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DWARF14 is a non-canonical hormone receptor for strigolactone

Authors :
Yao, Ruifeng
Ming, Zhenhua
Yan, Liming
Li, Suhua
Wang, Fei
Ma, Sui
Yu, Caiting
Yang, Mai
Chen, Li
Chen, Linhai
Li, Yuwen
Yan, Chun
Miao, Di
Sun, Zhongyuan
Yan, Jianbin
Sun, Yuna
Wang, Lei
Chu, Jinfang
Fan, Shilong
He, Wei
Deng, Haiteng
Nan, Fajun
Li, Jiayang
Rao, Zihe
Lou, Zhiyong
Xie, Daoxin
Source :
Nature; August 2016, Vol. 536 Issue: 7617 p469-473, 5p
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

Classical hormone receptors reversibly and non-covalently bind active hormone molecules, which are generated by biosynthetic enzymes, to trigger signal transduction. The α/β hydrolase DWARF14 (D14), which hydrolyses the plant branching hormone strigolactone and interacts with the F-box protein D3/MAX2, is probably involved in strigolactone detection. However, the active form of strigolactone has yet to be identified and it is unclear which protein directly binds the active form of strigolactone, and in which manner, to act as the genuine strigolactone receptor. Here we report the crystal structure of the strigolactone-induced AtD14–D3–ASK1 complex, reveal that Arabidopsis thaliana (At)D14 undergoes an open-to-closed state transition to trigger strigolactone signalling, and demonstrate that strigolactone is hydrolysed into a covalently linked intermediate molecule (CLIM) to initiate a conformational change of AtD14 to facilitate interaction with D3. Notably, analyses of a highly branched Arabidopsis mutant d14-5 show that the AtD14(G158E) mutant maintains enzyme activity to hydrolyse strigolactone, but fails to efficiently interact with D3/MAX2 and loses the ability to act as a receptor that triggers strigolactone signalling in planta. These findings uncover a mechanism underlying the allosteric activation of AtD14 by strigolactone hydrolysis into CLIM, and define AtD14 as a non-canonical hormone receptor with dual functions to generate and sense the active form of strigolactone.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00280836 and 14764687
Volume :
536
Issue :
7617
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
Nature
Publication Type :
Periodical
Accession number :
ejs39881230
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/nature19073