Article
- The EMBO Journal (2003) 22, 3376 - 3384
- doi:10.1093/emboj/cdg323
Subject Categories:
A novel transcription factor involved in plant defense endowed with protein phosphatase activity
José L. Carrasco1, Gema Ancillo1, Esther Mayda2 and Pablo Vera1
- Instituto de Biología Molecular y Celular de Plantas, Universidad Politécnica de Valencia–C.S.I.C. Camino de Vera, s/n, 46022 Valencia, Spain
- Present address: Aptagen, Inc., 2190 Fox Mill Road, Suite 300, Herndon, VA 20171, USA
Correspondence to:
Pablo Vera, E-mail: vera@ibmcp.upv.es
Received 5 August 2002; Accepted 13 May 2003; Revised 12 May 2003
Abstract
In plants, expression of a disease-resistance character following perception of a pathogen involves massive deployment of transcription-dependent defenses. Thus, if rapid and effective defense responses have to be achieved, it is crucial that the pathogenic signal is transduced and amplified through pre-existing signaling pathways. Reversible phosphorylation of specific transcription factors, by a concerted action of protein kinases and phosphatases, may represent a mechanism for rapid and flexible regulation of selective gene expression by environmental stimuli. Here we identified a novel DNA-binding protein from tobacco plants, designated DBP1, with protein phosphatase activity, which binds in a sequence-specific manner to a cis- acting element of a defense-related gene and participates in its transcriptional regulation. This finding helps delineate a terminal event in a signaling pathway for the selective activation of early transcription-dependent defense responses in plants, and suggests that stimulus-dependent reversible phosphorylation of regulatory proteins may occur directly in a transcription protein–DNA complex.
Keywords:
- CEVI1,
- DBP1,
- plant defense signaling,
- PP2C,
- transcriptional regulation



