
Public Release Date: 27 April 2005
Contact: Nancy Eckardt
neckardt@aspb.org
970-495-9918
American Society of Plant Biologists
Scientists Find MicroRNAs Regulate Plant Development
MicroRNAs are tiny ribonucleic acid (RNA) molecules (~22 nucleotides long)
that recently have been found to play important roles in regulating gene expression
in eukaryotic organisms, including plants and animals. Research conducted by
three independent groups and reported this month in The Plant Cell shows
that fundamental developmental processes controlled by the plant hormone auxin
are regulated by microRNAs in the model plant Arabidopsis thaliana. This
work provides an important contribution to our understanding of plant development.
Full release.
THE PLANT CELL
April 27, 2005
Contacts: Nancy Eckardt
neckardt@aspb.org
970-495-9918
Bonnie Bartel
bartel@rice.edu
713- 348-5602
David Bartel
dbartel@wi.mit.edu
617- 258-5287
Catherine Bellini
Catherine.Bellini@genfys.slu.se
From US: 011-46 90 786 84 64
Nam-Hai Chua
chua@mail.rockefeller.edu
212-327-8126
Scientists Find MicroRNAs Regulate Plant Development
Major Aspects of Root and Shoot Development Controlled by the Plant Hormone
Auxin are Linked to Regulation of Gene Expression by MicroRNAs
The plant hormone indole-3-acetic acid (IAA), commonly referred to as auxin,
plays a major role in regulating plant growth and development. Auxin influences
development by affecting the expression of numerous genes that control the processes
of cell division and cell expansion in specific plant tissues at specific stages
during the plant life cycle - e.g. for leaves, roots, and floral organs to develop
in the correct patterns and correct time sequence. Research reported this month
in The Plant Cell shows that microRNAs control the accumulation of transcription
factor proteins that regulate the expression of genes in the auxin response
pathway.
Messenger RNA (mRNA) molecules are encoded by genes and are themselves templates
for the proteins that carry the main metabolic functions in a cell. The mRNA
levels in a cell are fine tuned by different mechanisms, one of which is driven
by microRNA molecules. MicroRNAs are ~22 nucleotide long RNA molecules that
provide substrate specificity to a protein complex known as the RNA-induced
silencing complex. Within the complex, microRNAs are thought to bind to mRNA
molecules containing a complementary stretch of RNA sequence. The complex then
cleaves the mRNA into smaller pieces, thereby preventing translation of the
protein it encodes, and thus inhibiting or "silencing" gene expression.
mRNAs corresponding to several regulatory genes that mediate auxin responses
contain short stretches of sequence that are complementary to microRNAs, and
therefore have been considered potential targets of microRNA-mediated regulation.
One of these targets is the transcription factor AUXIN RESPONSE FACTOR17 (ARF17),
which is thought to repress the expression of a number of other genes involved
in auxin responses.
Dr. Bonnie Bartel at Rice University in Houston, TX together with Drs. David
Bartel and Allison Mallory at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and
the Whitehead Institute for Biomedical Research in Cambridge, MA report experiments
using transgenic Arabidopsis plants that produce a version of ARF17 mRNA that
resists microRNA-mediated cleavage. The plants showed increased accumulation
of ARF17 mRNA and altered levels of mRNAs corresponding to several genes that
may be regulated by ARF17. These changes were correlated with dramatic development
defects in leaves, roots, and flowers, showing that microRNA-mediated regulation
of ARF17 is essential for normal plant development.
Bonnie Bartel notes that "we have known for several years now that microRNAs
regulate genes implicated in auxin responses; with these three reports, we are
beginning to understand the consequences of this regulation for the development
of the plant." David Bartel adds, "We were particularly struck by
the unusual quadrilaterally symmetric seedlings we uncovered in our study. This
result implies that the Arabidopsis embryo relies on microRNA restriction of
ARF17 activity to achieve normal bilateral symmetry."
A second report focuses on the function of the protein ARGONAUTE1 (AGO1),
a major component of the RNA-induced silencing complex in Arabidopsis. There
are many AGO1-like proteins in animals and other eukaryotes as well, indicating
that the RNA-induced silencing complex is of ancient evolutionary origin, and
that microRNA-mediated regulation of gene expression is shared among many eukaryotes.
Arabidopsis ago1 mutants lacking the AGO1 protein have numerous severe
developmental defects, supporting the notion that regulation by microRNAs is
critical for normal plant growth. Dr. Catherine Bellini at The Swedish University
of Agricultural Sciences in Umeå, Sweden and colleagues at several other
institutions noticed that the ago1 mutant failed to form adventitious
roots - a type of root that develops from aerial parts of the plant and is important
for propagation through cuttings. Auxin is known to be a major regulator of
adventitious root formation and normal Arabidopsis plants form multiple adventitious
roots on the hypocotyl (stem just above the root) when treated with auxin but
the ago1 mutants do not. Dr. Bellini and her colleagues found that the
mutant plants over-accumulate ARF17 mRNA within the hypocotyl, pointing
to ARF17 as a major regulator of adventitious rooting and microRNA-mediated
regulation as a major regulator of ARF17.
In a third report, Dr. Nam-Hai Chua of Rockefeller University in New York
and scientists at the Temasek Life Science Laboratories, Singapore, and the
Chinese Academy of Sciences in Beijing show that microRNA is important in the
regulation of a transcription factor that is induced by auxin, called NAC1.
NAC1 functions in other aspects of the auxin response, such as the formation
of lateral roots (roots that grow off the main tap root below ground, as opposed
to the adventitious roots that grow off of the stem or other above-ground plant
parts). Like ARF17, NAC1 mRNA contains a stretch of sequence that
is complementary to microRNAs, and thus shows potential for microRNA-mediated
regulation. In experiments analogous to those of Bartel's group, Chua and colleagues
created transgenic Arabidopsis plants that produce a version of NAC1
that is resistant to microRNA-mediated cleavage. Compared to wild-type plants,
the transgenic plants overaccumulated NAC1 mRNA and produced more lateral
roots. It was also found that accumulation of the microRNA that targets NAC1
mRNA is induced by auxin. The pattern of induction suggested a model wherein
auxin induction of NAC1 mRNA is later followed by induction of the microRNA
responsible for NAC1 mRNA cleavage. MicroRNA-mediated regulation of gene
expression therefore appears to be an important mechanism for fine-tuning auxin
signaling during plant development.
These reports provide significant new information on microRNA-mediated regulation
of plant development and show that microRNAs play important roles in regulating
the auxin response pathway.
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You can read the full report News and Reviews article on this research in The
Plant Cell at http://www.aspb.org/pressreleases/plantcellRP033159.pdf.
The research papers cited in this report are available at the following links:
http://www.aspb.org/pressreleases/plantcellRP031716.pdf
http://www.aspb.org/pressreleases/plantcellRP031625.pdf
http://www.aspb.org/pressreleases/plantcellRP030841.pdf
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The Plant Cell (http://www.plantcell.org/)
is published by the American Society of Plant Biologists. News and Reviews articles
are available without subscription. For more information about ASPB, please
visit http://www.aspb.org/.
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