4.8 Article

Functional analysis of HD2 histone deacetylase homologues in Arabidopsis thaliana

Journal

PLANT JOURNAL
Volume 22, Issue 1, Pages 19-27

Publisher

BLACKWELL SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1046/j.1365-313x.2000.00711.x

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Post-translational modification of histones, in particular acetylation, is an important mechanism in the regulation of eukaryotic gene expression. Histone deacetylases are enzymes that remove acetyl groups from the core histones and play a key role in the repression of transcription. HD2 is a maize histone deacetylase, which shows no sequence homology to the histone deacetylases identified from other eukaryotes. We have identified two putative HDP-like histone deacetylase cDNA clones, AtHD2A and AtHD2B, from Arabidopsis thaliana by screening the expressed sequence tag database. AtHD2A and AtHD2B encode putative proteins of 246 and 305 amino acids, and share 44% and 46% amino acid identity to the maize HD2, respectively. Northern blot analysis indicated that AtHD2A was highly expressed in flowers and young siliques of Arabidopsis plants, whereas AtHD2B was widely expressed in stems, leaves, flowers and young siliques. AtHD2A repressed transcription when directed to a promoter containing GAL4 binding sites as a GAL4 fusion protein. Deletion of the extended acidic domain or the domain containing predicted catalytic residues of AtHD2A resulted in the loss of gene repression activity, revealing the importance of both domains to AtHD2A function. Arabidopsis plants were transformed with a gene construct comprising an AtHD2A cDNA in the antisense orientation driven by a strong constitutive promoter, -394tCUP. Silencing of AtHD2A expression resulted in aborted seed development in transgenic Arabidopsis plants, suggesting that the AtHD2A gene product was important in the reproductive development of Arabidopsis thaliana.

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