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Cell | 1989

Arabidopsis thaliana mutant that develops as a light-grown plant in the absence of light.

Joanne Chory; Charles A. Peto; Rhonda L. Feinbaum; Lee H. Pratt; Frederick M. Ausubel

The signal transduction pathways that lead to chloroplast biogenesis in plants are largely unknown. We describe here the identification and initial characterization of a novel genetic locus which fits the criteria of a regulatory gene located in a central pathway controlling light-mediated development. In the absence of light, these Arabidopsis thaliana mutants, designated det1 (de-etiolated 1), constitutively display many characteristics that are light-dependent in wild-type plants, including leaf and chloroplast development, anthocyanin accumulation, and accumulation of mRNAs for several light-regulated nuclear and chloroplast genes. The switch between dark and light growth modes thus appears to be a programmed step in a developmental pathway that is defined by det1. We suggest a model where the primary role of light on gene expression is mediated by the activation of leaf development. Further, the recessive nature of the det1 mutation implies that there is negative growth control on leaf development in dicotyledonous plants in the absence of light.


The Plant Cell | 1989

Different Roles for Phytochrome in Etiolated and Green Plants Deduced from Characterization of Arabidopsis thaliana Mutants.

Joanne Chory; Charles A. Peto; Megan Ashbaugh; Rebecca Saganich; Lee H. Pratt; Frederick M. Ausubel

We have isolated a new complementation group of Arabidopsis thaliana long hypocotyl mutant (hy6) and have characterized a variety of light-regulated phenomena in hy6 and other previously isolated A. thaliana hy mutants. Among six complementation groups that define the HY phenotype in A. thaliana, three (hy1, hy2, and hy6) had significantly lowered levels of photoreversibly detectable phytochrome, although near wild-type levels of the phytochrome apoprotein were present in all three mutants. When photoregulation of chlorophyll a/b binding protein (cab) gene expression was examined, results obtained depended dramatically on the light regime employed. Using the red/far-red photoreversibility assay on etiolated plants, the accumulation of cab mRNAs was considerably less in the phytochrome-deficient mutants than in wild-type A. thaliana seedlings. When grown in high-fluence rate white light, however, the mutants accumulated wild-type levels of cab mRNAs and other mRNAs thought to be regulated by phytochrome. An examination of the light-grown phenotypes of the phytochrome-deficient mutants, using biochemical, molecular, and morphological techniques, revealed that the mutants displayed incomplete chloroplast and leaf development under conditions where wild-type chloroplasts developed normally. Thus, although phytochrome may play a role in gene expression in etiolated plants, a primary role for phytochrome in green plants is likely to be in modulating the amount of chloroplast development, rather than triggering the initiation of events (e.g., gene expression) associated with chloroplast development.


Plant Physiology | 1997

The Sorghum Photoperiod Sensitivity Gene, Ma3, Encodes a Phytochrome B'

Kevin L. Childs; Frederick Miller; Marie Michèle Cordonnier-Pratt; Lee H. Pratt; Page W. Morgan; John E. Mullet

The Ma3 gene is one of six genes that regulate the photoperiodic sensitivity of flowering in sorghum (Sorghum bicolor [L.] Moench). The ma3R mutation of this gene causes a phenotype that is similar to plants that are known to lack phytochrome B, and ma3R sorghum lacks a 123-kD phytochrome that predominates in light-grown plants and that is present in non-ma3R plants. A population segregating for Ma3 and ma3R was created and used to identify two randomly amplified polymorphic DNA markers linked to Ma3. These two markers were cloned and mapped in a recombinant inbred population as restriction fragment length polymorphisms. cDNA clones of PHYA and PHYC were cloned and sequenced from a cDNA library prepared from green sorghum leaves. Using a genome-walking technique, a 7941-bp partial sequence of PHYB was determined from genomic DNA from ma3R sorghum. PHYA, PHYB, and PHYC all mapped to the same linkage group. The Ma3- linked markers mapped with PHYB more than 121 centimorgans from PHYA and PHYC. A frameshift mutation resulting in a premature stop codon was found in the PHYB sequence from ma3R sorghum. Therefore, we conclude that the Ma3 locus in sorghum is a PHYB gene that encodes a 123-kD phytochrome.


