| Literature DB >> 22822204 |
Kengo Morohashi1, María Isabel Casas, Maria Lorena Falcone Ferreyra, Lorena Falcone Ferreyra, María Katherine Mejía-Guerra, Lucille Pourcel, Alper Yilmaz, Antje Feller, Bruna Carvalho, Julia Emiliani, Eduardo Rodriguez, Silvina Pellegrinet, Michael McMullen, Paula Casati, Erich Grotewold.
Abstract
Pericarp Color1 (P1) encodes an R2R3-MYB transcription factor responsible for the accumulation of insecticidal flavones in maize (Zea mays) silks and red phlobaphene pigments in pericarps and other floral tissues, which makes P1 an important visual marker. Using genome-wide expression analyses (RNA sequencing) in pericarps and silks of plants with contrasting P1 alleles combined with chromatin immunoprecipitation coupled with high-throughput sequencing, we show here that the regulatory functions of P1 are much broader than the activation of genes corresponding to enzymes in a branch of flavonoid biosynthesis. P1 modulates the expression of several thousand genes, and ∼1500 of them were identified as putative direct targets of P1. Among them, we identified F2H1, corresponding to a P450 enzyme that converts naringenin into 2-hydroxynaringenin, a key branch point in the P1-controlled pathway and the first step in the formation of insecticidal C-glycosyl flavones. Unexpectedly, the binding of P1 to gene regulatory regions can result in both gene activation and repression. Our results indicate that P1 is the major regulator for a set of genes involved in flavonoid biosynthesis and a minor modulator of the expression of a much larger gene set that includes genes involved in primary metabolism and production of other specialized compounds.Entities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 22822204 PMCID: PMC3426112 DOI: 10.1105/tpc.112.098004
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Plant Cell ISSN: 1040-4651 Impact factor: 11.277