Scientists at Van Andel Research Institute (VARI) have revealed an
important molecular mechanism in plants that has significant similarities to
certain signaling mechanisms in humans, which are closely linked to early
embryonic development and to diseases such as cancer.
In plants as in animals and humans, intricate molecular networks regulate
key biological functions, such as development and stress responses. The system
can be likened to a massive switchboard--when the wrong switches are flipped,
genes can be inappropriately turned on or off, leading to the onset of
diseases.
Now, VARI scientists have unraveled how an important plant protein, known
as TOPLESS, interacts with other molecules responsible for turning genes off.
The findings in plants provide a general model across species for this type of
gene silencing, which is linked to several vital biological functions in humans.
The discovery was published today in Science Advances.
"This is really a fundamental discovery--our structure shows the
corepressor TOPLESS interacting with key repressor motifs, which constitutes a
major component of gene silencing in plants," said Van Andel Research
Institute's Karsten Melcher, Ph.D., one of the study's corresponding authors.
"Understanding this interaction in plants gives us unique insight into similar
pathways in humans that involve these proteins, which are notoriously tough to
investigate."
Using a method called X-ray crystallography, the team determined the three-
dimensional structure of TOPLESS, both on its own and when linked with other
molecules responsible for turning genes off, thereby regulating gene expression.
Although these interacting molecules were chosen from different signaling
pathways in plants, they all linked up with TOPLESS in the same manner
"This structure will allow us to take a more targeted approach to
investigating TOPLESS's counterparts in humans and significantly expands our
knowledge base," said VARI's H. Eric Xu, Ph.D., who also is a corresponding
author. "We're extremely excited to continue this work to better understand
these proteins and how they interact with other molecules in health and disease
states."
The new paper is the third in a trio of publications that unveil key
components of fundamental molecular processes. Although the new study provides
further insight into human molecular pathways, the work also directly describes
how components of the molecular switchboard in plants interact to regulate
responses to a multitude of stressors, including temperature fluctuations. The
new findings follow an earlier Nature paper, which was included in the top ten
list of scientific breakthroughs of 2009 by Science magazine, and an earlier
Science paper, both of which describe how plants respond to drought and
temperature stress. Taken together, the papers not only have implications for
developing hardier plants but also for determining molecular structures for
components of entire pathways.
Authors include Jiyuan Ke, Honglei Ma, and Xin Gu of VARI and VARI-Shanghai
Institute of Materia Medica; Jiayang Li of the Chinese Academy of Sciences;
Joseph S. Brunzelle of Northwestern University; and Adam Thelen, now at Michigan
State University.
Additional background information on TOPLESS and gene regulation:
Gene expression is regulated by both activators and repressors. Although
gene repression is thought to be equally important as gene activation for this
regulation, relatively little is known about the mechanisms of gene repressors
and co-repressors.
TOPLESS functions as a co-repressor and interacts with repressors
containing ethylene-responsive element binding factor-associated amphiphilic
repression (EAR) motifs. EAR motifs are the most common form of transcriptional
repression motifs found in plants and are thought to facilitate stable
epigenetic regulation of gene expression via recruitment of chromatin
modifiers.
TOPLESS plays important roles in plant development; its name stems from the
fact that mutations in TOPLESS can give rise to seedlings in which the shoot is
transformed into a second root, hence "topless" seedlings.
In humans, similar proteins also are altered in many types of tumors, and
control embryonic development and the development of neurons.
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