Most rice () cultivars cannot survive under prolonged submergence. However, some ssp. cultivars, such as FR13A, are highly tolerant owing to the () allele, which encodes a Group VII ethylene-responsive factor (ERFVII) protein; other submergence-intolerant cultivars contain a allele. The two alleles differ only by a single substitution at the 186 amino acid position from serine in SUB1A-1 to proline in SUB1A-2 resulting in only SUB1A-1 being able to be phosphorylated. Two other ERFVIIs, and , function downstream of SUB1A-1 to form a regulatory cascade in response to submergence stress. Here, we show that SUB1A-1, but not SUB1A-2, interacts with ADA2b of the ADA2b-GCN5 acetyltransferase complex, in which GCN5 functions as a histone acetyltransferase. Phosphorylation of SUB1A-1 at serine 186 enhances the interaction of SUB1A-1 with ADA2b. and expression was induced under submergence, suggesting that these two genes might play roles in response to submergence stress. In transient assays, binding of SUB1A-1 to the promoter and transcription were highly induced when SUB1A-1 was expressed together with the ADA2b-GCN5 acetyltransferase complex. Taken together, these results suggest that phospho-SUB1A-1 recruits the ADA2-GCN5 acetyltransferase complex to modify the chromatin structure of the promoter regions and activate gene expression, which in turn enhances rice submergence tolerance.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10364326 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/pnasnexus/pgad229 | DOI Listing |
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