4.7 Article

The co-chaperone HOP participates in TIR1 stabilisation and in auxin response in plants

Journal

PLANT CELL AND ENVIRONMENT
Volume 45, Issue 8, Pages 2508-2519

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/pce.14366

Keywords

Arabidopsis thaliana; auxin coreceptors; auxin signalling; HSP70-HSP90 organizing protein; HSP90 co-chaperones; SGT1b

Categories

Funding

  1. Ministerio de Ciencia, Innovacion y Universidades [RTI2018-095946-B-I00, BIO2017-82209-R, PID2020-113479RB-I00]
  2. Agencia Estatal de Investigacion. Severo Ochoa Programme for Centres of Excellence [SEV-2016-0672(2017-2021)]

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This study reveals the role of HOP family in plant development and its involvement in auxin signaling. HOP proteins interact and stabilize TIR1, a key component in auxin signal transduction, leading to reduced auxin sensitivity in the hop1 hop2 hop3 triple mutant. Additionally, HOP and SGT1b, another co-chaperone, synergistically cooperate in stabilizing common targets involved in plant development.
HOP (HSP70-HSP90 organising protein) is a conserved family of co-chaperones well known in mammals for its role in the folding of signalling proteins associated with development. In plants, HOP proteins have been involved in the response to multiple stresses, but their role in plant development remains elusive. Herein, we describe that the members of the HOP family participate in different aspects of plant development as well as in the response to warm temperatures through the regulation of auxin signalling. Arabidopsis hop1 hop2 hop3 triple mutant shows different auxin-related phenotypes and a reduced auxin sensitivity. HOP interacts with TIR1 auxin coreceptor in vivo. Furthermore, TIR1 accumulation and auxin transcriptional response are reduced in the hop1 hop2 hop3 triple mutant, suggesting that HOP's function in auxin signalling is related, at least, to TIR1 interaction and stabilisation. Interestingly, HOP proteins form part of the same complexes as SGT1b (a different HSP90 co-chaperone) and these co-chaperones synergistically cooperate in auxin signalling. This study provides relevant data about the role of HOP in auxin regulation in plants and uncovers that both co-chaperones, SGT1b and HOP, cooperate in the stabilisation of common targets involved in plant development.

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