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American Society of Plant Physiologists Molecular Characterization of Functional Domains in the Protein Kinase SOS2 That Is Required for Plant Salt ToleranceDepartment of Plant Sciences, University of Arizona, Tucson, Arizona 85721 1 To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail jkzhu{at}ag.arizona.edu; fax 520-621-7186
The SOS3 (for SALT OVERLY SENSITIVE3) calcium binding protein and SOS2 protein kinase are required for sodium and potassium ion homeostasis and salt tolerance in Arabidopsis. We have shown previously that SOS3 interacts with and activates the SOS2 protein kinase. We report here the identification of a SOS3 binding motif in SOS2 that also serves as the kinase autoinhibitory domain. Yeast two-hybrid assays as well as in vitro binding assays revealed a 21amino acid motif in the regulatory domain of SOS2 that is necessary and sufficient for interaction with SOS3. Database searches revealed a large family of SOS2-like protein kinases containing such a SOS3 binding motif. Using a yeast two-hybrid system, we show that these SOS2-like kinases interact with members of the SOS3 family of calcium binding proteins. Two-hybrid assays also revealed interaction between the N-terminal kinase domain and the C-terminal regulatory domain within SOS2, suggesting that the regulatory domain may inhibit kinase activity by blocking substrate access to the catalytic site. Removal of the regulatory domain of SOS2, including the SOS3 binding motif, resulted in constitutive activation of the protein kinase, indicating that the SOS3 binding motif can serve as a kinase autoinhibitory domain. Constitutively active SOS2 that is SOS3 independent also was produced by changing Thr168 to Asp in the activation loop of the SOS2 kinase domain. Combining the Thr168-to-Asp mutation with the autoinhibitory domain deletion created a superactive SOS2 kinase. These results provide insights into regulation of the kinase activities of SOS2 and the SOS2 family of protein kinases.
Many extracellular stimuli, including hormones and such environmental signals as abscisic acid, gravity, light, salinity, drought, cold, oxidative stress, anoxia, and mechanical perturbation, cause changes in cytosolic free Ca2+ concentration (Poovaiah and Reddy, 1993
The superfamily of EF-hand helix-loop-helix calcium binding proteins represents the largest group of calcium-modulated proteins (Moncrief et al., 1990
Calcium signaling often is coupled with protein phosphorylation. Phosphorylation by protein kinases is one of the most common and important regulatory mechanisms in signal transduction (Hardie, 1999
In Arabidopsis, the SOS2 (for SALT OVERLY SENSITIVE2) and SOS3 genes are required for potassium and sodium ion homeostasis and plant salt tolerance (Liu and Zhu, 1997 In this article, we further characterize the interaction between SOS2 and SOS3 and identify SOS2 domains involved in kinase activation and autoinhibition. We show that a 21amino acid motif in the regulatory domain of SOS2 is necessary and sufficient for the interaction with SOS3. We extend these protein interaction studies to a family of SOS2-like protein kinases and the SOS3 family of calcium binding proteins. We also found interaction between the N-terminal kinase domain and the C-terminal regulatory domain within the SOS2 protein. A constitutively active SOS2 kinase could be generated either by deletion of the C-terminal portion, including the SOS3 binding motif, or by a Thr168-to-Asp change in the activation loop of the SOS2 kinase domain. When the two constitutively active mutations were combined, a superactive SOS2 was created. Our results provide an important structural basis for understanding the regulation of the kinase activities of SOS2 and SOS2-like protein kinases.
