4.7 Article

Developmental control of hypoxia during bud burst in grapevine

Journal

PLANT CELL AND ENVIRONMENT
Volume 41, Issue 5, Pages 1154-1170

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/pce.13141

Keywords

cell cycle; ethylene response factor; meristem; N-end rule proteolysis; quiescence; redox; transcriptome; woody perennial plant

Categories

Funding

  1. Australia Awards
  2. Royal Society [50 2011/R2]
  3. Australian Research Council [DP150103211, LP130100347, LP0990355]
  4. Royal Society (UK) [IE111477]
  5. Wine Australia [GWT 1216]
  6. National Collaborative Research Infrastructure Strategy (NCRIS)

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Dormant or quiescent buds of woody perennials are often dense and in the case of grapevine (Vitis vinifera L.) have a low tissue oxygen status. The precise timing of the decision to resume growth is difficult to predict, but once committed, the increase in tissue oxygen status is rapid and developmentally regulated. Here, we show that more than a third of the grapevine homologues of widely conserved hypoxia-responsive genes and nearly a fifth of all grapevine genes possessing a plant hypoxia-responsive promoter element were differentially regulated during bud burst, in apparent harmony with resumption of meristem identity and cell-cycle gene regulation. We then investigated the molecular and biochemical properties of the grapevine ERF-VII homologues, which in other species are oxygen labile and function in transcriptional regulation of hypoxia-responsive genes. Each of the 3 VvERF-VIIs were substrates for oxygen-dependent proteolysis in vitro, as a function of the N-terminal cysteine. Collectively, these data support an important developmental function of oxygen-dependent signalling in determining the timing and effective coordination bud burst in grapevine. In addition, novel regulators, including GASA-, TCP-, MYB3R-, PLT-, and WUS-like transcription factors, were identified as hallmarks of the orderly and functional resumption of growth following quiescence in buds. Hypoxia has recently emerged as an important developmental cue. Tissue oxygen levels are dynamic and highly regulated during bud burst in grapevine. Here, we show that the timing and coordination of bud burst in grapevine displays hallmarks of oxygen-dependent signalling, including the oxygen-dependent N-end rule proteolysis of Group VII ethylene response factors.

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