4.6 Article

Impact on Arabidopsis growth and stress resistance of depleting the Maf1 repressor of RNA polymerase III

Journal

GENE
Volume 815, Issue -, Pages -

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ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.gene.2021.146130

Keywords

Arabidopsis; Growth; Maf1; RNA polymerase III; Stress; tRNA

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Maf1 is a conserved transcription factor that plays a crucial role in growth and stress response. Depletion of Maf1 in Arabidopsis was found to enhance growth without compromising resistance to common challenges.
Maf1 is a transcription factor that is conserved in sequence and structure between yeasts, animals and plants. Its principal molecular function is also well conserved, being to bind and repress RNA polymerase (pol) III, thereby inhibiting synthesis of tRNAs and other noncoding RNAs. Restrictions on tRNA production and hence protein synthesis can provide a mechanism to preserve resources under conditions that are suboptimal for growth. Accordingly, Maf1 is found in some organisms to influence growth and/or stress survival. Because of their sessile nature, plants are especially vulnerable to environmental changes and molecular adaptations that enhance growth under benign circumstances can increase sensitivity to external challenges. We tested if Maf1 depletion in the model plant Arabidopsis affects growth, pathogen resistance and tolerance of drought or soil salinity, a common physiological challenge that imposes both osmotic and ionic stress. We find that disruption of the Maf1 gene or RNAi-mediated depletion of its transcript is well-tolerated and confers a modest growth advantage without compromising resistance to common biotic and abiotic challenges.

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