New mechanisms found in plants to adapt to light, water

Updated on 29 May 2012

Researchers at the Institute of Plant and Microbial Biology in Taiwan have published the reports in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

New mechanisms found in plants to adapt to light

According to study, a new enzyme, phycourobilin synthase, can synthesize an alternative chromophore to regulate phytochrome activity

Singapore: Researchers at the Institute of Plant and Microbial Biology in Taiwan have reported new mechanisms by which plants detect and adapt to changes in light and water abundance, two key environmental factors controlling plant growth. The laboratories of Dr Shih-Long Tu and Dr Paul Verslues, both assistant research fellows at the institute, published their studies in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS) in May.

Dr Shih-Long Tu reported that a new enzyme named phycourobilin synthase (PUBS) can synthesize an alternative chromophore (a compound that absorbs light) to regulate phytochrome (a photoreceptor that binds the chromophore to sense light) activity. The group of Dr Paul Verslues reported variation in levels of proline, a stress-protective compound, and production of a non-functional RNA encoding the proline synthesis enzyme P5CS1 that are associated with adaptation to different environments.

Phytochromes, the main photoreceptors that detect light and mediate changes in plant growth to match light conditions, require a chromophore cofactor to fully function. In most plants, phytochromobilin synthase (HY2) is a key enzyme producing the chromophore for phytochromes. In the moss Physcomitrella patens, Dr Tu's laboratory identified a new second enzyme, which they named PUBS, that can synthesize an alternative chromophore to regulate phytochrome activity.

PUBS can only be found in green algae, mosses, and lycophytes, suggesting that this enzyme was important evolutionarily for green plants to adapt to light-rich environments. Dr Tu's team identified phytochrome-regulated genes in Physcomitrella. These results reveal that moss phytochromes efficiently re-program gene expression for phototrophic growth in the light.

This approach allows, for the first time, a global view of phytochrome-mediated gene regulation in nonvascular plants. These new findings can be applied to agriculture, to modulate crop growth and development using light.

 

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