AI Article Synopsis

  • RAD23 proteins, like MdRAD23D1, help transport ubiquitylated proteins to the 26S proteasome for degradation and play a role in plant response to drought stress.
  • Under drought conditions, MdRAD23D1 levels increase, which enhances stress tolerance in apple plants by degrading a proline-rich protein, MdPRP6.
  • The interaction between MdRAD23D1 and MdPRP6 reveals that while MdRAD23D1 improves drought resilience, MdPRP6 has a negative effect on drought response by influencing proline accumulation.

Article Abstract

RAD23 (RADIATION SENSITIVE23) proteins are a group of UBL-UBA (ubiquitin-like-ubiquitin-associated) proteins that shuttle ubiquitylated proteins to the 26S proteasome for breakdown. Drought stress is a major environmental constraint that limits plant growth and production, but whether RAD23 proteins are involved in this process is unclear. Here, we demonstrated that a shuttle protein, MdRAD23D1, mediated drought response in apple plants (Malus domestica). MdRAD23D1 levels increased under drought stress, and its suppression resulted in decreased stress tolerance in apple plants. Through in vitro and in vivo assays, we demonstrated that MdRAD23D1 interacted with a proline-rich protein MdPRP6, resulting in the degradation of MdPRP6 by the 26S proteasome. And MdRAD23D1 accelerated the degradation of MdPRP6 under drought stress. Suppression of MdPRP6 resulted in enhanced drought tolerance in apple plants, mainly because the free proline accumulation is changed. And the free proline is also involved in MdRAD23D1-mediated drought response. Taken together, these findings demonstrated that MdRAD23D1 and MdPRP6 oppositely regulated drought response. MdRAD23D1 levels increased under drought, accelerating the degradation of MdPRP6. MdPRP6 negatively regulated drought response, probably by regulating proline accumulation. Thus, "MdRAD23D1-MdPRP6" conferred drought stress tolerance in apple plants.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10363924PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/pbi.14057DOI Listing

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