Transcriptome Analysis Reveals Specific Modulation of Abscisic Acid Signaling by ROP10 Small GTPase in Arabidopsis
Open Access
- 28 October 2005
- journal article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in Plant Physiology
- Vol. 139 (3) , 1350-1365
- https://doi.org/10.1104/pp.105.068064
Abstract
Abscisic acid (ABA) is a hormone that modulates a variety of agronomically important growth and developmental processes and various stresses responses, but its signal transduction pathways remain poorly understood. ROP10, a member of ROP small GTPases in Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana), is a plasma membrane-associated protein specifically involved in negative regulation of ABA responses. To dissect the ROP10-mediated ABA signaling, we carried out transcriptome analysis using the Arabidopsis full-genome chip. Our analysis revealed a total of 262 and 125 genes that were, respectively, up- and down-regulated (≥2-fold cutoff) by 1 μm ABA in wild type (Wassilewskija [Ws]); 42 up-regulated and 38 down-regulated genes have not been identified in other studies. Consistent with the nonpleiotropic phenotypes of rop10-1, only three genes were altered in rop10-1 in the absence of ABA treatment. In response to 1 μm ABA, 341 and 127 genes were, respectively, activated and repressed in rop10-1. Interestingly, a particular subset of 21 genes that were not altered by 1 μm ABA in Ws but only activated in rop10-1 was identified. Reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction analysis revealed the existence of three distinct categories of ABA dose-response patterns. One novel category is characterized by their ABA unresponsiveness in Ws and activation in rop10-1 at 1 μm but not 10 and 100 μm of ABA. This indicates that ROP10 gates the expression of genes that are specific to low concentrations of ABA. Furthermore, almost all of these 21 genes are known to be highly induced by various biotic and abiotic stresses. Consequently, we found that rop10-1 enhanced the sensitivity of seed germination inhibition to mannitol and sodium chloride. Our results suggest that ROP10 negatively regulates ABA responses by specifically and differentially modulating the ABA sensitivity of a subset of genes including protein kinases and zinc-finger family proteins.Keywords
This publication has 78 references indexed in Scilit:
- Involvement of MPK4 in osmotic stress response pathways in cell suspensions and plantlets of Arabidopsis thaliana: activation by hypoosmolarity and negative role in hyperosmolarity toleranceFEBS Letters, 2004
- Global Transcription Profiling Reveals Multiple Sugar Signal Transduction Mechanisms in Arabidopsis[W]Plant Cell, 2004
- The Arabidopsis Putative G Protein–Coupled Receptor GCR1 Interacts with the G Protein α Subunit GPA1 and Regulates Abscisic Acid SignalingPlant Cell, 2004
- Regulation of Abscisic Acid BiosynthesisPlant Physiology, 2003
- Viviparous1 Alters Global Gene Expression Patterns through Regulation of Abscisic Acid SignalingPlant Physiology, 2003
- Disruption Mutations of ADA2b and GCN5 Transcriptional Adaptor Genes Dramatically Affect Arabidopsis Growth, Development, and Gene Expression[W]Plant Cell, 2003
- Monitoring the expression pattern of around 7,000 Arabidopsis genes under ABA treatments using a full-length cDNA microarrayFunctional & Integrative Genomics, 2002
- The Rop GTPase Switch Controls Multiple Developmental Processes in ArabidopsisPlant Physiology, 2001
- Significance analysis of microarrays applied to the ionizing radiation responseProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2001
- Characterization of anArabidopsis thalianaGene that Defines a New Class of Putative Plant Receptor Kinases with an Extracellular Lectin-like DomainJournal of Molecular Biology, 1996