Identification of an SOS3 Binding Motif in SOS2 To identify amino acid residues in SOS2 that might be necessary for interaction with SOS3, we cloned various parts of SOS2 into the prey vector pACT2 and then tested for interaction with the bait pAS-SOS3 in the yeast two-hybrid system. Figure 1 shows that full-length SOS2 interacted strongly with SOS3 and that the Lys40-to-Asn mutation, which abolishes SOS2 kinase activity (Halfter et al., 2000
Serial deletions of the SOS2 regulatory domain were made and then tested for interaction with SOS3. The results show that residues between Asp304 and Tyr321 are required for SOS2 interaction with SOS3 (Figure 1). SOS2T4, which spans from Gly257 to Arg368, was found to be sufficient to interact with SOS3. We further delimited the region sufficient for SOS3 interaction to a stretch of 21 amino acids between Met309 and Arg330 of SOS2 (Figure 1). SOS2D1, in which this 21amino acid motif was deleted, failed to interact with SOS3 at all (Figure 1). Therefore, we conclude that this 21amino acid motif is necessary and sufficient for interaction with SOS3. This SOS3 binding sequence is designated the FISL motif for its conserved amino acid residues (see below) and for convenience.
The FISL Motif Binds to SOS3 in Vitro
SOS2-like Protein Kinases We searched the GenBank database and identified a large number of plant sequences that are highly similar to SOS2 in both the kinase catalytic domain and the regulatory domain. These SOS2-like proteins (protein kinase S [PKS] proteins) all contain a putative FISL motif. It seems that the FISL motif is found only in the SOS2 subfamily of protein kinases. Table 1 lists plant protein kinases that appear to contain an FISL motif. Sequence analyses of the putative FISL motifs indicate that residues A, F, I, S, L, and F are conserved absolutely (hence the name FISL motif). Twenty-three of the PKS proteins are from Arabidopsis and are named PKS2 to PKS24. PKS2 to PKS5 correspond to SIP1 (for SOS3-interacting proteins) to SIP4 (Halfter et al., 2000
Except for PKS3, which was cloned based on sequence homology with serine/threonine protein kinases (Mizoguchi et al., 1994
Expression of PKS Genes under Salt Stress Steady state transcript levels of PKS genes in roots and shoots of young Arabidopsis seedlings were analyzed. Because of our interest in plant salt stress responses, potential PKS regulation by salt stress also was examined. Two-week-old seedlings were subjected to various durations of treatment with either 100 or 200 mM NaCl. The seedlings were separated into shoots and roots, and their mRNAs were analyzed using gene-specific probes for PKS2 to PKS8 (Figure 4) . PKS2 was expressed at a higher level in the root than in the shoot. There was no substantial regulation of PKS2 by salt stress (Figure 4). Expression levels of PKS3 were comparable between the root and the shoot. After 12 hr of NaCl treatment, PKS3 transcript levels were reduced slightly (Figure 4).
The steady state level of PKS4 transcript was relatively high in both roots and shoots (Figure 4). There was slight upregulation of PKS4 expression by treatment with 200 mM NaCl. The PKS5 transcript level in the root was very low; its expression was higher in the shoot. In addition, its expression in the shoot was slightly upregulated by treatment with 200 mM NaCl (Figure 4). PKS6 expression was extremely low in both roots and shoots (Figure 4). The salt stress treatment did not affect PKS6 expression significantly. In contrast, the levels of PKS7 and PKS8 expression in both the root and the shoot were very high (Figure 4). Interestingly, PKS7 and PKS8 expression in the root was repressed significantly by treatment with 200 mM NaCl. Both PKS7 and PKS8 expression in the shoot were maintained at high levels under NaCl treatment (Figure 4).
