AI Article Synopsis

  • Ethylene perception in Arabidopsis is mediated by a family of five receptors, with subfamily 1 members having histidine kinase activity while subfamily 2 members do not.
  • Transformations of a mutant plant with both wild-type and kinase-inactive versions of ETR1 show that while both versions restore normal growth, the kinase-inactive version leads to reduced ethylene sensitivity.
  • Analysis suggests that the histidine kinase activity of ETR1 is not essential for ethylene responses, but it does play a significant role in modulating these responses, impacting related protein levels.

Article Abstract

In Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana), ethylene is perceived by a receptor family consisting of five members. Subfamily 1 members ETHYLENE RESPONSE1 (ETR1) and ETHYLENE RESPONSE SENSOR1 (ERS1) have histidine kinase activity, unlike the subfamily 2 members ETR2, ERS2, and ETHYLENE INSENSITIVE4 (EIN4), which lack amino acid residues critical for this enzymatic activity. To resolve the role of histidine kinase activity in signaling by the receptors, we transformed an etr1-9;ers1-3 double mutant with wild-type and kinase-inactive versions of the receptor ETR1. Both wild-type and kinase-inactive ETR1 rescue the constitutive ethylene-response phenotype of etr1-9;ers1-3, restoring normal growth to the mutant in air. However, the lines carrying kinase-inactive ETR1 exhibit reduced sensitivity to ethylene based on several growth response assays. Microarray and real-time polymerase chain reaction analyses of gene expression support a role for histidine kinase activity in eliciting the ethylene response. In addition, protein levels of the Raf-like kinase CONSTITUTIVE TRIPLE RESPONSE1 (CTR1), which physically associates with the ethylene receptor ETR1, are less responsive to ethylene in lines containing kinase-inactive ETR1. These data indicate that the histidine kinase activity of ETR1 is not required for but plays a modulating role in the regulation of ethylene responses. Models for how enzymatic and nonenzymatic regulation may facilitate signaling from the ethylene receptors are discussed.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3375934PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1104/pp.112.196790DOI Listing

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