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Seed Dormancy in Arabidopsis Is Controlled by Alternative Polyadenylation of DOG1

Cyrek, Malgorzata and Fedak, Halina and Ciesielski, Arkadiusz and Guo, Yanwu and Sliwa, Aleksandra and Brzezniak, Lien and Krzyczmonik, Katarzyna and Pietras, Zbigniew and Kaczanowski, Szymon and Liu, Fuquan and Świeżewski, Szymon (2016) Seed Dormancy in Arabidopsis Is Controlled by Alternative Polyadenylation of DOG1. Plant Physiology, 170 (2). pp. 947-955. ISSN 0032-0889

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Official URL: http://www.plantphysiol.org/content/170/2/947.long

Abstract

DOG1 is a key regulator of seed dormancy in Arabidopsis and other plants. Interestingly, the C-terminus of DOG1 is either absent or not conserved in many plant species. Here, we show that in Arabidopsis, DOG1 transcript is subject to alternative polyadenylation. In line with this, mutants in RNA 3’ processing complex display weakened seed dormancy in parallel with defects in DOG1 proximal polyadenylation site selection, suggesting that the short DOG1 transcript, is functional. This is corroborated by the finding that the proximally polyadenylated short DOG1 mRNA is translated in vivo and complements the dog1 mutation. In summary, our findings indicate that the short DOG1 protein isoform produced from the proximally polyadenylated DOG1 mRNA is a key player in the establishment of seed dormancy in Arabidopsis and characterize a set of mutants in RNA 3’ processing complex required for production of proximally polyadenylated functional DOG1 transcript.

Item Type:Article
Subjects:Q Science > QH Natural history > QH301 Biology
Divisions:Department of Protein Biosynthesis
ID Code:1151
Deposited By: Unnamed user with email sswiez@ibb.waw.pl
Deposited On:15 Apr 2016 12:47
Last Modified:21 Oct 2016 09:42

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