SOS3-like Calcium Binding Proteins
The LYD tripeptide at the junction of the E helix and the calcium binding loop in the second EF hand is deleted in the loss-of-function allele sos3-1 (Liu and Zhu, 1998
A consensus sequence for N-myristoylation (i.e., MGxxxS/T[K], where the letter x can be any amino acid) (Towler et al., 1988
Interactions between PKS Proteins and SCaBPs
To determine whether the PKS proteins interact with certain SCaBPs, we introduced the pAS-SOS3 and pAS-SCaBP baits into yeast strains harboring one of the pACT-PKS preys. Figure 6 shows that PKS2 interacted relatively strongly with SCaBP4 and SOS3. PKS3 interacted strongly with SCaBP5 and weakly with SOS3 (Figure 6). PKS3 did not show substantial interaction with any of the other SCaBPs. PKS4 showed interaction with SCaBP5 and SCaBP6 (Figure 6). PKS5 interacted weakly with SCaBP1 but showed no substantial interaction with SOS3 or any of the other SCaBPs (Figure 6). We suggest that PKS4 may interact strongly with SCaBPs that we have not yet identified. PKS6 showed preferential interaction with SCaBP1, SCaBP5, and SCaBP6 (Figure 6). This protein kinase also interacted weakly with SOS3. Like PKS6, PKS7 also had the strongest interaction with SCaBP5 (Figure 6). However, PKS7 did not show interaction with SCaBP1. PKS7 showed some weak interaction with SCaBP6 as well as with SOS3. PKS8 exhibited a strong interaction with SCaBP6 (Figure 6). In fact, the interaction between SCaBP6 and PKS8 was stronger than that between SCaBP6 and any of the other protein kinases tested (Figure 6). SCaBP2 did not show significant interaction with any of the protein kinases. Similarly, SCaBP3 had only weak interaction with SOS2 and little or no interaction with the other protein kinases. It is possible that strong interactions may be found between SCaBP2 or SCaBP3 and the other PKS proteins (e.g., PKS9 to PKS24) that were not tested. The strongest interaction for SCaBP1 was with PKS6. Interestingly, the strongest interaction for SCaBP5 was with PKS6 as well. However, unlike SCaBP5, which interacted substantially with several PKS proteins, SCaBP1 was not as promiscuous. SCaBP4 was very specific and interacted only with PKS2. SCaBP6 was similar to SCaBP5 in that both interacted with several of the protein kinase preys.
Interaction between the Kinase and the Regulatory Domains of SOS2
The FISL Motif Is Inhibitory to SOS2 Kinase Activity The SOS2 protein kinase is not active by itself but becomes active by binding to SOS3 via its FISL motif. Furthermore, the FISL motif is required for the regulatory domain to bind to the N-terminal kinase domain (Figure 7). Together, these results suggest that the FISL motif may inhibit SOS2 kinase activity. Alternatively, part of the junction region between the FISL motif and the kinase domain may be inhibitory, as is the case in calmodulin-dependent protein kinases (Meador et al., 1993
Removal of the entire regulatory domain (amino acids 268 to -446) or part or all of the junction domain abolished SOS2 autophosphorylation (Figure 8C) or phosphorylation of p3 (Figure 8D). SOS2 autophosphorylation was retained when the FISL motif and its downstream sequences were removed (Figure 8C, lane 3, SOS2/308). The level of autophosphorylation in the truncated protein SOS2/308 was similar to that in intact SOS2. However, the truncated SOS2 mutant was much more active than was the intact SOS2 in phosphorylating the p3 substrate (Figure 8D, lane 3). In agreement with previous findings (Halfter et al., 2000
A Mutation in the Activation Loop Activates SOS2 Kinase Activity
Engineering a Superactive SOS2 Kinase by Combining the Deletion and Activation Loop Mutations The data presented above show that a constitutively active, SOS3-independent SOS2 protein kinase can be created either by removing the FISL motif or by mutating the activation loop sequence (Figures 8 and 9). We also tested the effect of combining the activation loop mutation with various regulatory domain deletions. The results are presented in Figure 10 . Combining the Thr168-to-Asp mutation with the SOS2/308 truncation resulted in a kinase that is more active than any of the previous single mutant versions (Figure 10). In the combined mutant form (T/DSOS2/308), the effect of the two single mutations appeared to be more than additive. The activation loop mutation also was able to overcome the inhibitory effect of the FISL motif in the SOS2/329 truncated protein (Figure 10, lane 3). The T/DSOS2/329 mutant was active in phosphorylating p3, although it was not very active in autophosphorylation. In contrast, the superactive T/DSOS2/308 had very high autophosphorylation activity in addition to being extremely active in p3 phosphorylation (Figure 10, lane 2).
