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Dive into the research topics where Alison DeLong is active.

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Featured researches published by Alison DeLong.


The Plant Cell | 2001

Genetic and Chemical Reductions in Protein Phosphatase Activity Alter Auxin Transport, Gravity Response, and Lateral Root Growth

Aaron M. Rashotte; Alison DeLong; Gloria K. Muday

Auxin transport is required for important growth and developmental processes in plants, including gravity response and lateral root growth. Several lines of evidence suggest that reversible protein phosphorylation regulates auxin transport. Arabidopsis rcn1 mutant seedlings exhibit reduced protein phosphatase 2A activity and defects in differential cell elongation. Here we report that reduced phosphatase activity alters auxin transport and dependent physiological processes in the seedling root. Root basipetal transport was increased in rcn1 or phosphatase inhibitor–treated seedlings but showed normal sensitivity to the auxin transport inhibitor naphthylphthalamic acid (NPA). Phosphatase inhibition reduced root gravity response and delayed the establishment of differential auxin-induced gene expression across a gravity-stimulated root tip. An NPA treatment that reduced basipetal transport in rcn1 and cantharidin-treated wild-type plants also restored a normal gravity response and asymmetric auxin-induced gene expression, indicating that increased basipetal auxin transport impedes gravitropism. Increased auxin transport in rcn1 or phosphatase inhibitor–treated seedlings did not require the AGR1/EIR1/PIN2/WAV6 or AUX1 gene products. In contrast to basipetal transport, root acropetal transport was normal in phosphatase-inhibited seedlings in the absence of NPA, although it showed reduced NPA sensitivity. Lateral root growth also exhibited reduced NPA sensitivity in rcn1 seedlings, consistent with acropetal transport controlling lateral root growth. These results support the role of protein phosphorylation in regulating auxin transport and suggest that the acropetal and basipetal auxin transport streams are differentially regulated.


The EMBO Journal | 1996

A mutation in protein phosphatase 2A regulatory subunit A affects auxin transport in Arabidopsis.

Christine Garbers; Alison DeLong; Jean Deruère; P Bernasconi; Dieter Söll

The phytohormone auxin controls processes such as cell elongation, root hair development and root branching. Tropisms, growth curvatures triggered by gravity, light and touch, are also auxin‐mediated responses. Auxin is synthesized in the shoot apex and transported through the stem, but the molecular mechanism of auxin transport is not well understood. Naphthylphthalamic acid (NPA) and other inhibitors of auxin transport block tropic curvature responses and inhibit root and shoot elongation. We have isolated a novel Arabidopsis thaliana mutant designated roots curl in NPA (rcn1). Mutant seedlings exhibit altered responses to NPA in root curling and hypocotyl elongation. Auxin efflux in mutant seedlings displays increased sensitivity to NPA. The rcn1 mutation was transferred‐DNA (T‐DNA) tagged and sequences flanking the T‐DNA insert were cloned. Analysis of the RCN1 cDNA reveals that the T‐DNA insertion disrupts a gene for the regulatory A subunit of protein phosphatase 2A (PP2A‐A). The RCN1 gene rescues the rcn1 mutant phenotype and also complements the temperature‐sensitive phenotype of the Saccharomyces cerevisiae PP2A‐A mutation, tpd3–1. These data implicate protein phosphatase 2A in the regulation of auxin transport in Arabidopsis.


Nature Cell Biology | 2011

PP2A activates brassinosteroid-responsive gene expression and plant growth by dephosphorylating BZR1

Wenqiang Tang; Min Yuan; Ruiju Wang; Yihong Yang; Chunming Wang; Juan A. Oses-Prieto; Tae-Wuk Kim; Hong-Wei Zhou; Zhiping Deng; Srinivas S. Gampala; Joshua M. Gendron; Else Müller Jonassen; Cathrine Lillo; Alison DeLong; Alma L. Burlingame; Ying Sun; Zhi-Yong Wang

