Plants display a range of adaptive responses to phosphate (Pi) starvation including an increase in the proportion of Pi allocated to the roots, which enhances lateral root development and consequently Pi acquisition. The mechanisms by which plants sense Pi and signal Pi reallocation are largely unknown. Previously, we cloned At4, a gene predicted to contain multiple short open-reading frames (ORFs), whose expression is strongly induced by Pi starvation. At4 is a member of a small gene family whose members, AtIPS1 and two additional genes reported here, At4.1 and At4.2, share little conservation among the predicted ORFs but high conservation of a 22-nt sequence located in the 3' half of the transcript. Here, we show that under Pi-starvation conditions, At4 is expressed in the vascular tissue and transcript levels are regulated by both cytokinin and ABA. at4, an At4 loss-of-function mutant fails to redistribute Pi to the roots correctly in response to Pi deprivation and At4 shoots continue to accumulate a greater proportion of Pi relative to wild type. Consistent with this, the primary root growth rate in at4 is faster than wild type in low-Pi conditions. The conserved sequence found in all members of the At4 gene family hybridizes to a small RNA present in Pi-starved roots. These data support a role for At4 in the internal allocation of Pi and suggest that the At4 gene is not only subject to Pi-starvation-inducible expression, but that transcript levels may be adjusted at a post-transcriptional level by the activity of an miRNA.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-313X.2005.02629.x | DOI Listing |
Plant Physiol Biochem
January 2024
State Key Laboratory of Wheat and Maize Crop Science, College of Life Sciences, Henan Agricultural University, 450002, Zhengzhou, China. Electronic address:
Environ Int
November 2023
Institute of Pesticide and Environmental Toxicology, College of Agriculture & Biotechnology, Zhejiang University, Hangzhou 310058, PR China; Key Laboratory of Biology of Crop Pathogens and Insects of Zhejiang Province, Key Laboratory of Molecular Biology of Crop Pathogens and Insects, Ministry of Agriculture, Zhejiang University, Hangzhou 310058, PR China. Electronic address:
Atrazine residues can pose serious threats to soil ecology and human health. Currently, the underlying relationship between soil microbial communities and the degradation genes associated with atrazine degradation remains unclear. In this study, the degradation characteristics of atrazine was investigated in ten different soil types.
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January 2024
Department of Pathology, Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, California, USA.
A t(4;11) leukemia model established from CRISPR-engineered chromosomal translocations between the KMT2A and AFF1 genes recapitulate proteomic, epigenomic, and transcriptomic features of primary patient leukemias.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCancer Genomics Proteomics
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Section for Cancer Cytogenetics, Institute for Cancer Genetics and Informatics, The Norwegian Radium Hospital, Oslo University Hospital, Oslo, Norway.
Background/aim: Angioleiomyoma is a benign tumor, occurs at any age, and arises most frequently in the lower extremities. Genetic information on angioleiomyomas is restricted to six reported abnormal karyotypes, losses in chromosome 22 and gains in Xq found by comparative genomic hybridization, and mutation analysis of notch receptor 2 (NOTCH2), NOTCH3, platelet-derived growth factor receptor beta (PDGFRB), and mediator complex subunit 12 (MED12) in a few tumors. Herein, we report the genetic findings in another three angioleiomyomas.
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June 2023
Department of Pathology, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts; Dana Farber/Brigham and Women's Cancer Center, Boston, Massachusetts; Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts. Electronic address:
Acinic cell carcinoma (AciCC) is a tumor that is recognized in both the breast and salivary glands. Recently, the recurrent genomic rearrangement, t(4;9)(q13;q31) was identified in salivary AciCC that results in constitutive upregulation of the nuclear transcription factor NR4A3, which can be detected by immunohistochemistry. In this study, we sought to evaluate NR4A3 expression in breast AciCC using immunohistochemistry.
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