| Literature DB >> 30833711 |
Jelle Van Leene1,2, Chao Han1,2,3, Astrid Gadeyne1,2, Dominique Eeckhout1,2, Caroline Matthijs1,2, Bernard Cannoot1,2, Nancy De Winne1,2, Geert Persiau1,2, Eveline Van De Slijke1,2, Brigitte Van de Cotte1,2, Elisabeth Stes1,2, Michiel Van Bel1,2,4, Veronique Storme1,2, Francis Impens5,6,7, Kris Gevaert5,6,7, Klaas Vandepoele1,2,4, Ive De Smet1,2, Geert De Jaeger8,9.
Abstract
The target of rapamycin (TOR) kinase is a conserved regulatory hub that translates environmental and nutritional information into permissive or restrictive growth decisions. Despite the increased appreciation of the essential role of the TOR complex in plants, no large-scale phosphoproteomics or interactomics studies have been performed to map TOR signalling events in plants. To fill this gap, we combined a systematic phosphoproteomics screen with a targeted protein complex analysis in the model plant Arabidopsis thaliana. Integration of the phosphoproteome and protein complex data on the one hand shows that both methods reveal complementary subspaces of the plant TOR signalling network, enabling proteome-wide discovery of both upstream and downstream network components. On the other hand, the overlap between both data sets reveals a set of candidate direct TOR substrates. The integrated network embeds both evolutionarily-conserved and plant-specific TOR signalling components, uncovering an intriguing complex interplay with protein synthesis. Overall, the network provides a rich data set to start addressing fundamental questions about how TOR controls key processes in plants, such as autophagy, auxin signalling, chloroplast development, lipid metabolism, nucleotide biosynthesis, protein translation or senescence.Entities:
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Year: 2019 PMID: 30833711 DOI: 10.1038/s41477-019-0378-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Plants ISSN: 2055-0278 Impact factor: 15.793