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BBX28/BBX29, HY5 and BBX30/31 form a feedback loop to fine‐tune photomorphogenic development

Zhaoqing Song, Tingting Yan, Jiujie Liu, Yeting Bian, Yueqin Heng, Fang Lin, Yan Jiang, Xing Wang Deng, Dongqing Xu

2020The Plant Journal78 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Light is one of the key environmental cues controlling photomorphogenic development in plants. A group of B-box (BBX) proteins play critical roles in this developmental process through diverse regulatory mechanisms. In this study we report that BBX29 acts as a negative regulator of light signaling. BBX29 interacts with CONSTITUTIVELY PHOTOMORPHOGENIC 1 (COP1) and undergoes COP1-mediated degradation in the dark. Mutant seedlings with loss of BBX29 function show shortened hypocotyls, while transgenic plants overexpressing BBX29 display elongated hypocotyls in the light. Both BBX28 and BBX29 interfere with the binding of ELONGATED HYPOCOTYL 5 (HY5) to the promoters of BBX30 and BBX31, consequently leading to the upregulation of their transcript levels. BBX30 and BBX31 associate with the promoter regions of BBX28 and BBX29, which in turn promotes the expression of these genes. Taken together, this study reveals a transcriptional feedback loop consisting of BBX28, BBX29, BBX30, BBX31, and HY5 that serves to fine-tune photomorphogenesis in response to light in plants.

Topics & Concepts

PhotomorphogenesisHypocotylBiologyArabidopsisMutantRegulatorCell biologyFunction (biology)Downregulation and upregulationGeneGeneticsBotanyLight effects on plantsPlant Molecular Biology ResearchPhotosynthetic Processes and Mechanisms