Sucrose-induced translational repression of plant bZIP-type transcription factors
Publication date
2005
Authors
Wiese, A.
Elzinga, N.
Wobbes, B.
Smeekens, S.
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Document Type
Article
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Abstract
Sugars as signalling molecules exert control on the transcription of many plant genes. Sugar signals also alter mRNA and protein stability. Increased sucrose concentrations specifically repress translation of the S-class basic region leucine zipper (bZIP) type transcription factor AtbZIP11/ATB2. This sucrose-induced repression of translation (SIRT) depends on translation of a highly conserved upstream open reading frame (uORF)in the 5' UTR of the gene. This conserved uORF is exclusively encoded in 5' UTRs of several plant S-class bZIP transcription factors. Arabidopsis homologues of ATB2/AtbZIP11, which harbour the conserved uORF, also show SIRT. Therefore, SIRT emerges as a general sucrose translational control mechanism of a group of
transcription factors. SIRT might be part of a sucrose-specific signalling pathway, controlling expression of plant bZIP transcription factor genes.
Keywords
bZIP, plant gene expression, sucrose, sugar sensing, transcription factor, translational control, upstream open reading frame (uORF)