Effect of Divalent Cations on the Superactive SOS2 Mutant Kinase Substrate phosphorylation by the intact SOS2 is dependent on both SOS3 and Ca2+ (Halfter et al., 2000
The mutant kinase was active in phosphorylating p3 when no Ca2+ was present (Figures 11A to 11C, lanes 1, EGTA). The addition of 0.02 µM Ca2+ resulted in a slight increase in p3 phosphorylation (Figures 11A to 11C, lanes 2). However, very high levels of Ca2+ were clearly inhibitory to the p3 phosphorylation activity of the mutant kinase (Figures 11A to 11C). To determine whether the inhibitory effect of Ca2+ was specific, we assayed the mutant kinase at various Mg2+ concentrations. Figures 11D to 11F show that the mutant kinase was not active in either autophosphorylation or p3 phosphorylation when no Mg2+ was present (lanes 1, EDTA). The addition of Mg2+ to the assay solution restored kinase autophosphorylation and p3 phosphorylation activities. Very high levels of Mg2+ appeared to inhibit the p3 phosphorylation slightly but not the kinase autophosphorylation (Figures 11D to 11F).
SOS2 and SOS2-like proteins (i.e., PKS) represent a novel family of serine/threonine protein kinases. The PKS proteins all contain a highly conserved kinase domain in the N-terminal part, which is similar to that of SNF1/AMPK protein kinases (Figure 3). The C-terminal portions of the PKS proteins also are conserved but lack substantial sequence similarities to well-characterized proteins or protein domains. Through site-directed mutagenesis and deletion analysis, we discovered functional domains in the founding member of the PKS protein family, SOS2, that are critical in intramolecular and intermolecular protein interactions and kinase activation or suppression. These results provide important insights into the regulation of activities of the PKS family of protein kinases.
Proteinprotein interactions are key to the understanding of protein function. Our finding of SOS2SOS3 interaction led to the discovery that the SOS2 protein kinase functions in a salt stressactivated calcium-signaling pathway (Halfter et al., 2000
The SOS3-binding FISL motif is located near the kinase domain of SOS2. The FISL motif is also found in all PKS proteins, located near the kinase domain (Figure 3). Interestingly, N-terminal truncations of PKS clones identified in the yeast two-hybrid screen with SOS3 never extended into the conserved SOS3 binding motif (Table 2; Halfter et al., 2000
The sequence between the FISL motif and the kinase domain is not conserved in the PKS proteins. In calmodulin kinase I, the calmodulin binding domain also is near the kinase domain, and in between is the autoinhibitory domain (Goldberg et al., 1996 The interaction between the kinase domain and the regulatory domain within SOS2 is interesting. Together with other findings in this study, it suggests the following model for the regulation of SOS2 kinase activity. In the inactive form, the kinase domain of SOS2 is inhibited by interaction with the regulatory domain on the same protein. In response to cytosolic Ca2+ increases elicited by salt stress, and together with SOS3 binding to the FISL motif in the regulatory domain, the kinase is liberated and relieved from inhibition. Because Ca2+ is not required for SOS3 binding to the FISL motif, its precise role in kinase activation remains to be defined.
