Zea mays Taxilin protein negatively regulates opaque-2 transcriptional activity by causing a change in its sub-cellular distribution.
Nan Zhang, Zhenyi Qiao, Zheng Liang, Bing Mei, Zhengkai Xu, Rentao Song
Index: PLoS ONE 7(8) , e43822, (2012)
Full Text: HTML
Abstract
Zea mays (maize) Opaque-2 (ZmO2) protein is an important bZIP transcription factor that regulates the expression of major storage proteins (22-kD zeins) and other important genes during maize seed development. ZmO2 is subject to functional regulation through protein-protein interactions. To unveil the potential regulatory network associated with ZmO2, a protein-protein interaction study was carried out using the truncated version of ZmO2 (O2-2) as bait in a yeast two-hybrid screen with a maize seed cDNA library. A protein with homology to Taxilin was found to have stable interaction with ZmO2 in yeast and was designated as ZmTaxilin. Sequence analysis indicated that ZmTaxilin has a long coiled-coil domain containing three conserved zipper motifs. Each of the three zipper motifs is individually able to interact with ZmO2 in yeast. A GST pull-down assay demonstrated the interaction between GST-fused ZmTaxilin and ZmO2 extracted from developing maize seeds. Using onion epidermal cells as in vivo assay system, we found that ZmTaxilin could change the sub-cellular distribution of ZmO2. We also demonstrated that this change significantly repressed the transcriptional activity of ZmO2 on the 22-kD zein promoter. Our study suggests that a Taxilin-mediated change in sub-cellular distribution of ZmO2 may have important functional consequences for ZmO2 activity.
Related Compounds
Related Articles:
2015-03-01
[J. Virol. 89(6) , 3396-411, (2015)]
Chromosome Missegregation Associated with RUVBL1 Deficiency.
2015-01-01
[PLoS ONE 10 , e0133576, (2015)]
2014-01-01
[Nat. Commun. 5 , 5582, (2014)]
Thrombospondin-1 repression is mediated via distinct mechanisms in fibroblasts and epithelial cells.
2015-05-28
[Oncogene 34 , 2823-35, (2015)]
Polyomavirus T antigens activate an antiviral state.
2015-02-01
[Virology 476 , 377-85, (2015)]