544
Entry URI http://metadb.riken.jp/db/SciNetS_ria224i/cria224u4ria224u17316173i
Entry name Xin Zhanguo et al. 2007 Mar. Plant J. 49(5):786-99.
Title Arabidopsis ESK1 encodes a novel regulator of freezing tolerance.
Authors Browse John|Chen Junping|Last Robert L|Mandaokar Ajin|Xin Zhanguo
Abstract The eskimo1 (esk1) mutation of Arabidopsis resulted in a 5.5 degrees C improvement in freezing tolerance in the absence of cold acclimation. Here we show that the increase in freezing tolerance is not associated with any increase in the ability to survive drought or salt stresses, which are similar to freezing in their induction of cellular dehydration. Genome-wide comparisons of gene expression between esk1-1 and wild type indicate that mutations at esk1 result in altered expression of transcription factors and signaling components and of a set of stress-responsive genes. Interestingly, the list of 312 genes regulated by ESK1 shows greater overlap with sets of genes regulated by salt, osmotic and abscisic acid treatments than with genes regulated by cold acclimation or by the transcription factors CBF3 and ICE1, which have been shown to control genetic pathways for freezing tolerance. Map-based cloning identified the esk1 locus as At3g55990. The wild-type ESK1 gene encodes a 57-kDa protein and is a member of a large gene family of DUF231 domain proteins whose members encode a total of 45 proteins of unknown function. Our results indicate that ESK1 is a novel negative regulator of cold acclimation. Mutations in the ESK1 gene provide strong freezing tolerance through genetic regulation that is apparently very different from previously described genetic mechanisms of cold acclimation.
Pubmed ID 17316173
Journal The Plant journal
Volume 49
Issue 5
Pages 786-99
Publication date 2007 Mar
Num of phenotype gene 0