Downstream nuclear events in brassinosteroid signalling
- PMID: 16672972
- DOI: 10.1038/nature04681
Downstream nuclear events in brassinosteroid signalling
Erratum in
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  Author Correction: Downstream nuclear events in brassinosteroid signaling.Nature. 2024 Jan;625(7994):E8-E10. doi: 10.1038/s41586-023-06766-2. Nature. 2024. PMID: 38110577 No abstract available.
Abstract
Brassinosteroids (BRs) are steroid hormones that control many aspects of plant growth and development. BRs bind to the plasma membrane receptor kinase BRI1, and act through a signalling pathway that involves a glycogen synthase kinase-3-like kinase (BIN2) and a serine/threonine phosphatase (BSU1). Previous models proposed that BIN2 negatively regulates BR signalling by controlling the stability and subcellular localization of the related transcription factors BES1 and BZR1 by phosphorylation, in a manner reminiscent of the canonical Wnt signalling pathway of metazoans. Here we present strong evidence for a different mode of regulation of BR signalling. We show that BES1 is localized constitutively to the nucleus, where its activity is modulated by nuclear-localized BIN2 kinase. BIN2-mediated phosphorylation of BES1 inhibits its DNA-binding activity on BR-responsive target promoters and its transcriptional activity through impaired multimerization. Our observations demonstrate that phosphorylation-dependent inhibition of DNA binding and trans-activation is the key primary mechanism of BES1 regulation.
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