Abstract:
The plant hormone ethylene regulates variety of growth and developmental processes including
germination, seedling growth, organ senescence, organ abscission, and fruit ripening. The
established pathway for ethylene signaling involves ethylene perception by a family of five
ethylene receptors ETR1, ERS1, ETR2, ERS2 and EIN4 (Hua et al. 1998) related to the bacterial
histidine kinases and residing in Endoplasmic Reticulum (ER) membrane (Chen et al. 2002,
Grefen et al. 2008). Ethylene receptors associate and regulate the Raf-like protein kinase CTR1
(Clark et al. 1998, Gao et al. 2003), which is positioned downstream of the ethylene receptors in
signaling pathway based on epistasis analysis and act as a negative regulator of ethylene
signaling. Further downstream regulators include EIN2, a small family of EIN3, EIN3-like
proteins and ERF1 which belongs to a large ERF super-family (Nakano et al. 2006).
There are numerous mechanisms which can modulate the output of ethylene signaling pathway
and in turns regulate the sensitivity of plants towards ethylene (Binder et al. 2012), like
transcriptional regulation and, clustering of receptors (Gao et al. 2008, Grefen et al. 2008, Gao et
al. 2009), and interactions of pathway elements with auxiliary proteins such as the RTE1/GR
family (Barry et al. 2006, Resnick et al. 2006). In addition, various genes have also been
identified as modulating the ethylene response based on a genetic screen for enhanced ethylene
sensitivity (Larsen et al. 2001, Larsen et al. 2003, Christians et al. 2007, Robles et al. 2007,
Christians et al. 2008). Our work explores two important regulatory mechanisms involved in
ethylene signaling in Arabidopsis; (i) the regulation of CTR1 in response to ethylene and (ii) the
characterization of the novel role of ARGOS gene family as negative feedback mediators of
ethylene signaling.
Genetic studies propose that hormone binding leads to inactivation and most likely the
degradation of ethylene receptors, which are negative regulators of signaling pathway (Hua et al.
1998, Tieman et al. 2000). When active, that is in the absence of ethylene, the receptors suppress
ethylene responses. Presence of ethylene inactivates the receptors, to trigger ethylene signaling
resulting in ethylene responses. Ligand induced proteasome mediated degradation of ethylene
receptors has also been reported (Chen et al. 2007). Ethylene receptors as well as Raf-like kinase
CTR1 are acting as negative regulators of ethylene signaling. CTR1 is itself a soluble protein
Regulators
of
Ethylene
Signaling
in
Arabidopsis
thaliana:
CTR1
and
ARGOS
Family
having no transmembrane domains but is found in membranes, because it is bound to receptors
which are present in ER membrane. Receptor degradation in response to ethylene binding
generates questions about the fate of CTR1 afterwards. Our data support a model in which
perception of ethylene results in the production of new CTR1 largely through transcriptional
induction, but ethylene also induces post transcriptional modifications in CTR1 in such a way
that levels of CTR1 at the membrane drops in response to ethylene.
Apart from CTR1 role in the established ethylene signaling network, we report novel role of
ARGOS (AUXIN REGULATED GENE INVOLVED IN ORGAN SIZE) gene family being a
negative regulators of ethylene signaling. ARGOS gene family consists of four protein members
ARGOS, ARL, OSR1 and OSR2. ARGOS, as its name indicates, is previously reported to be
induced in response to auxin (Hu et al. 2003), here we report their main role is to serve as
negative feedback mediators of ethylene signaling. We provide evidences of the prominent
induction of all four members of ARGOS family in response to ethylene where induction levels
varies, suggesting a range of their role in response to various levels of ethylene concentration.
Ethylene insensitive mutants abolish the response of ARGOS family which further supports their
role in ethylene signaling. The transcript induction of ARGOS and ARL is parallel to the levels
of induction of ethylene receptors. Genetic analysis provide evidence that over expression of
ARGOS and ARL enhances negative regulation in ethylene signaling, reducing ethylene
sensitivity based on both physiological and molecular responses, supporting their place in
ethylene negative feedback loop.