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The Plant Cell 19:2098

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IN BRIEF

Dominant, Constitutively Active Phytochrome Mutants

Nancy A. Eckardt, News and Reviews Editor

neckardt{at}aspb.org

Signaling via the red/far-red phytochrome photoreceptors regulates many aspects of plant growth and development. The dicot Arabidopsis possesses five different types of phytochromes, PHYA-E, which exhibit overlapping and distinct functions. Phytochromes (principally phyB) are well known for their photoreversibility: absorption of red light converts phyB to the physiological active (signaling) state, whereas far-red absorption converts it back to an inactive state.

Su and Lagarias (pages 2124–2139) report the discovery of a new class of Arabidopsis phytochrome mutants that exhibit light-independent constitutive signaling. Dominant gain-of-function activity is conferred by mutation of a conserved GAF domain Tyr residue (YGAF) that is critical for photoactivation of plant phytochromes. Although phyB YGAF mutants (BY276H) were poorly photoreactive, they exhibited constitutive signaling activity by conferring light-independent seed germination, activation of light-regulated genes, and constitutive photomorphogenic development. Results of this study thus demonstrate a key role of YGAF in coupling light perception with downstream signaling. In addition, the identification of constitutively active alleles of plant phytochromes holds potential for crop improvement. The phytochrome-mediated shade avoidance syndrome contributes significantly to yield losses in high-density crop plantings, losses that might be mitigated by expression of these novel gain-of-function alleles in crop species.


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Dark-grown plants expressing BY276H show light-grown development compared with the wild type (Ler) and plants expressing wild-type PHYB (B).

 
Footnotes

www.plantcell.org/cgi/doi/10.1105/tpc.107.190711


Related articles in Plant Cell:

Light-Independent Phytochrome Signaling Mediated by Dominant GAF Domain Tyrosine Mutants of Arabidopsis Phytochromes in Transgenic Plants
Yi-shin Su and J. Clark Lagarias
Plant Cell 2007 19: 2124-2139. [Abstract] [Full Text]  




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