Our results with the activation loop mutation suggest the possibility that SOS2 also may be activated via phosphorylation by an upstream protein kinase. Both animal AMPK and yeast SNF1 protein kinases can be activated by an upstream kinase, the molecular identity of which is still unknown (Hardie et al., 1998
The superactive form of SOS2 was inhibited by high concentrations of Ca2+ but not by Mg2+ (Figure 11). This is in sharp contrast to the intact SOS2 protein, which depends on Ca2+ for activation (Halfter et al., 2000
We have begun to apply some of the knowledge gained from the analysis of SOS2 domains to the PKS family of protein kinases. The SOS3 binding sequence is highly conserved in the PKS proteins. Thus, all of the PKS proteins examined interact with SOS3 to some extent. However, their interactions with SOS3 are weak compared with that between SOS2 and SOS3. We hypothesized that some of the PKS proteins showing weak interactions with SOS3 may interact strongly with SCaBPs. Indeed, we found that the PKS proteins interact differentially with the SCaBPs. We hope to determine which particular combinations between PKS family members and SCaBP family members give strong interactions, because strong interactions are likely to be meaningful for the in vivo function of these proteins. In the in vitro characterization of enzymes, several different molecules might be used as substrates, but only molecules with the highest affinities are considered to be true substrates. Among the protein kinases tested, SOS2 exhibited the strongest interaction with SOS3. The in planta significance of this strong interaction is consistent with genetic evidence showing that SOS3 and SOS2 function in the same pathway for plant salt tolerance (Halfter et al., 2000 Our studies revealed very specific interactions. For example, PKS3 interacted strongly with SCaBP5 but weakly or not at all with other SCaBPs. In contrast, PKS8 showed specific interaction with SCaBP6 (Figure 6). These results suggest that PKS3 most likely functions together with SCaBP5 and that PKS8 probably acts in concert with SCaBP6. Similarly, preferential interaction between SCaBP4 and PKS2 (Figure 6) suggests the possibility that these two proteins function as a complex. The interaction studies can be complemented by future expression analysis to determine whether the interaction partners are co-expressed spatially and temporally. True interactions require at least some overlap in the spatial and temporal expression of the interaction partners. In this regard, we have analyzed the expression of PKS2 to PKS8 in shoots and roots, and their regulation by salt stress. Interestingly, some were expressed preferentially in the root (e.g., PKS2 and PKS5), whereas some were expressed equally in roots and shoots (e.g., PKS3, PKS4, PKS7, and PKS8). PKS7 and PKS8 showed a substantial downregulation by NaCl stress in the root, whereas several others (e.g., PKS2, PKS4, and PKS5) were slightly upregulated by the stress (Figure 4). The very high levels of expression and downregulation of PKS7 and PKS8 by salt stress indicate that these two protein kinase genes may function in some processes associated with active growth or metabolism.
Some of the other interactions between the two families of proteins are not as specific. For example, PKS6 interacted strongly with SCaBP1, SCaBP5, and SCaBP6. Apart from its interaction with SOS3, SOS2 also had strong interaction with SCaBP5. These and other less specific interactions could be functionally relevant. Many if not most of the functions in plants are performed by redundant genes. The redundancies provide flexibility for evolutionary changes and are an important mechanism to protect against undesirable recessive mutations. In the case of PKS6, its interactors SCaBP1, SCaBP5, and SCaBP6 may have redundant functions. Alternatively, these SCaBPs may function in separate pathways and mediate different calcium signals. In the latter case, PKS6 would be a point of communication between the different pathways. Recently, Shi et al. (1999)
