A Seven-Transmembrane RGS Protein That Modulates Plant Cell Proliferation

Jin‐Gui Chen(University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill), Francis S. Willard(University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill), Jirong Huang(University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill), Jiansheng Liang(University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill), Scott Chasse(University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill), Alan M. Jones(University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill), David P. Siderovski(University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill)
Science
September 18, 2003
Cited by 329

Abstract

G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) at the cell surface activate heterotrimeric G proteins by inducing the G protein alpha (Galpha) subunit to exchange guanosine diphosphate for guanosine triphosphate. Regulators of G protein signaling (RGS) proteins accelerate the deactivation of Galpha subunits to reduce GPCR signaling. Here we identified an RGS protein (AtRGS1) in Arabidopsis that has a predicted structure similar to a GPCR as well as an RGS box with GTPase accelerating activity. Expression of AtRGS1 complemented the pheromone supersensitivity phenotype of a yeast RGS mutant, sst2Delta. Loss of AtRGS1 increased the activity of the Arabidopsis Galpha subunit, resulting in increased cell elongation in hypocotyls in darkness and increased cell production in roots grown in light. These findings suggest that AtRGS1 is a critical modulator of plant cell proliferation.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis