Litcius/Paper detail

Co-condensation with photoexcited cryptochromes facilitates MAC3A to positively control hypocotyl growth in <i>Arabidopsis</i>

Bochen Jiang, Zhenhui Zhong, Jun Su, Tengfei Zhu, Timothy Yueh, Jielena Bragasin, Victoria Bu, Charles C. Zhou, Chentao Lin, Xu Wang

2023Science Advances23 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Cryptochromes (CRYs) are blue light receptors that mediate plant photoresponses through regulating gene expressions. We recently reported that Arabidopsis CRY2 could form light-elicited liquid condensates to control RNA methylation. However, whether CRY2 condensation is involved in other gene expression–regulatory processes remains unclear. Here, we show that MOS4-associated complex subunits 3A and 3B (MAC3A/3B) are CRY-interacting proteins and assembled into nuclear CRY condensates. mac3a3b double mutants exhibit hypersensitive photoinhibition of hypocotyl elongation, suggesting that MAC3A/3B positively control hypocotyl growth. We demonstrate the noncanonical activity of MAC3A as a DNA binding protein that modulates transcription. Genome-wide mapping of MAC3A-binding sites reveals that blue light enhances the association of MAC3A with its DNA targets, which requires CRYs. Further evidence indicates that MAC3A and ELONGATED HYPOCOTYL 5 (HY5) occupy overlapping genomic regions and compete for the same targets. These results argue that photocondensation of CRYs fine-tunes light-responsive hypocotyl growth by balancing the opposed effects of HY5 and MAC3A.

Topics & Concepts

HypocotylArabidopsisCryptochromeCell biologyBiologyGeneTranscription (linguistics)MutantChemistryBiochemistryBotanyCircadian clockPhilosophyLinguisticsLight effects on plantsPlant Molecular Biology ResearchPhotosynthetic Processes and Mechanisms