4.8 Article

Characterization of a novel putative zinc finger gene MIF1:: involvement in multiple hormonal regulation of Arabidopsis development

Journal

PLANT JOURNAL
Volume 45, Issue 3, Pages 399-422

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-313X.2005.02626.x

Keywords

MINI ZINC FINGER 1; plant hormones; gibberellin; gene duplication; seedling development; photomorphogenesis

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Phytohormones play crucial roles in regulating many aspects of plant development. Although much has been learned about the effects of individual hormones, cross-talk between and integration of different hormonal signals are still not well understood. We present a study of MINI ZINC FINGER 1 ( MIF1), a putative zinc finger protein from Arabidopsis, and suggest that it may be involved in integrating signals from multiple hormones. MIF1 homologs are highly conserved among seed plants, each characterized by a very short sequence containing a central putative zinc finger domain. Constitutive overexpression of MIF1 caused dramatic developmental defects, including dwarfism, reduced apical dominance, extreme longevity, dark-green leaves, altered flower morphology, poor fertility, reduced hypocotyl length, spoon-like cotyledons, reduced root growth, and ectopic root hairs on hypocotyls and cotyledons. In addition, 35S::MIF1 seedlings underwent constitutive photomorphogenesis in the dark, with root growth similar to that in the light. Furthermore, 35S:: MIF1 seedlings were demonstrated to be non-responsive to gibberellin ( GA) for cell elongation, hypersensitive to the GA synthesis inhibitor paclobutrazol ( PAC) and abscisic acid ( ABA), and hyposensitive to auxin, brassinosteroid and cytokinin, but normally responsive to ethylene. The de-etiolation defect could not be rescued by the hormones tested. Consistent with these observations, genome-scale expression profiling revealed that 35S:: MIF1 seedlings exhibited decreased expression of genes involved in GA, auxin and brassinosteroid signaling as well as cell elongation/expansion, and increased expression of ABA-responsive genes. We propose that MIF1, or the protein( s) with which MIF1 interacts, is involved in mediating the control of plant development by multiple hormones.

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