When brassinosteroid levels are low, the GSK3-like kinase BIN2 phosphorylates and inactivates the BZR1 transcription factor to inhibit growth in plants. Brassinosteroid promotes growth by inducing dephosphorylation of BZR1, but the phosphatase that dephosphorylates BZR1 has remained unknown. Here, using tandem affinity purification, we identified protein phosphatase 2A (PP2A) as a BZR1-interacting protein. Genetic analyses demonstrated a positive role for PP2A in brassinosteroid signalling and BZR1 dephosphorylation. Members of the B’ regulatory subunits of PP2A directly interact with BZR1’s putative PEST domain containing the site of the bzr1-1D mutation. Interaction with and dephosphorylation by PP2A are enhanced by the bzr1-1D mutation, reduced by two intragenic bzr1-1D suppressor mutations, and abolished by deletion of the PEST domain. This study reveals a crucial function for PP2A in dephosphorylating and activating BZR1 and completes the set of core components of the brassinosteroid-signalling cascade from cell surface receptor kinase to gene regulation in the nucleus.


Trends in Plant Science | 2001

Polar auxin transport: controlling where and how much

Gloria K. Muday; Alison DeLong

Auxin is transported through plant tissues, moving from cell to cell in a unique polar manner. Polar auxin transport controls important growth and developmental processes in higher plants. Recent studies have identified several proteins that mediate polar auxin transport and have shown that some of these proteins are asymmetrically localized, paving the way for studies of the mechanisms that regulate auxin transport. New data indicate that reversible protein phosphorylation can control the amount of auxin transport, whereas protein secretion through Golgi-derived vesicles and interactions with the actin cytoskeleton might regulate the localization of auxin efflux complexes.


Plant Physiology | 2009

PINOID Kinase Regulates Root Gravitropism through Modulation of PIN2-Dependent Basipetal Auxin Transport in Arabidopsis

Poornima Sukumar; Karin S. Edwards; Abidur Rahman; Alison DeLong; Gloria K. Muday

Reversible protein phosphorylation is a key regulatory mechanism governing polar auxin transport. We characterized the auxin transport and gravitropic phenotypes of the pinoid-9 (pid-9) mutant of Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) and tested the hypothesis that phosphorylation mediated by PID kinase and dephosphorylation regulated by the ROOTS CURL IN NAPHTHYLPHTHALAMIC ACID1 (RCN1) protein might antagonistically regulate root auxin transport and gravity response. Basipetal indole-3-acetic acid transport and gravitropism are reduced in pid-9 seedlings, while acropetal transport and lateral root development are unchanged. Treatment of wild-type seedlings with the protein kinase inhibitor staurosporine phenocopies the reduced auxin transport and gravity response of pid-9, while pid-9 is resistant to inhibition by staurosporine. Staurosporine and the phosphatase inhibitor, cantharidin, delay the asymmetric expression of DR5∷revGFP (green fluorescent protein) at the root tip after gravistimulation. Gravity response defects of rcn1 and pid-9 are partially rescued by treatment with staurosporine and cantharidin, respectively. The pid-9 rcn1 double mutant has a more rapid gravitropic response than rcn1. These data are consistent with a reciprocal regulation of gravitropism by RCN1 and PID. Furthermore, the effect of staurosporine is lost in pinformed2 (pin2). Our data suggest that reduced PID kinase function inhibits gravitropism and basipetal indole-3-acetic acid transport. However, in contrast to PID overexpression studies, we observed wild-type asymmetric membrane distribution of the PIN2 protein in both pid-9 and wild-type root tips, although PIN2 accumulates in endomembrane structures in pid-9 roots. Similarly, staurosporine-treated plants expressing a PIN2∷GFP fusion exhibit endomembrane accumulation of PIN2∷GFP, but no changes in membrane asymmetries were detected. Our data suggest that PID plays a limited role in root development; loss of PID activity alters auxin transport and gravitropism without causing an obvious change in cellular polarity.


PLOS Genetics | 2011

Protein phosphatase 2A controls ethylene biosynthesis by differentially regulating the turnover of ACC synthase isoforms.

