PLoS ONE (Jan 2008)

A polyadenylation factor subunit implicated in regulating oxidative signaling in Arabidopsis thaliana.

  • Jingxian Zhang,
  • Balasubramanyam Addepalli,
  • Kil-Young Yun,
  • Arthur G Hunt,
  • Ruqiang Xu,
  • Suryadevara Rao,
  • Qingshun Q Li,
  • Deane L Falcone

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0002410
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 3, no. 6
p. e2410

Abstract

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BACKGROUND: Plants respond to many unfavorable environmental conditions via signaling mediated by altered levels of various reactive oxygen species (ROS). To gain additional insight into oxidative signaling responses, Arabidopsis mutants that exhibited tolerance to oxidative stress were isolated. We describe herein the isolation and characterization of one such mutant, oxt6. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: The oxt6 mutation is due to the disruption of a complex gene (At1g30460) that encodes the Arabidopsis ortholog of the 30-kD subunit of the cleavage and polyadenylation specificity factor (CPSF30) as well as a larger, related 65-kD protein. Expression of mRNAs encoding Arabidopsis CPSF30 alone was able to restore wild-type growth and stress susceptibility to the oxt6 mutant. Transcriptional profiling and single gene expression studies show elevated constitutive expression of a subset of genes that encode proteins containing thioredoxin- and glutaredoxin-related domains in the oxt6 mutant, suggesting that stress can be ameliorated by these gene classes. Bulk poly(A) tail length was not seemingly affected in the oxt6 mutant, but poly(A) site selection was different, indicating a subtle effect on polyadenylation in the mutant. CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: These results implicate the Arabidopsis CPSF30 protein in the posttranscriptional control of the responses of plants to stress, and in particular to the expression of a set of genes that suffices to confer tolerance to oxidative stress.