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      Negative autoregulation of the Arabidopsis homeobox gene ATHB-2.

      The Plant Journal
      Arabidopsis, genetics, Arabidopsis Proteins, Base Sequence, Blotting, Northern, DNA Footprinting, DNA, Plant, DNA-Binding Proteins, metabolism, Gene Expression Regulation, Plant, Genes, Homeobox, Homeodomain Proteins, Plant Proteins, Plants, Genetically Modified, Promoter Regions, Genetic, Protein Binding, Recombinant Proteins, Reverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain Reaction, Transgenes

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          Abstract

          The Arabidopsis homeobox gene ATHB-2 is tightly regulated by light signals, and is thought to direct morphological changes during shade avoidance responses. To understand how ATHB-2 mediates light signals in plant morphogenesis, we investigated its transcriptional network. We constructed a gene encoding a chimeric transcription factor (HD-Zip-2-V-G) that is expected to activate target genes of ATHB-2 in a glucocorticoid-dependent manner. In transgenic Arabidopsis plants expressing HD-Zip-2-V-G, glucocorticoid treatment activates the ATHB-2 gene itself, independent of de novo protein synthesis. An in vitro DNase I-footprinting experiment showed that recombinant ATHB-2 protein specifically bound to an ATHB-2 promoter region. These complementary results indicate that ATHB-2 recognizes its own promoter. Consistent with the fact that ATHB-2 itself has been shown to act as a repressor, expression of the endogenous ATHB-2 gene was repressed in transgenic plants overexpressing an ATHB-2 transgene. Moreover, target-gene analysis using the HD-Zip-2-V-G suggested that ATHB-2 recognizes other HD-Zip II subfamily genes. We conclude that ATHB-2 has a negative autoregulatory loop and may be involved in a complicated transcriptional network involving paralogous genes, as is the case with animal homeobox genes.

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