Genome sequencing efforts are revealing an increasingly large number of protein kinases in plants (Arabidopsis Genome Initiative, 2000
SOS2 Deletion and Site-Directed Mutant Constructs Plasmids pAS-SOS3 and pACT-SOS2 were described by Halfter et al. (2000) To introduce the Lys40-to-Asn mutation into pACT-SOS2 to make pACT-SOS2A, the following primer pairs were used for the first PCR: 5'-GCGGATCCGAATGACAAAGAAAATGAGAAGAGTGGGC-3' (the BamHI site is underlined) and 5'-ATTGTACTCTTAGCCATAATG-TTGATGGCT-3', and 5'-GTGATAATGTAGCCATCAACATTATGG-CTA-3' and 5'-GCGAATTCTTAAGTTGGGATCAAAACGTGATTG-TTCTG-3' (the EcoRI site is underlined). Using the PCR products as templates, we performed a second amplification with the primer pair 5'-GCGGATCCGAATGACAAAGAAAATGAGAAGAGTGGGC-3' (the BamHI site is underlined) and 5'-GCGAATTCTTAAGTTGGGATC-AAAACGTGATTGTTCTG-3' (the EcoRI site is underlined). The final product was cloned between the BamHI and EcoRI sites of pACT2. For the deletion construct pACT-SOS2D1, primer pairs 5'-GCG-GATCCGAATGACAAAGAAAATGAGAAGAGTGGGC-3' (the BamHI site is underlined) and 5'-CGGGTTTGCCTTTTAACAAAATCC-TGTCGCAGGGGCCCTTCATC-3', and 5'-GAGAGAAATGATGAA-GGGCCCCTGCGACAGGATTTTGTTA-3' and 5'-GCGAATTCTTAA-GTTGGGATCAAAACGTGATTGTTCTG-3' (the EcoRI site is underlined), were used for the first PCR. The second PCR was performed as described above (pACT2-SOS2A). The final products were cloned between the BamHI and EcoRI sites of pACT2. To express the SOS2 N-terminal kinase domain in the bait vector pAS2, we used primers 5'-ATGGCCATGGATGACAAAGAAAATGAGAAG-3' (the NcoI site is underlined) and 5'-ACGCGTCGACGA-TTTAATCTGAACCAAGGATC-3' (the SalI site is underlined) for PCR amplification of SOS2 cDNA. The product was cloned into the pAS2 vector between the NcoI and SalI sites. To make deletion constructs for constitutively active SOS2 kinase, we used the following primer pairs for PCR amplification. The SOS2 forward primer was 5'-CGGGATCCATGACAAAGAAAATGAGAAG-3' (the BamHI site is underlined). The reverse primers were as follows: 5'-GGAATTCTCAATTTAATCTGAACCAAGGATC-3' for SOS2/267; 5'-GGAATTCTCAATCATCCAAATTCACTTCTTC-3' for SOS2/283; 5'-GGAATTCTCACAGGGGCCCTTCATCATTTC-3' for SOS2/308; and 5'-GGAATTCTCAGTCAAATAGTGCAGATAAATTTAAG-3' for SOS2/329 (the EcoRI site is underlined in each primer). To make SOS2/DJ1 and SOS2/DJ2 constructs, we amplified first-round PCR products with the SOS2 forward primer and the reverse primers 5'-CATCTCAAAGGCATTCATCATATTTAATCTGAACCAAGGATC-3' for SOS2/DJ1 and 5'-AACAAAATCCTGTCGCCTATTTAATCTGAACCAAGGATC-3' for SOS2/DJ2 and the SOS2 reverse primer 5'-GGAATTCTCAAAACGTGATTGTTCTGAG-3' (the EcoRI site is underlined) with forward primers 5'-GATCCTTGGTTCAGATTAAATATGATGAATGCC-TTTGAGATG-3' for SOS2/DJ1 and 5'-GATCCTTGGTTCAGATTA-AATAGGCGACAGGATTTTGTT-3' for SOS2/DJ2. The PCR products were then isolated from agarose gels. The two PCR fragments for SOS2/DJ1 were used together as a template to be amplified by SOS2 forward and reverse primers. Similarly, the two PCR fragments for SOS2/DJ2 were used together as a template to be amplified by SOS2 forward and reverse primers. All final PCR fragments were cloned into pGEX-2TK between the BamHI and EcoRI sites. To introduce the Thr168-to-Asp mutation into SOS2 to make the T/DSOS2 construct, we used the SOS2 forward primer and 5'-GAG-TTCCACATGTGTCACGCAGAAGTTCTAC-3' and the SOS2 reverse primer and 5'-GTAGAACTTCTGCGTGACACATGTGGAACTC-3' for PCR amplification. The PCR products were isolated from agarose gels and then used as templates for amplification by SOS2 forward and reverse primers. The final fragment was cloned into pGEX-2TK vector between the BamHI and EcoRI sites. For the T/DSOS2/283, T/DSOS2/308, T/DSOS2/329, and T/DSOS2/ DJ2 constructs, T/DSOS2 plasmid was used and amplified by SOS2/283, SOS2/308, SOS2/329, and SOS2/DJ2 primers. The final fragments were cloned into pGEX-2TK vector between the BamHI and EcoRI sites. For all amplifications, Turbo-pfu DNA polymerase (Stratagene) was used on SOS2 cDNA as a template. All constructs were sequenced completely to verify that there were no PCR or cloning errors.
