Telomerase activator1: a zinc-finger protein that acts synergistically with auxin to control telomerase expression in Arabidopsis thaliana

Telomerase is the key enzyme synthesizing telomeric DNA in most eukaryotic organisms. In mammals, telomerase expression is abundant in the germline cells but is undetectable in most other differentiated organs. Intensive studies of telomerase have focused on human cancerous cells, where over 90% of...

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Main Author: Ren, Shuxin
Other Authors: Shippen, Dorothy E.
Format: Others
Language:en_US
Published: Texas A&M University 2006
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/3271
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spelling ndltd-tamu.edu-oai-repository.tamu.edu-1969.1-32712013-01-08T10:38:10ZTelomerase activator1: a zinc-finger protein that acts synergistically with auxin to control telomerase expression in Arabidopsis thalianaRen, ShuxinArabidopsis thalianatelomeraseauxindrought toleranceTelomerase is the key enzyme synthesizing telomeric DNA in most eukaryotic organisms. In mammals, telomerase expression is abundant in the germline cells but is undetectable in most other differentiated organs. Intensive studies of telomerase have focused on human cancerous cells, where over 90% of all cancerous tissues examined have telomerase activity. In wild-type Arabidopsis, telomerase expression is abundant in reproductive organs and dedifferentiated tissues such as flowers, siliques and calli but barely detectable in vegetative tissues (both rosette and cauline leaves). In this study, a biochemical screen strategy was developed for isolation of telomerase activating mutants in Arabidopsis thaliana. Through screening of Arabidopsis activation-tagged lines by a PCR-based TRAP assay, two tac (for telomerase activator) mutants were isolated. RT-PCR analysis of AtTERT expression revealed that different mechanisms are involved in alternating telomerase activity in tac1 and tac2. We cloned and characterized the TAC1 gene. TAC1 encodes a single zinc finger protein and acts synergistically with auxin to induce telomerase expression without altering cell cycles. Telomere length was unperturbed in the mutant, but other phenotypes, such as altered root development and the ability of cells to grow in culture without exogenous auxin, indicated that TAC1 not only is part of the previously reported link between auxin and telomerase expression, but also potentiates other classic responses to this phytohormone. DNA microarrays were used to analyze the expression profile of the tac1 mutant and revealed that several drought-induced genes were up-regulated 3 to 10 fold in the tac1-1D mutant. RT-PCR analysis further confirmed this up-regulation for five of these genes. Investigation of root growth also indicated that tac1-1D roots were ~20% longer relative to wild-type. Further experiments demonstrated that over-expression of TAC1 does confer drought tolerance, but not salt tolerance. In addition, our preliminary result showed that treatment with a low concentration of IAA could induce drought tolerance in wild-type Arabidopsis. Although plants with constitutive expression of telomerase have no practical utility, the ability of TAC1 to confer drought tolerance could have significant agricultural applications.Texas A&M UniversityShippen, Dorothy E.McKnight, Thomas D.2006-04-12T16:05:32Z2006-04-12T16:05:32Z2003-082006-04-12T16:05:32ZBookThesisElectronic Dissertationtext3020179 byteselectronicapplication/pdfborn digitalhttp://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/3271en_US
collection NDLTD
language en_US
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Arabidopsis thaliana
telomerase
auxin
drought tolerance
spellingShingle Arabidopsis thaliana
telomerase
auxin
drought tolerance
Ren, Shuxin
Telomerase activator1: a zinc-finger protein that acts synergistically with auxin to control telomerase expression in Arabidopsis thaliana
description Telomerase is the key enzyme synthesizing telomeric DNA in most eukaryotic organisms. In mammals, telomerase expression is abundant in the germline cells but is undetectable in most other differentiated organs. Intensive studies of telomerase have focused on human cancerous cells, where over 90% of all cancerous tissues examined have telomerase activity. In wild-type Arabidopsis, telomerase expression is abundant in reproductive organs and dedifferentiated tissues such as flowers, siliques and calli but barely detectable in vegetative tissues (both rosette and cauline leaves). In this study, a biochemical screen strategy was developed for isolation of telomerase activating mutants in Arabidopsis thaliana. Through screening of Arabidopsis activation-tagged lines by a PCR-based TRAP assay, two tac (for telomerase activator) mutants were isolated. RT-PCR analysis of AtTERT expression revealed that different mechanisms are involved in alternating telomerase activity in tac1 and tac2. We cloned and characterized the TAC1 gene. TAC1 encodes a single zinc finger protein and acts synergistically with auxin to induce telomerase expression without altering cell cycles. Telomere length was unperturbed in the mutant, but other phenotypes, such as altered root development and the ability of cells to grow in culture without exogenous auxin, indicated that TAC1 not only is part of the previously reported link between auxin and telomerase expression, but also potentiates other classic responses to this phytohormone. DNA microarrays were used to analyze the expression profile of the tac1 mutant and revealed that several drought-induced genes were up-regulated 3 to 10 fold in the tac1-1D mutant. RT-PCR analysis further confirmed this up-regulation for five of these genes. Investigation of root growth also indicated that tac1-1D roots were ~20% longer relative to wild-type. Further experiments demonstrated that over-expression of TAC1 does confer drought tolerance, but not salt tolerance. In addition, our preliminary result showed that treatment with a low concentration of IAA could induce drought tolerance in wild-type Arabidopsis. Although plants with constitutive expression of telomerase have no practical utility, the ability of TAC1 to confer drought tolerance could have significant agricultural applications.
author2 Shippen, Dorothy E.
author_facet Shippen, Dorothy E.
Ren, Shuxin
author Ren, Shuxin
author_sort Ren, Shuxin
title Telomerase activator1: a zinc-finger protein that acts synergistically with auxin to control telomerase expression in Arabidopsis thaliana
title_short Telomerase activator1: a zinc-finger protein that acts synergistically with auxin to control telomerase expression in Arabidopsis thaliana
title_full Telomerase activator1: a zinc-finger protein that acts synergistically with auxin to control telomerase expression in Arabidopsis thaliana
title_fullStr Telomerase activator1: a zinc-finger protein that acts synergistically with auxin to control telomerase expression in Arabidopsis thaliana
title_full_unstemmed Telomerase activator1: a zinc-finger protein that acts synergistically with auxin to control telomerase expression in Arabidopsis thaliana
title_sort telomerase activator1: a zinc-finger protein that acts synergistically with auxin to control telomerase expression in arabidopsis thaliana
publisher Texas A&M University
publishDate 2006
url http://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/3271
work_keys_str_mv AT renshuxin telomeraseactivator1azincfingerproteinthatactssynergisticallywithauxintocontroltelomeraseexpressioninarabidopsisthaliana
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