Kyle R. Skottke; Gyeong Mee Yoon; Joseph J. Kieber; Alison DeLong

The gaseous hormone ethylene is one of the master regulators of development and physiology throughout the plant life cycle. Ethylene biosynthesis is stringently regulated to permit maintenance of low levels during most phases of vegetative growth but to allow for rapid peaks of high production at developmental transitions and under stress conditions. In most tissues ethylene is a negative regulator of cell expansion, thus low basal levels of ethylene biosynthesis in dark-grown seedlings are critical for optimal cell expansion during early seedling development. The committed steps in ethylene biosynthesis are performed by the enzymes 1-aminocyclopropane 1-carboxylate synthase (ACS) and 1-aminocyclopropane 1-carboxylate oxidase (ACO). The abundance of different ACS enzymes is tightly regulated both by transcriptional control and by post-translational modifications and proteasome-mediated degradation. Here we show that specific ACS isozymes are targets for regulation by protein phosphatase 2A (PP2A) during Arabidopsis thaliana seedling growth and that reduced PP2A function causes increased ACS activity in the roots curl in 1-N-naphthylphthalamic acid 1 (rcn1) mutant. Genetic analysis reveals that ethylene overproduction in PP2A-deficient plants requires ACS2 and ACS6, genes that encode ACS proteins known to be stabilized by phosphorylation, and proteolytic turnover of the ACS6 protein is retarded when PP2A activity is reduced. We find that PP2A and ACS6 proteins associate in seedlings and that RCN1-containing PP2A complexes specifically dephosphorylate a C-terminal ACS6 phosphopeptide. These results suggest that PP2A-dependent destabilization requires RCN1-dependent dephosphorylation of the ACS6 C-terminus. Surprisingly, rcn1 plants exhibit decreased accumulation of the ACS5 protein, suggesting that a regulatory phosphorylation event leads to ACS5 destabilization. Our data provide new insight into the circuitry that ensures dynamic control of ethylene synthesis during plant development, showing that PP2A mediates a finely tuned regulation of overall ethylene production by differentially affecting the stability of specific classes of ACS enzymes.


The Plant Cell | 2004

Disparate Roles for the Regulatory A Subunit Isoforms in Arabidopsis Protein Phosphatase 2A

Hong-Wei Zhou; Cindy Nussbaumer; Yvonne Chao; Alison DeLong

The heterotrimeric protein phosphatase 2A (PP2A) complex comprises a catalytic subunit and regulatory A and B subunits that modulate enzyme activity and mediate interactions with other proteins. We report here the results of a systematic analysis of the Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) regulatory A subunit gene family, which includes the ROOTS CURL IN NAPHTHYLPHTHALAMIC ACID1 (RCN1), PP2AA2, and PP2AA3 genes. All three A subunit isoforms accumulate in the organs of seedlings and adult plants, suggesting extensive overlap in expression domains. We have isolated pp2aa2 and pp2aa3 mutants and found that their phenotypes are largely normal and do not resemble that of rcn1. Whereas rcn1 pp2aa2 and rcn1 pp2aa3 double mutants exhibit striking abnormalities in all stages of development, the pp2aa2 pp2aa3 double mutant shows only modest defects. Together, these data suggest that RCN1 performs a cardinal role in regulation of phosphatase activity and that PP2AA2 and PP2AA3 functions are unmasked only when RCN1 is absent.


