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The Plant Cell 18:278-282 (2006) © 2006 American Society of Plant Biologists
Rice GIBBERELLIN INSENSITIVE DWARF1 Is a Gibberellin Receptor That Illuminates and Raises Questions about GA SignalingDepartment of Plant Biology, University of Minnesota, St. Paul, MN 55108
Department of Plant Biology, University of Minnesota, St. Paul, MN 55108 neil{at}umn.edu
Recently, gibberellins (GAs) joined the list of plant hormones with a known receptor protein with the report by Ueguchi-Tanaka et al. (2005)
GAs are tetracyclic diterpenoids that act at all stages in the plant life cycle by promoting germination, hypocotyl elongation, phase transitions, root, leaf, stem, and fruit growth, greening of leaves, flowering, and flower and seed development. In addition, they have been implicated in meristem function and recently have been shown to inhibit cytokinin action (Greenboim-Wainberg et al., 2005 GID1
In marked contrast with other loss-of-function GA response mutants, the gid1 mutant of rice appears to be completely unresponsive to GA. One of the best-characterized GA responses is the induction of
In animals, HSL hydrolyzes triacylglycerol, and, as the name implies, the activity of this enzyme is modified through hormone-regulated phosphorylation (Yeaman, 2004
Ueguchi-Tanaka et al. (2005) gid1-1, -2, and -3 plants have no or greatly reduced responses to GAs. The gid1-1, -2, and -3 proteins, which have either a single amino acid change or a small deletion, did not bind GA, suggesting that GA binding is required for a GA response. Consistent with this hypothesis, overexpression of GID1 in rice increases the sensitivity of the second leaf sheath to GA. One of the more informative discoveries is that in a yeast two-hybrid assay, GID1 interacts with the rice DELLA protein SLENDER RICE1 (SLR1) in a GA-dependent manner. This discovery provides additional evidence that GID1 is a GA receptor and suggests where GID1 functions in the signaling pathway. The GID1SLR1 interaction was shown to be dependent on the presence of GA3, a bioactive GA, but the activity of other GAs was not reported. A test of the hypothesis that the GID1SLR1 interaction is central to GA signaling will be to determine if, as has already been shown for GA binding to GID1, the relative effectiveness of different GAs in promoting this interaction is correlated with the intrinsic bioactivity of GAs. In addition, it will be important to determine if GID1 and SLR1 interact in rice and if this interaction is GA dependent. Arabidopsis has three potential GID1 orthologs. Like GID1, all three proteins lack the essential His of the catalytic triad, suggesting that they will not have lipase activity. Screens for GA response mutants have not identified these proteins, suggesting that, if they are the Arabidopsis GA receptors, they have significant functional overlap. DELLA PROTEINS
SLR1 is a member of a family of proteins called DELLA proteins that negatively regulate plant responses to GA. SLR1, which is also known as Os GAI, negatively regulates most if not all GA responses of rice and is a putative transcription factor (Ogawa et al., 2000
How GA triggers the interaction of DELLAs with the F-box protein is an open question. Initially it was proposed that phosphorylation of DELLA proteins in a GA-dependent manner caused them to interact with the F-box proteins (Fu et al., 2002
There is an interesting parallel between the auxin and GA receptors in that both appear to play a direct role in the destruction of signaling pathway proteins by promoting interaction with the SCF complex. However, because TIR1, the auxin receptor, is an F-box protein (Dharmasiri et al., 2005 DO PLANTS HAVE ADDITIONAL GA RECEPTORS? The hypothesis that GID1 is a GA receptor calls into question long-held views about the GA signaling pathway. While GID1 is primarily nuclear localized, there is significant experimental support for a membrane-localized GA receptor, and early action of heterotrimeric G proteins, calcium, and protein phosphorylation acting upstream of DELLA proteins (Figure 1).
Two types of experiments support the hypothesis that binding of GA to a plasma membranelocalized receptor is required for GA signaling. A classic system used to study GA signaling is the induction of
In animals, transmembrane spanning proteins can act as hormone receptors, often directly transducing the signal through heterotrimeric G proteins. Mutations and chemicals affecting the activity of plant heterotrimeric G proteins reduce but do not eliminate GA responses, suggesting a role for these proteins in GA signaling (Ueguchi-Tanaka et al., 2000
One of the fastest known GA responses is an increase in the concentration of cytosolic calcium, which is detectable 2 to 5 min following treatment of wheat aleurone cells (Bush, 1996
While the GA insensitivity of gid1 mutants suggests that GID1 is the only GA receptor, the results discussed above are difficult to reconcile with this model. If GID1 is the only receptor, aleurone cells should respond to microinjected GA. One possibility is that GID1 only signals when it binds GA at the external face of the plasma membrane. Since some of the GID1-GFP fusion protein is located in the cytosol, it is possible that GID1 is associated with the plasma membrane, but the lack of an identifiable membrane-spanning domain leaves open how GID1 can perceive extracellular GA. Moreover, for it to be the receptor that transduces the signal from GA conjugated to sepharose, it would need to bind the GA and undergo a stable change in conformation or be posttranslationally modified in such a way that it could then carry the signal from the plasma membrane to the nucleus as an unliganded receptor. Since these scenarios seem unlikely, it seems plausible to reject a single receptor model in favor of there being two independent receptors. However, since gid1 plants are insensitive to GA and microinjected GA is inactive, a simple model with a soluble GID1 receptor and a second plasma membranelocalized receptor is not supported. There are however several possible solutions to this conundrum. One solution is to discount the evidence for a membrane-bound receptor or to discount that GID1 is the receptor, but there are no obvious reasons for doing either. A second solution is to propose that GID1 plays multiple roles in GA signaling, with GID1 being the receptor of intracellular GA in some cells and a downstream component in other cells. Under this model, aleurone cells, which do not synthesize GA, perceive extracellular GA using a membrane-bound receptor that is not GID1, with GID1 instead acting as a downstream pathway component. To explain the inactivity of microinjected GA, it is also necessary to hypothesize that binding of GA to GID1 does not induce FINDING NEW GA PATHWAY COMPONENTS
Based on what is known about GID1, efforts to identify new GA signaling pathway components should focus on proteins that interact with GID1 or SLR1 and the targets of SLR1. Interestingly, DELLA protein stability is affected by auxin and ethylene. The addition of ethylene (Achard et al., 2003
DELLA proteins are believed to regulate transcription, but the only evidence for this comes from transgenic spinach, where a DELLA GAL4 DNA binding domain fusion protein induced transcription of a reporter gene with a GAL4 binding site (Ogawa et al., 2000 Since GID1 interacts with SLR1 in a GA-dependent manner and SLR1 protein accumulates in a gid1 mutant, GID1 is likely to play a central role in controlling the stability and perhaps activity of SLR1. Therefore, a major focus of GA signaling research should be to understand the interaction between these proteins and the role of GA binding in this process. Acknowledgments We thank the reviewers for their helpful suggestions. Research in the lab is supported by National Science Foundation Grant MCB-0112826 to N.E.O. and by U.S. Department of Energy Grant DE-FG01-04ER04 to N.E.O. and L.M.H. REFERENCES
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