| Literature DB >> 27235398 |
Meral Tunc-Ozdemir1, Daisuke Urano1, Dinesh Kumar Jaiswal1, Steven D Clouse2, Alan M Jones3.
Abstract
Plants and some protists have heterotrimeric G protein complexes that activate spontaneously without canonical G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs). In Arabidopsis, the sole 7-transmembrane regulator of G protein signaling 1 (AtRGS1) modulates the G protein complex by keeping it in the resting state (GDP-bound). However, it remains unknown how a myriad of biological responses is achieved with a single G protein modulator. We propose that in complete contrast to G protein activation in animals, plant leucine-rich repeat receptor-like kinases (LRR RLKs), not GPCRs, provide this discrimination through phosphorylation of AtRGS1 in a ligand-dependent manner. G protein signaling is directly activated by the pathogen-associated molecular pattern flagellin peptide 22 through its LRR RLK, FLS2, and co-receptor BAK1.Entities:
Keywords: Arabidopsis thaliana; AtRGS1; BAK1; FLS2; G protein; flg22; phosphorylation; receptor protein serine/threonine kinase; receptor-like kinases; regulator of G protein signaling (RGS)
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27235398 PMCID: PMC4933153 DOI: 10.1074/jbc.C116.736702
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Biol Chem ISSN: 0021-9258 Impact factor: 5.157