| Literature DB >> 31628867 |
Naheed Tabassum1, Lennart Eschen-Lippold1, Benedikt Athmer1, Manaswita Baruah1, Martina Brode1, Luis D Maldonado-Bonilla1, Wolfgang Hoehenwarter1, Gerd Hause2, Dierk Scheel1, Justin Lee1.
Abstract
Mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) cascades are key signalling modules of plant defence responses to pathogen-associated molecular patterns [PAMPs; e.g. the bacterial peptide flagellin (flg22)]. Tandem zinc finger protein 9 (TZF9) is a RNA-binding protein that is phosphorylated by two PAMP-responsive MAPKs, MPK3 and MPK6. We mapped the major phosphosites in TZF9 and showed their importance for controlling in vitro RNA-binding activity, in vivo flg22-induced rapid disappearance of TZF9-labelled processing body-like structures and TZF9 protein turnover. Microarray analysis showed a strong discordance between transcriptome (total mRNA) and translatome (polysome-associated mRNA) in the tzf9 mutant, with more mRNAs associated with ribosomes in the absence of TZF9. This suggests that TZF9 may sequester and inhibit the translation of subsets of mRNAs. Fittingly, TZF9 physically interacts with poly(A)-binding protein 2 (PAB2), a hallmark constituent of stress granules - sites for stress-induced translational stalling/arrest. TZF9 even promotes the assembly of stress granules in the absence of stress. Hence, MAPKs may control defence gene expression post-transcriptionally through release from translation arrest within TZF9-PAB2-containing RNA granules or by perturbing the function of PAB2 in translation control (e.g. in the mRNA closed-loop model of translation).Entities:
Keywords: mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK); pathogen-associated molecular pattern (PAMP); post-transcriptional regulation; processing bodies (PB); stress granule (SG); tandem zinc finger protein (TZF)
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31628867 DOI: 10.1111/tpj.14573
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Plant J ISSN: 0960-7412 Impact factor: 6.417