Plant Physiology | 2005

Transcriptional Profiling of Sorghum Induced by Methyl Jasmonate, Salicylic Acid, and Aminocyclopropane Carboxylic Acid Reveals Cooperative Regulation and Novel Gene Responses

Ron A. Salzman; Jeff A. Brady; Scott A. Finlayson; Christina D. Buchanan; Elizabeth J. Summer; Feng Sun; Patricia E. Klein; Robert R. Klein; Lee H. Pratt; Marie-Michèle Cordonnier-Pratt; John E. Mullet

We have conducted a large-scale study of gene expression in the C4 monocot sorghum (Sorghum bicolor) L. Moench cv BTx623 in response to the signaling compounds salicylic acid (SA), methyl jasmonate (MeJA), and the ethylene precursor aminocyclopropane carboxylic acid. Expression profiles were generated from seedling root and shoot tissue at 3 and 27 h, using a microarray containing 12,982 nonredundant elements. Data from 102 slides and quantitative reverse transcription-PCR data on mRNA abundance from 171 genes were collected and analyzed and are here made publicly available. Numerous gene clusters were identified in which expression was correlated with particular signaling compound and tissue combinations. Many genes previously implicated in defense responded to the treatments, including numerous pathogenesis-related genes and most members of the phenylpropanoid pathway, and several other genes that may represent novel activities or pathways. Genes of the octadecanoic acid pathway of jasmonic acid (JA) synthesis were induced by SA as well as by MeJA. The resulting hypothesis that increased SA could lead to increased endogenous JA production was confirmed by measurement of JA content. Comparison of responses to SA, MeJA, and combined SA+MeJA revealed patterns of one-way and mutual antagonisms, as well as synergistic effects on regulation of some genes. These experiments thus help further define the transcriptional results of cross talk between the SA and JA pathways and suggest that a subset of genes coregulated by SA and JA may comprise a uniquely evolved sector of plant signaling responsive cascades.


Photochemistry and Photobiology | 1978

MOLECULAR PROPERTIES OF PHYTOCHROME

Lee H. Pratt

The physiological experiments which led to the discovery of the photoreversible, morphogenically active plant chromoprotein phytochrome and to predictions concerning its molecular properties represent a classic example of a successful photobiological investigation (Hendricks, 1964). Biochemical and biophysical studies which followed verified many of these predictions. However, hypotheses concerning the molecular mode of action of phytochrome (Mohr, 1966; Borthwick et al., 1969; Mancinelli and Rabino, 1975; Schafer, 1975a) have not yet been definitively tested. A principal purpose of this review will be to summarize our present understanding of the molecular properties of phytochrome in order to provide a framework within which these latter hypotheses may 1976; Kendrick and Spruit, 1977; Marmk, 19771, monographs (Mohr, 1972; Smith, 1975) and symposium volumes (Mitrakos and Shropshire, 1972; Smith, 1976) concerning phytochrome have appeared in recent years. Because most of these reviews deal more with phytochrome-mediated events within intact tissues or whole organisms than with the molecular properties of the pigment itself, I shall emphasize those studies which involve direct in vitro biochemical or biophysical assay of phytochrome. In addition, since available reviews of the molecular properties of phytochrome generally cover literature up to about 1973, I shall further emphasize information which has appeared since that year.


