The TIR1 protein of Arabidopsis functions in auxin response and is related to human SKP2 and yeast Grr1p

  1. Max Ruegger1,
  2. Elizabeth Dewey,
  3. William M. Gray,
  4. Lawrence Hobbie2,
  5. Jocelyn Turner, and
  6. Mark Estelle3
  1. Department of Biology, Indiana University, Bloomington, Indiana 47405 USA

Abstract

Genetic analysis in Arabidopsis has led to the identification of several genes that are required for auxin response. One of these genes, AXR1, encodes a protein related to yeast Aos1p, a protein that functions to activate the ubiquitin-related protein Smt3p. Here we report the identification of a new gene calledTRANSPORT INHIBITOR RESPONSE 1 (TIR1). The tir1mutants are deficient in a variety of auxin-regulated growth processes including hypocotyl elongation and lateral root formation. These results indicate that TIR1 is also required for normal response to auxin. Further, mutations in TIR1 display a synergistic interaction with mutations in AXR1, suggesting that the two genes function in overlapping pathways. The TIR1 protein contains a series of leucine-rich repeats and a recently identified motif called an F box. Sequence comparisons indicate that TIR1 is related to the yeast protein Grr1p and the human protein SKP2. Because Grr1p and other F-box proteins have been implicated in ubiquitin-mediated processes, we speculate that auxin response depends on the modification of a key regulatory protein(s) by ubiquitin or a ubiquitin-related protein.

Keywords

Footnotes

  • Present addresses: 1Department of Biochemistry, Purdue University, West Lafayette, Indiana 47907 USA; 2Department of Biology, Adelphi University, Garden City, New York 11530 USA.

  • 3 Corresponding author.

  • E-MAIL mestelle{at}bio.indiana.edu; FAX (812) 855-6705.

    • Received September 10, 1997.
    • Accepted November 14, 1997.
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