Yeast Two-Hybrid Interaction Assays For interaction analysis of SOS2 and protein kinase S (PKS) proteins with SOS3 and SOS3-like calcium binding proteins (SCaBP), yeast Y190 strains expressing the bait pAS-SOS3 or one of the pAS-SCaBPs were transformed with pACT-SOS2, pACT-PKS2, pACT-PKS3, pACT-PKS4, pACT-PKS5, pACT-PKS6, pACT-PKS7, or pACT-PKS8 in all combinations. To analyze the interaction between SOS2 N-terminal and C-terminal domains, yeast Y190 cells expressing the bait pAS2-SOS2N were transformed with pACT-SOS2, pACT-SOS2T1, pACT-SOS2T2, pACT-SOS2T3, pACT-SOS2T4, or pACT-SOS2T5. All bait proteins were tested for self-activation, and none of them was found to activate the two reporter genes His3 or LacZ.
For quantitative assays, we used a procedure published at http://www.fhcrc.org/labs/gottschling/Bgal.sht. Yeast cells were grown in YEPD (for yeast extract, peptone, and dextrose) liquid medium until mid-log phase, pelleted, and resuspended in an equal volume of buffer Z (60 mM Na2HPO4, 40 mM NaH2PO4, pH 7.0, 10 mM KCl, 1 mM MgSO4, and 50 mM
cDNA Cloning of PKS and SCaBPs For SCaBPs, primer pairs for PCR on first-strand cDNAs were as follows (the NcoI and SalI restriction sites are underlined): for SCaBP1, 5'-CATGCCATGGATGTCGCAGTGCGTTGAC-3' and 5'-ACGCGTCGACAGGTATCTTCAACCTGAG-3'; for SCaBP2, 5'-CATGCCATGGATGATGATGCAATGTTTAG-3' and 5'-ACGCGTCGACATCCATCCAGCTCACTAG-3'; for SCaBP3, 5'-CATGCCATGGAT-GGATTCAACAAGAAATTC-3' and 5'-ACGCGTCGACAGGTATCTTCCACTTGCGAG-3'; for SCaBP4, 5'-CATGCCATGGATGGGATG-TGTTTGCAGCAAG-3' and 5'-ACGCGTCGACTTACTTCAAGAAAG-GGATAGTC-3'; for SCaBP5, 5'-CATGCCATGGATGGGCTGCTTCCA-CTC-3' and 5'-ACGCGTCGACTCATGTGGCAATCTCATC-3'; and for SCaBP6, 5'-CATGCCATGGATGTCGCAGTGCATAGAC-3' and 5'-ACGCGTCGACTCAGGTATCTTCCACCTG-3'. SCaBP cDNAs were cloned into pAS2 between the NcoI and SalI sites for yeast two-hybrid assays.
Expression and Purification of GST Fusion Proteins in Escherichia coli
Protein Binding in Vitro
Oligopeptide Phosphorylation Assays To determinate whether the T/DSOS2/308 mutant depends on Ca2+, phosphorylation assays were performed in kinase buffer (20 mM Tris-HCl, pH 8.0, 5 mM MgCl2, 10 µM ATP, and 1 mM DTT) with 0.02, 0.1, 0.25, 0.5, 1, 3, 6, 10, and 20 mM CaCl2 or 10 mM EGTA at 30°C for 30 min. Different Mg2+ concentrations (0.5, 1, 2.5, 5, 7.5, 10, 15, and 20 mM or 1 mM EDTA) also were tested in reactions with kinase buffer (20 mM Tris-HCl, pH 8.0, 1 mM CaCl2, 10 µM ATP, and 1 mM DTT).
RNA Gel Blot Analysis
We thank Dr. Hans Bohnert for critical reading of the manuscript and Dr. D. Grahame Hardie for stimulating discussions. This work was supported by National Institutes of Health Grant R01GM59138 and United States Department of Agriculture National Research Initiative Grant 0001657 to J.-K.Z. Received January 17, 2001; accepted March 26, 2001.
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