Planta | 1985

Immunochemical detection with rabbit polyclonal and mouse monoclonal antibodies of different pools of phytochrome from etiolated and green Avena shoots

Yukio Shimazaki; Lee H. Pratt

While two monoclonal antibodies directed to phytochrome from etiolated oat (Avena sativa L.) shoots can precipitate up to about 30% of the photoreversible phytochrome isolated from green oat shoots, most precipitate little or none at all. These results are consistent with a report by J.G. Tokuhisa and P.H. Quail (1983, Plant Physiol. 72, Suppl., 85), according to which polyclonal rabbit antibodies directed to phytochrome from etiolated oat shoots bind only a small fraction of the phytochrome obtained from green oat shoots. The immunoprecipitation data reported here indicate that essentially all phytochrome isolated from green oat shoots is distinct from that obtained from etiolated oat shoots. The data indicate further that phytochrome from green oat shoots might itself be composed of two or more immunochemically distinct populations, each of which is distinct from phytochrome from etiolated shoots. Phytochrome isolated from light-grown, but norflurazon-bleached oat shoots is like that isolated from green oat shoots. When light-grown, green oat seedlings are kept in darkness for 48 h, however, much, if not all, of the phytochrome that reaccumulates is like that from etiolated oat shoots. Neither modification during purification from green oat shoots of phytochrome like that from etiolated oat shoots, nor non-specific interference by substances in extracts of green oat shoots, can explain the inability of antibodies to recognize phytochrome isolated from green oat shoots. Immunopurified polyclonal rabbit antibodies to phytochrome from etiolated pea (Pisum sativum L.). shoots precipitate more than 95% of the photoreversible phytochrome obtained from etiolated pea shoots, while no more than 75% of the pigment is precipitated when phytochrome is isolated from green pea shoots. These data indicate in preliminary fashion that an immunochemically unique pool of phytochrome might also be present in extracts of green pea shoots.


Plant Molecular Biology | 1995

The phytochrome gene family in tomato includes a novel subfamily

Bernard A. Hauser; Marie-Michèle Cordonnier-Pratt; Françoise Daniel-Vedele; Lee H. Pratt

Data presented here define five tomato phytochrome genes (PHY) and indicate the existence of additional PHY in the tomato genome. Portions of each gene, encoding amino acids 203 through 315 in a consensus amino acid sequence, were amplified by polymerase chain reaction. Four of these genes, PHYA, PHYB1, PHYB2 and PHYE, are members of previously identified PHY subfamilies, while the fifth, PHYF, is identified as a member of a new PHY subfamily. PHYA, PHYB1, PHYB2 and PHYE fragments encode amino acid sequences that share 88% to 98% sequence identity with their Arabidopsis counterparts. The PHYF fragment, however, encodes a polypeptide that shares only 65% to 74% sequence identity with previously identified Arabidopsis phytochromes. A phylogenetic analysis suggests that PHYF arose soon after, or perhaps prior to, the origin of angiosperms. This analysis leads to the prediction that PHYF might be widespread among angiosperms, including both monocotyledons and dicotyledons. Each of the five tomato PHY is expressed as a transcript of sufficient size to encode a full-length phytochrome apoprotein. Two PHYF transcripts, 4.4 and 4.7 kb in length, have been detected in 9-day-old light-grown seedlings, consistent with either multiple transcription start sites or differential processing. Analyses of genomic Southern blots hybridized with radiolabelled RNA probes derived from the five tomato PHY, as well as Arabidopsis PHYC, indicate that the tomato genome contains as many as 9 to 13 PHY. The tomato PHY family is apparently not only different from, but also larger than, the PHY family presently described for Arabidopsis.


Planta | 1984

Native phytochrome: immunoblot analysis of relative molecular mass and in-vitro proteolytic degradation for several plant species.

