4.6 Article

SNF1-related protein kinase 1 represses Arabidopsis growth through post-translational modification of E2Fa in response to energy stress

Journal

NEW PHYTOLOGIST
Volume 237, Issue 3, Pages 823-839

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/nph.18597

Keywords

Arabidopsis thaliana; cell cycle; E2Fa; energy stress; protein degradation; protein phosphorylation; SnRK1

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Cellular sugar starvation and energy deprivation are important signals for live cells to trigger stress adaptation response. When exposed to cellular energy stress (ES) conditions, plants reconfigure metabolic pathways and restrict vegetative organ growth. The regulatory mechanism underlying this growth restriction response in plants is largely unknown.
Cellular sugar starvation and/or energy deprivation serves as an important signaling cue for the live cells to trigger the necessary stress adaptation response. When exposed to cellular energy stress (ES) conditions, the plants reconfigure metabolic pathways and rebalance energy status while restricting vegetative organ growth. Despite the vital importance of this ES-induced growth restriction, the regulatory mechanism underlying the response remains largely elusive in plants. Using plant cell- and whole plant-based functional analyses coupled with extended genetic validation, we show that cellular ES-activated SNF1-related protein kinase 1 (SnRK1.1) directly interacts with and phosphorylates E2Fa transcription factor, a critical cell cycle regulator. Phosphorylation of E2Fa by SnRK1.1 leads to its proteasome-mediated protein degradation, resulting in S-phase repression and organ growth restriction. Our findings show that ES-dependently activated SnRK1.1 adjusts cell proliferation and vegetative growth for plants to cope with constantly fluctuating environments.

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