TOP

Research Article

Split Viewer

Mol. Cells 2012; 34(4): 367-374

Published online September 6, 2012

https://doi.org/10.1007/s10059-012-0111-5

© The Korean Society for Molecular and Cellular Biology

Overexpression of a LAM Domain Containing RNA-Binding Protein LARP1c Induces Precocious Leaf Senescence in Arabidopsis

Bangyue Zhang, Jianheng Jia, Min Yang, Chunxia Yan, and Yuzhen Han*

State Key Laboratory of Plant Physiology and Biochemistry, College of Biological Sciences, China Agricultural University, Beijing 100193, China

Correspondence to : *Correspondence: hanyuzhen@cau.edu.cn

Received: April 13, 2012; Revised: July 11, 2012; Accepted: July 26, 2012

Abstract

Leaf senescence is the final stage of leaf life history, and it can be regulated by multiple internal and external cues. La-related proteins (LARPs), which contain a well-con-served La motif (LAM) domain and normally a canonical RNA recognition motif (RRM) or noncanonical RRM-like motif, are widely present in eukaryotes. Six LARP genes (LARP1a-1c and LARP6a-6c) are present in Arabidopsis, but their biological functions have not been studied previously. In this study, we investigated the biological roles of LARP1c from the LARP1 family. Constitutive or inducible overexpression of LARP1c caused premature leaf senescence. Expression levels of several senes-cence-asso-ciated genes and defense-related genes were elevated upon overexpression of LARP1c. The LARP1c null mutant 1c-1 impaired ABA-, SA-, and MeJA-induced leaf senescence in detached leaves. Gene expression profiles of LARP1c showed age-dependent expression in rosette leaves. Taken together, our results suggest LARP1c is involved in regulation of leaf senescence.

Keywords Arabidopsis, LARP1c, senescence, senescence-associated genes

Article

Research Article

Mol. Cells 2012; 34(4): 367-374

Published online October 31, 2012 https://doi.org/10.1007/s10059-012-0111-5

Copyright © The Korean Society for Molecular and Cellular Biology.

Overexpression of a LAM Domain Containing RNA-Binding Protein LARP1c Induces Precocious Leaf Senescence in Arabidopsis

Bangyue Zhang, Jianheng Jia, Min Yang, Chunxia Yan, and Yuzhen Han*

State Key Laboratory of Plant Physiology and Biochemistry, College of Biological Sciences, China Agricultural University, Beijing 100193, China

Correspondence to:*Correspondence: hanyuzhen@cau.edu.cn

Received: April 13, 2012; Revised: July 11, 2012; Accepted: July 26, 2012

Abstract

Leaf senescence is the final stage of leaf life history, and it can be regulated by multiple internal and external cues. La-related proteins (LARPs), which contain a well-con-served La motif (LAM) domain and normally a canonical RNA recognition motif (RRM) or noncanonical RRM-like motif, are widely present in eukaryotes. Six LARP genes (LARP1a-1c and LARP6a-6c) are present in Arabidopsis, but their biological functions have not been studied previously. In this study, we investigated the biological roles of LARP1c from the LARP1 family. Constitutive or inducible overexpression of LARP1c caused premature leaf senescence. Expression levels of several senes-cence-asso-ciated genes and defense-related genes were elevated upon overexpression of LARP1c. The LARP1c null mutant 1c-1 impaired ABA-, SA-, and MeJA-induced leaf senescence in detached leaves. Gene expression profiles of LARP1c showed age-dependent expression in rosette leaves. Taken together, our results suggest LARP1c is involved in regulation of leaf senescence.

Keywords: Arabidopsis, LARP1c, senescence, senescence-associated genes

Mol. Cells
Dec 31, 2023 Vol.46 No.12, pp. 727~777
COVER PICTURE
Lee et al. (pp. 757-763), show that disruption of ANKS1A promotes the entry of intraflagellar transport trains into cilia, increasing protein transport and forming extracellular vesicles (ECVs). This figure illustrates the abundance of ECVs along the cilia of primary ependymal cells derived from ANKS1A KO mice.

Supplementary File

Share this article on

  • line

Related articles in Mol. Cells

Molecules and Cells

eISSN 0219-1032
qr-code Download