Plant Molecular Biology | 2002

Protein phosphorylation in the delivery of and response to auxin signals

Alison DeLong; Keithanne Mockaitis; Sioux Christensen

The importance of reversible protein phosphorylation in regulation of plant growth and development has been amply demonstrated by decades of research. Here we discuss recent studies that suggest roles for protein phosphorylation in regulation of both auxin responses and polar auxin transport. Specific kinases act at auxin-requiring steps in floral and embryonic development, and at the junction(s) between light and auxin signaling pathways in hypocotyl elongation and phototropism responses. New evidence for rapid mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) activation by auxin treatment suggests that MAPK cascade(s) might mediate cellular responses to auxin. Protein phosphorylation also may play a crucial role in regulating the activity or turnover of auxin-responsive transcription factors. Auxin transport is modulated by phosphorylation, and protein phosphatase activity is involved in regulation of auxin transport streams in roots. Although the regulatory circuits have not been fully elucidated, these studies suggest that protein phosphorylating and dephosphorylating enzymes perform key functions in auxin biology. In some cases, these enzymes act at the intersections between auxin signaling and other signaling pathways.


Plant Physiology | 2007

Specificity of RCN1-Mediated Protein Phosphatase 2A Regulation in Meristem Organization and Stress Response in Roots

Joshua J. Blakeslee; Hong-Wei Zhou; Jeffrey T. Heath; Kyle R. Skottke; Jorge A. Rodriguez Barrios; Su-Yang Liu; Alison DeLong

Protein dephosphorylation by the serine/threonine protein phosphatase 2A (PP2A) modulates a broad array of cellular functions. PP2A normally acts as a heterotrimeric holoenzyme complex comprising a catalytic subunit bound by regulatory A and B subunits. Characterization of the regulatory A subunit isoforms (ROOTS CURL IN NAPHTHYLPHTHALAMIC ACID1 [RCN1], PP2AA2, and PP2AA3) of Arabidopsis thaliana PP2A has shown that RCN1 plays a primary role in controlling root and hypocotyl PP2A activity in seedlings. Here we show that hypocotyl and root growth exhibit different requirements for RCN1-mediated regulation of PP2A activity. Roots of rcn1 mutant seedlings exhibit characteristic abnormalities in cell division patterns at the root apical meristem, as well as reduced growth under ionic, osmotic, and oxidative stress conditions. We constructed chimeric A subunit genes and found that restoration of normal root tip development in rcn1 plants requires both regulatory and coding sequences of RCN1, whereas the hypocotyl elongation defect of rcn1 plants can be complemented by either RCN1 or PP2AA3 transgenes. Furthermore, the RCN1 and PP2AA3 proteins exhibit ubiquitous subcellular localization patterns in seedlings and both associate with membrane compartments. Together, these results show that RCN1-containing PP2A has unique functions that cannot be attributed to isoform-specific expression and localization patterns. Postembryonic RCN1 function is required to maintain normal auxin distribution and stem cell function at the root apex. Our data show that RCN1-regulated phosphatase activity plays a unique role in regulating postembryonic root development and stress response.


Plant Journal | 2012

Arabidopsis thaliana histone deacetylase 14 (HDA14) is an α-tubulin deacetylase that associates with PP2A and enriches in the microtubule fraction with the putative histone acetyltransferase ELP3.

Hue T. Tran; Mhairi Nimick; R. Glen Uhrig; George W. Templeton; Nick Morrice; Robert Gourlay; Alison DeLong; Greg B. G. Moorhead

It is now emerging that many proteins are regulated by a variety of covalent modifications. Using microcystin-affinity chromatography we have purified multiple protein phosphatases and their associated proteins from Arabidopsis thaliana. One major protein purified was the histone deacetylase HDA14. We demonstrate that HDA14 can deacetylate α-tubulin, associates with α/β-tubulin and is retained on GTP/taxol-stabilized microtubules, at least in part, by direct association with the PP2A-A2 subunit. Like HDA14, the putative histone acetyltransferase ELP3 was purified on microcystin-Sepharose and is also enriched at microtubules, potentially functioning in opposition to HDA14 as the α-tubulin acetylating enzyme. Consistent with the likelihood of it having many substrates throughout the cell, we demonstrate that HDA14, ELP3 and the PP2A A-subunits A1, A2 and A3 all reside in both the nucleus and cytosol of the cell. The association of a histone deacetylase with PP2A suggests a direct link between protein phosphorylation and acetylation.

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Jean Deruère

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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Joseph J. Kieber

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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