4.7 Article

Abscisic Acid Receptors: Past, Present and Future

Journal

JOURNAL OF INTEGRATIVE PLANT BIOLOGY
Volume 53, Issue 6, Pages 469-479

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/j.1744-7909.2011.01044.x

Keywords

ABA; ChlH/ABAR/CCH/GUN5; FCA; GCR2; GTG1/GTG2; PYL/PYL/RCAR

Funding

  1. U.S. Department of Energy [DE-AC05-00OR22725]
  2. Laboratory Directed Research and Development Program of Oak Ridge National Laboratory
  3. U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Science, Biological and Environmental Research

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Abscisic acid (ABA) is the key plant stress hormone. Consistent with the earlier studies in support of the presence of both membrane-and cytoplasm-localized ABA receptors, recent studies have identified multiple ABA receptors located in various subcellular locations. These include a chloroplast envelope-localized receptor (the H subunit of Chloroplast Mg2+-chelatase/ABA Receptor), two plasma membrane-localized receptors (G-protein Coupled Receptor 2 and GPCR-type G proteins), and one cytosol/nucleus-localized Pyrabactin Resistant (PYR)/PYR-Like (PYL)/Regulatory Component of ABA Receptor 1 (RCAR). Although the downstream molecular events for most of the identified ABA receptors are currently unknown, one of them, PYR/PYL/RCAR was found to directly bind and regulate the activity of a long-known central regulator of ABA signaling, the A-group protein phosphatase 2C (PP2C). Together with the Sucrose Non-fermentation Kinase Subfamily 2 (SnRK2s) protein kinases, a central signaling complex (ABA-PYR-PP2Cs-SnRK2s) that is responsible for ABA signal perception and transduction is supported by abundant genetic, physiological, biochemical and structural evidence. The identification of multiple ABA receptors has advanced our understanding of ABA signal perception and transduction while adding an extra layer of complexity.

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