A local regulatory network around three<scp>NAC</scp>transcription factors in stress responses and senescence in<scp>A</scp>rabidopsis leaves

Richard Hickman(University of Warwick), Claire Hill(University of Warwick), Christopher A. Penfold(University of Warwick), Emily Breeze(University of Warwick), Laura Bowden(University of Warwick), Jonathan D. Moore(University of Warwick), Peijun Zhang(University of Warwick), Alison C. Jackson(University of Warwick), Emma J. Cooke(University of Warwick), Findlay Bewicke‐Copley(University of Warwick), Andrew Mead(University of Warwick), Jim Beynon(University of Warwick), David L. Wild(University of Warwick), Katherine Denby(University of Warwick), Sascha Ott(University of Warwick), Vicky Buchanan‐Wollaston(University of Warwick)
The Plant Journal
April 12, 2013
Cited by 210Open Access
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Abstract

A model is presented describing the gene regulatory network surrounding three similar NAC transcription factors that have roles in Arabidopsis leaf senescence and stress responses. ANAC019, ANAC055 and ANAC072 belong to the same clade of NAC domain genes and have overlapping expression patterns. A combination of promoter DNA/protein interactions identified using yeast 1-hybrid analysis and modelling using gene expression time course data has been applied to predict the regulatory network upstream of these genes. Similarities and divergence in regulation during a variety of stress responses are predicted by different combinations of upstream transcription factors binding and also by the modelling. Mutant analysis with potential upstream genes was used to test and confirm some of the predicted interactions. Gene expression analysis in mutants of ANAC019 and ANAC055 at different times during leaf senescence has revealed a distinctly different role for each of these genes. Yeast 1-hybrid analysis is shown to be a valuable tool that can distinguish clades of binding proteins and be used to test and quantify protein binding to predicted promoter motifs.


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