| Literature DB >> 36050463 |
Honglei Wang1, Chao Han1, Jia-Gang Wang1,2, Xiaoqian Chu1,2, Wen Shi1, Lianmei Yao1, Jie Chen1, Wei Hao1, Zhiping Deng3, Min Fan1, Ming-Yi Bai4.
Abstract
The coordinated metabolism of carbon and nitrogen is essential for optimal plant growth and development. Nitrate is an important molecular signal for plant adaptation to a changing environment, but how nitrate regulates plant growth under carbon deficiency conditions remains unclear. Here we show that the evolutionarily conserved energy sensor SnRK1 negatively regulates the nitrate signalling pathway. Nitrate promoted plant growth and downstream gene expression, but such effects were repressed when plants were grown under carbon deficiency conditions. Mutation of KIN10, the α-catalytic subunit of SnRK1, partially suppressed the inhibitory effects of carbon deficiency on nitrate-mediated plant growth. KIN10 phosphorylated NLP7, the master regulator of the nitrate signalling pathway, to promote its cytoplasmic localization and degradation. Furthermore, nitrate depletion induced KIN10 accumulation, whereas nitrate treatment promoted KIN10 degradation. Such KIN10-mediated NLP7 regulation allows carbon and nitrate availability to control optimal nitrate signalling and ensures the coordination of carbon and nitrogen metabolism in plants.Entities:
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Year: 2022 PMID: 36050463 DOI: 10.1038/s41477-022-01236-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Plants ISSN: 2055-0278 Impact factor: 17.352