcino (pas) mutants of Arabidopsis thaliana are a new class of plant developmental mutants; members of this class show ectopic cell proliferation in cotyledons, extra layers of cells in the hypocotyl, and an abnormal apical meristem. This phenotype is correlated with both cell division and cell elongation defects. There are three complementation groups of pas mutants (pas1, pas2, and pas3, with, respectively 2, 1, and 4 alleles). Here we describe in more detail the pas1-1 allele, which was obtained by insertional mutagenesis. The PAS1 gene has been cloned and characterized; it encodes an immunophilin-like protein similar to the p59 FK506-binding protein (FKBP52). PAS1 is characterized by an FKBP-like domain and three tetratricopeptide repeat units. Although the presence of immunophilins in plants has already been demonstrated, the pas1-1 mutant represents the first inactivation of an FKBP-like gene in plants. PAS1 expression is altered in pas1 mutants and in the pas2 and pas3 mutants. The expression of the PAS1 gene is increased in the presence of cytokinins, a class of phytohormones originally discovered because of their ability to stimulate cell division. These results are of particular relevance as they show for the first time that an FKBP-like protein plays an important role in the control of plant development.In flowering plants, morphogenesis depends on the control of the pattern and numbers of cell divisions and on the control of cell elongation. Although there are many examples of controlled patterns of cell division, we still know very little about how local patterns of cell division are established and maintained (30). In Arabidopsis thaliana, the roles of cell division control in the development of the embryo, the shoot, and the root have been extensively studied (reviewed in references 29 and 30). In the last few years, much progress has been made in this field by the isolation of mutants in which single-gene mutations affect specific modes of cell division control. Some of the corresponding genes have been cloned from A. thaliana (SHOOT MERISTEMLESS [STM] and SCARECROW [SCR]) maize (KNOTTED1), and petunia (NO APICAL MERISTEM) (reviewed in reference 30). These genes do not seem to specify components of the cell division machinery, but they are thought to act upstream in the control of cell division. The elements at the interface between genes like STM and SCR and cell cycle regulators, such as cyclins and the CDC genes, are still unknown.The growth and differentiation of higher plants is also greatly dependent on environmental stimuli, such as light and temperature, and on endogenous factors, such as phytohormones. Cytokinins (CKs) were originally discovered because of their ability to promote, along with auxins, plant cell division and organogenesis (reviewed in reference 9). Although this discovery initiated a vast amount of fundamental and applied research on the hormonal control of cell proliferation and regeneration, the mechanisms by which auxins and CKs act and interact at the molecu...
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