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Revisiting the Role of Ethylene and N-End Rule Pathway on Chilling-Induced Dormancy Release in Arabidopsis Seeds.


ABSTRACT: Dormant Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) seeds do not germinate easily at temperatures higher than 10⁻15 °C. Using mutants affected in ethylene signaling (etr1, ein2 and ein4) and in the N-end-rule pathway of the proteolysis (prt6 and ate1-ate2) we have investigated the effects of cold and ethylene on dormancy alleviation. Ethylene (10⁻100 ppm) and 2⁻4 days chilling (4 °C) strongly stimulate the germination of wild type (Col-0) seeds at 25 °C. Two to four days of chilling promote the germination at 25 °C of all the mutants suggesting that release of dormancy by cold did not require ethylene and did not require the N-end-rule pathway. One mutant (etr1) that did not respond to ethylene did not respond to GA₃ either. Mutants affected in the N-end rule (prt6 and ate1-ate2) did not respond to ethylene indicating that also this pathway is required for dormancy alleviation by ethylene; they germinated after chilling and in the presence of GA₃. Cold can activate the ethylene signaling pathway since it induced an accumulation of ETR1, EINI4, and EIN2 transcripts, the expression of which was not affected by ethylene and GA₃. Both cold followed by 10 h at 25 °C and ethylene downregulated the expression of PRT6, ATE1, ATE2, and of ABI5 involved in ABA signaling as compared to dormant seeds incubated at 25 °C. In opposite, the expression of RGA, GAI, and RGL2 encoding three DELLAs was induced at 4 °C but downregulated in the presence of ethylene.

SUBMITTER: Wang X 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC6275081 | biostudies-literature | 2018 Nov

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Revisiting the Role of Ethylene and N-End Rule Pathway on Chilling-Induced Dormancy Release in Arabidopsis Seeds.

Wang Xu X   Yesbergenova-Cuny Zhazira Z   Biniek Catherine C   Bailly Christophe C   El-Maarouf-Bouteau Hayat H   Corbineau Françoise F  

International journal of molecular sciences 20181113 11


Dormant Arabidopsis (<i>Arabidopsis thaliana</i>) seeds do not germinate easily at temperatures higher than 10⁻15 °C. Using mutants affected in ethylene signaling (<i>etr1</i>, <i>ein2</i> and <i>ein4</i>) and in the N-end-rule pathway of the proteolysis (<i>prt6</i> and <i>ate1-ate2</i>) we have investigated the effects of cold and ethylene on dormancy alleviation. Ethylene (10⁻100 ppm) and 2⁻4 days chilling (4 °C) strongly stimulate the germination of wild type (Col-0) seeds at 25 °C. Two to f  ...[more]

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