Richard D. Vierstra; Marie-Michèle Cordonnier; Lee H. Pratt; Peter H. Quail

The relative molecular mass (Mr) of the native phytochrome monomer from etiolated Cucurbita pepo L., Pisum sativum L., Secale cereale L. and Zea mays L. seedlings has been determined using immunoblotting to visualize the chromoprotein in crude extracts subjected to sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. A single phytochrome band is observed for each plant species when the molecule is extracted under conditions previously demonstrated to inhibit the proteolysis of native Avena sativa L. phytochrome. A comparison among plant species indicates that the Mr of native phytochrome is variable: Zea mays=127000; Secale=Avena=124000; Pisum=121000; Cucurbita=120000. The in-vitro phototransformation difference spectrum for native phytochrome from each species is similar to that observed in vivo in each case and is indistinguishable from that described for native Avena phytochrome. The difference minima between the red- and far-red-absorbing forms of the pigment (Pr-Pfr) are all at 730 nm and the spectral change ratios (ΔAr/ΔAfr) are near unity. When incubated in crude extracts, phytochrome from all four species is susceptible to Pr-specific limited proteolysis in a manner qualitatively similar to that observed for Avena phytochrome, albeit with slower rates and with the production of different Mr degradation products. Further examination of the in-vitro proteolysis of Avena phytochrome by endogeneous proteases has identified several additional phytochrome degradation products and permitted construction of a peptide map of the molecule. The results indicate that both the 6000- and 4000-Mr polypeptide segments cleaved by Pr-specific proteolysis are located at the NH2-terminus of the chromoprotein and are adjacent to a 64000-Mr polypeptide that contains the chromophore.


Plant Physiology | 2005

Sorghum Expressed Sequence Tags Identify Signature Genes for Drought, Pathogenesis, and Skotomorphogenesis from a Milestone Set of 16,801 Unique Transcripts

Lee H. Pratt; Chun Liang; Manish Shah; Feng Sun; Haiming Wang; St Patrick Reid; Alan R. Gingle; Andrew H. Paterson; Rod A. Wing; Ralph A. Dean; Robert R. Klein; Henry T. Nguyen; Hong Mei Ma; Xin Zhao; Daryl T. Morishige; John E. Mullet; Marie Michèle Cordonnier-Pratt

Improved knowledge of the sorghum transcriptome will enhance basic understanding of how plants respond to stresses and serve as a source of genes of value to agriculture. Toward this goal, Sorghum bicolor L. Moench cDNA libraries were prepared from light- and dark-grown seedlings, drought-stressed plants, Colletotrichum-infected seedlings and plants, ovaries, embryos, and immature panicles. Other libraries were prepared with meristems from Sorghum propinquum (Kunth) Hitchc. that had been photoperiodically induced to flower, and with rhizomes from S. propinquum and johnsongrass (Sorghum halepense L. Pers.). A total of 117,682 expressed sequence tags (ESTs) were obtained representing both 3′ and 5′ sequences from about half that number of cDNA clones. A total of 16,801 unique transcripts, representing tentative UniScripts (TUs), were identified from 55,783 3′ ESTs. Of these TUs, 9,032 are represented by two or more ESTs. Collectively, these libraries were predicted to contain a total of approximately 31,000 TUs. Individual libraries, however, were predicted to contain no more than about 6,000 to 9,000, with the exception of light-grown seedlings, which yielded an estimate of close to 13,000. In addition, each library exhibits about the same level of complexity with respect to both the number of TUs preferentially expressed in that library and the frequency with which two or more ESTs is found in only that library. These results indicate that the sorghum genome is expressed in highly selective fashion in the individual organs and in response to the environmental conditions surveyed here. Close to 2,000 differentially expressed TUs were identified among the cDNA libraries examined, of which 775 were differentially expressed at a confidence level of 98%. From these 775 TUs, signature genes were identified defining drought, Colletotrichum infection, skotomorphogenesis (etiolation), ovary, immature panicle, and embryo.


Photochemistry and Photobiology | 1975

PHOTOCHEMISTRY OF HIGH MOLECULAR WEIGHT PHYTOCHROME IN VITRO

Lee H. Pratt

Abstract— –Photochemical properties of phytochrome have been reexamined with preparations of high molecular weight chromoproteins from etiolated oat (Avena sativa L., cv. Garry), rye (Secale cereale L., cv. Balbo) and pea (Pisum sativum L., cv. Alaska) shoots. The proportion of the total phytochrome pool in such preparations present as the far‐red‐absorbing form (Pfr) at photoequilibrium in red light is 0–75. The ratio of the quantum yields for the phototransformation of the red‐absorbing form (Pr) to Pfr and of Pfr to Pr is 1‐0. The absolute quantum yield for these two photoreactions is 017.

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Feng Sun

University of Georgia

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