Advanced Science (Oct 2024)

The SINA1‐BSD1 Module Regulates Vegetative Growth Involving Gibberellin Biosynthesis in Tomato

  • Yulin Yuan,
  • Youhong Fan,
  • Li Huang,
  • Han Lu,
  • Bowen Tan,
  • Chloe Ramirez,
  • Chao Xia,
  • Xiangli Niu,
  • Sixue Chen,
  • Mingjun Gao,
  • Cankui Zhang,
  • Yongsheng Liu,
  • Fangming Xiao

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1002/advs.202400995
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 40
pp. n/a – n/a

Abstract

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Abstract In plants, vegetative growth is controlled by synergistic and/or antagonistic effects of many regulatory factors. Here, the authors demonstrate that the ubiquitin ligase seven in absentia1 (SINA1) mammalian BTF2‐like transcription factors, Drosophila synapse‐associated proteins, and yeast DOS2‐like proteins (BSD1) function as a regulatory module to control vegetative growth in tomato via regulation of the production of plant growth hormone gibberellin (GA). SINA1 negatively regulates the protein level of BSD1 through ubiquitin‐proteasome‐mediated degradation, and the transgenic tomato over‐expressing SINA1 (SINA1‐OX) resembles the dwarfism phenotype of the BSD1‐knockout (BSD1‐KO) tomato plant. BSD1 directly activates expression of the BSD1‐regulated gene 1 (BRG1) via binding to a novel core BBS (standing for BSD1 binding site) binding motif in the BRG1 promoter. Knockout of BRG1 (BRG1‐KO) in tomato also results in a dwarfism phenotype, suggesting BRG1 plays a positive role in vegetative growth as BSD1 does. Significantly, GA contents are attenuated in transgenic SINA1‐OX, BSD1‐KO, and BRG1‐KO plants exhibiting dwarfism phenotype and exogenous application of bioactive GA3 restores their vegetative growth. Moreover, BRG1 is required for the expression of multiple GA biosynthesis genes and BSD1 activates three GA biosynthesis genes promoting GA production. Thus, this study suggests that the SINA1‐BSD1 module controls vegetative growth via direct and indirect regulation of GA biosynthesis in tomato.

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