4.4 Article

A golgi-localized hexose transporter is involved in heterotrimeric G protein-mediated early development in Arabidopsis

Journal

MOLECULAR BIOLOGY OF THE CELL
Volume 17, Issue 10, Pages 4257-4269

Publisher

AMER SOC CELL BIOLOGY
DOI: 10.1091/mbc.E06-01-0046

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  1. NIGMS NIH HHS [GM-65989-01, R01 GM065989] Funding Source: Medline

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Signal transduction involving heterotrimeric G proteins is universal among fungi, animals, and plants. In plants and fungi, the best understood function for the G protein complex is its modulation of cell proliferation and one of several important signals that are known to modulate the rate at which these cells proliferate is D-glucose. Arabidopsis thaliana seedlings lacking the beta subunit (AGB1) of the G protein complex have altered cell division in the hypocotyl and are D-glucose hypersensitive. With the aim to discover new elements in G protein signaling, we screened for gain-of-function suppressors of altered cell proliferation during early development in the agb1-2 mutant background. One agb1-2dependent suppressor, designated sgb1-1(D) for suppressor of G protein betal (agb1-2), restored to wild type the altered cell division in the hypocotyl and sugar hypersensitivity of the agb1-2 mutant. Consistent with AGB1 localization, SGB1 is found at the highest steady-state level in tissues with active cell division, and this level increases in hypocotyls when grown on D-glucose and sucrose. SGB1 is shown here to be a Golgi-localized hexose transporter and acts genetically with AGB1 in early seedling development.

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