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The zinc finger protein 3 of Arabidopsis thaliana regulates vegetative growth and root hair development.


ABSTRACT:

Introduction

Zinc finger protein 3 (ZFP3) and closely related C2H2 zinc finger proteins have been identified as regulators of abscisic acid signals and photomorphogenic responses during germination. Whether ZFP3 and related ZFP factors regulate plant development is, however, not known.

Results

ZFP3 overexpression reduced plant growth, limited cell expansion in leaves, and compromised root hair development. The T-DNA insertion zfp3 mutant and transgenic lines with silenced ZFP1, ZFP3, ZFP4, and ZFP7 genes were similar to wild-type plants or had only minor differences in plant growth and morphology, probably due to functional redundancy. RNAseq transcript profiling identified ZFP3-controlled gene sets, including targets of ABA signaling with reduced transcript abundance. The largest gene set that was downregulated by ZFP3 encoded regulatory and structural proteins in cell wall biogenesis, cell differentiation, and root hair formation. Chromatin immunoprecipitation confirmed ZFP3 binding to several target promoters.

Discussion

Our results suggest that ZFP3 and related ZnF proteins can modulate cellular differentiation and plant vegetative development by regulating the expression of genes implicated in cell wall biogenesis.

SUBMITTER: Benyo D 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC10796524 | biostudies-literature | 2023

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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The zinc finger protein 3 of <i>Arabidopsis thaliana</i> regulates vegetative growth and root hair development.

Benyó Dániel D   Bató Emese E   Faragó Dóra D   Rigó Gábor G   Domonkos Ildikó I   Labhane Nitin N   Zsigmond Laura L   Prasad Melvin M   Nagy István I   Szabados László L  

Frontiers in plant science 20240105


<h4>Introduction</h4>Zinc finger protein 3 (ZFP3) and closely related C2H2 zinc finger proteins have been identified as regulators of abscisic acid signals and photomorphogenic responses during germination. Whether ZFP3 and related ZFP factors regulate plant development is, however, not known.<h4>Results</h4>ZFP3 overexpression reduced plant growth, limited cell expansion in leaves, and compromised root hair development. The T-DNA insertion zfp3 mutant and transgenic lines with silenced ZFP1, ZF  ...[more]

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