The LONELY GUY gene family: from mosses to wheat, the key to the formation of active cytokinins in plants

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Date
2022-04-07
Open Access Location
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Publisher
John Wiley and Sons Ltd on behalf of the Society for Experimental Biology and The Association of Applied Biologists
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(c) 2022 The Author/s
CC BY-NC 4.0
Abstract
LONELY GUY (LOG) was first identified in a screen of rice mutants with defects in meristem maintenance. In plants, LOG codes for cytokinin riboside 5'-monophosphate phosphoribohydrolase, which converts inactive cytokinin nucleotides directly to the active free bases. Many enzymes with the PGGxGTxxE motif have been misannotated as lysine decarboxylases; conversely not all enzymes containing this motif are cytokinin-specific LOGs. As LOG mutants clearly impact yield in rice, we investigated the LOG gene family in bread wheat. By interrogating the wheat (Triticum aestivum) genome database, we show that wheat has multiple LOGs. The close alignment of TaLOG1, TaLOG2 and TaLOG6 with the X-ray structures of two functional Arabidopsis thaliana LOGs allows us to infer that the wheat LOGs 1-11 are functional LOGs. Using RNA-seq data sets, we assessed TaLOG expression across 70 tissue types, their responses to various stressors, the pattern of cis-regulatory elements (CREs) and intron/exon patterns. TaLOG gene family members are expressed variously across tissue types. When the TaLOG CREs are compared with those of the cytokinin dehydrogenases (CKX) and glucosyltransferases (CGT), there is close alignment of CREs between TaLOGs and TaCKXs reflecting the key role of CKX in maintaining cytokinin homeostasis. However, we suggest that the main homeostatic mechanism controlling cytokinin levels in response to biotic and abiotic challenge resides in the CGTs, rather than LOG or CKX. However, LOG transgenics and identified mutants in rice variously impact yield, providing interesting avenues for investigation in wheat.
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Keywords
5′-monophosphate phosphoribohydrolase, LOG, LONELY GUY, cis-regulatory elements, cytokinin, cytokinin riboside, wheat, yield, Arabidopsis, Bryophyta, Cytokinins, Gene Expression Regulation, Plant, Oryza, Triticum
Citation
Chen L, Jameson GB, Guo Y, Song J, Jameson PE. (2022). The LONELY GUY gene family: from mosses to wheat, the key to the formation of active cytokinins in plants.. Plant Biotechnol J. 20. 4. (pp. 625-645).
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