IFEVA   02662
INSTITUTO DE INVESTIGACIONES FISIOLOGICAS Y ECOLOGICAS VINCULADAS A LA AGRICULTURA
Unidad Ejecutora - UE
artículos
Título:
Function of B-BOX under shade
Autor/es:
CROCCO CD, HOLM M, YANOVSKY MJ AND BOTTO JF
Revista:
Plant Signaling & Behavior
Editorial:
Landes Bioscience
Referencias:
Lugar: Rio Grande, Texas, EEUU; Año: 2011 vol. 6 p. 101 - 104
ISSN:
1559-2316
Resumen:
Plants are capable of perceiving changes in the light environment and finely adjust their growth and development. Reductions of red to far-red ratio (R:FR) generated by an increase of the plant canopy above the plant are sensed by the phytochrome system triggering the shade-avoidance syndrome (SAS) that includes elongation of vegetative structures, reduction of branching and acceleration of flowering. Albeit the SAS is a strategy of major adaptative significance in plant communities, involving massive changes in gene expression, our knowledge of the SAS signaling network is still fragmented. By a selection and characterization of a T-DNA mutant with a long hypocotyl under shade, we identified BBX21, a protein with two B-box domains involved in the SAS. BBX21 belongs to a small eight member family of B-box containing proteins with both opposite and additive functions in the SAS signaling. BBX21 down-regulates the gene expression of auxin, brassinosteroid and ethylene signaling pathway components under shade. Furthermore BBX21 is a transcription factor that interacts genetically with COP1. We propose a model in which a dynamic balance of positive and negative B-box transcriptional regulators acts as a gas-and-brake mechanism into the COP1 signaling to regulate the expression of SAS.