Munich, Germany
September 23, 2008
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Thale
cress Arabidopsis thaliana
Image: Max Planck Institute for Developmental Biology |
Plants that grow more slowly stay
fresh longer. In their study now published in PLoS Biology,
scientists at the Max Planck
Institute for Developmental Biology in Tübingen have shown
that certain small sections of genes, so-called microRNAs,
coordinate growth and aging processes in plants. These microRNAs
inhibit certain regulators, known as TCP transcription factors.
These transcription factors in turn influence the production of
jasmonic acid, a plant hormone. The higher the number of
microRNAs present, the lower the number of transcription factors
that are active, and the smaller the amount of jasmonic acid,
which is produced by the plant. The plant therefore ages more
slowly, as this hormone is important for the plant’s aging
processes. The researchers have succeeded for the first time in
describing the antagonistic regulation of growth and aging in
plants. Since the quantity of microRNAs in the plants can be
controlled by genetic methods, it may be possible in future to
cultivate plants that live longer and grow faster. (PLoS
Biology, September 23, 2008)
MicroRNAs are short, single-strand
sections of genes that regulate other genes. They do this by
binding to complementary sections of the genetic material, thus
preventing them from being read and implemented in genetic
products. In plants, microRNAs mainly inhibit other regulators,
so-called transcription factors. These factors can switch genes
on or off by binding to DNA sections, thus activating or
blocking them so that either too many or too few proteins are
formed. Since proteins control metabolic processes, an imbalance
leads to more or less clearly visible changes to the plant.
The scientists in Prof. Detlef Weigel’s department at the Max
Planck Institute for Developmental Biology have investigated the
effects that the transcription factors of the TCP family have on
the growth and aging of the thale cress model plant (Arabidopsis
thaliana). These transcription factors are regulated by the
microRNA miR319.
It was already known that miR319-regulated transcription factors
affect the growth of leaves. Using a combination of biochemical
and genetic analyses, the researchers have now discovered that
the transcription factors also regulate those genes that are
essential for the formation of the plant hormone jasmonic acid.
The higher the amount of microRNA miR319 present in the plant,
the lower the number of transcription factors that are produced.
This results in smaller amounts of jasmonic acid which can be
synthesized. Plants containing little jasmonic acid age more
slowly: The leaves become yellow and the plant dies. This
process can be stopped by treating the plant with the hormone.
"Our studies show that the transcription factors, which are
regulated by the microRNA miR319, exert a negative influence on
the growth of plants, and also lead to premature aging. The
mechanism discovered here is a further milestone in the attempt
to explain the relationships of genetic regulation in plants.
Only when we have a better understanding of these processes will
we be able to produce plants that have particularly desired
properties," says Detlef Weigel, who heads the project.
The Max Planck Institute for Developmental Biology conducts
basic research in the areas of biochemistry, genetics and
evolutionary biology. It has some 325 employees and is located
at the Max Planck campus in Tübingen, Germany. The MPI for
Developmental Biology is one of 82 Institutes and research labs
of the Max Planck Society for the
Promotion of Science e.V. |
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