Baena-González Elena, Rolland Filip, Thevelein Johan M, Sheen Jen
Department of Genetics, Harvard Medical School, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston Massachusetts 02114, USA.
Nature. 2007 Aug 23;448(7156):938-42. doi: 10.1038/nature06069. Epub 2007 Aug 1.
Photosynthetic plants are the principal solar energy converter sustaining life on Earth. Despite its fundamental importance, little is known about how plants sense and adapt to darkness in the daily light-dark cycle, or how they adapt to unpredictable environmental stresses that compromise photosynthesis and respiration and deplete energy supplies. Current models emphasize diverse stress perception and signalling mechanisms. Using a combination of cellular and systems screens, we show here that the evolutionarily conserved Arabidopsis thaliana protein kinases, KIN10 and KIN11 (also known as AKIN10/At3g01090 and AKIN11/At3g29160, respectively), control convergent reprogramming of transcription in response to seemingly unrelated darkness, sugar and stress conditions. Sensing and signalling deprivation of sugar and energy, KIN10 targets a remarkably broad array of genes that orchestrate transcription networks, promote catabolism and suppress anabolism. Specific bZIP transcription factors partially mediate primary KIN10 signalling. Transgenic KIN10 overexpression confers enhanced starvation tolerance and lifespan extension, and alters architecture and developmental transitions. Significantly, double kin10 kin11 deficiency abrogates the transcriptional switch in darkness and stress signalling, and impairs starch mobilization at night and growth. These studies uncover surprisingly pivotal roles of KIN10/11 in linking stress, sugar and developmental signals to globally regulate plant metabolism, energy balance, growth and survival. In contrast to the prevailing view that sucrose activates plant SnRK1s (Snf1-related protein kinases), our functional analyses of Arabidopsis KIN10/11 provide compelling evidence that SnRK1s are inactivated by sugars and share central roles with the orthologous yeast Snf1 and mammalian AMPK in energy signalling.
光合植物是维持地球生命的主要太阳能转换器。尽管其至关重要,但对于植物如何在日常的明暗循环中感知和适应黑暗,或者它们如何适应那些会损害光合作用和呼吸作用并耗尽能量供应的不可预测的环境胁迫,我们却知之甚少。当前的模型强调多种胁迫感知和信号传导机制。通过细胞和系统筛选相结合的方法,我们在此表明,进化上保守的拟南芥蛋白激酶KIN10和KIN11(分别也称为AKIN10/At3g01090和AKIN11/At3g29160),控制着转录的趋同重编程,以响应看似不相关的黑暗、糖分和胁迫条件。KIN10感知并传递糖分和能量的缺乏信号,靶向大量协调转录网络、促进分解代谢并抑制合成代谢的基因。特定的bZIP转录因子部分介导了KIN10的主要信号传导。转基因过表达KIN10可增强饥饿耐受性并延长寿命,并改变植物结构和发育转变。重要的是,KIN10和KIN11双缺失消除了黑暗和胁迫信号传导中的转录开关,并损害了夜间淀粉的动员和生长。这些研究揭示了KIN10/11在将胁迫、糖分和发育信号联系起来以全局调节植物代谢、能量平衡、生长和存活方面令人惊讶的关键作用。与普遍认为蔗糖激活植物SnRK1s(Snf1相关蛋白激酶)的观点相反,我们对拟南芥KIN10/11的功能分析提供了令人信服的证据,即SnRK1s被糖分失活,并在能量信号传导中与直系同源的酵母Snf1和哺乳动物AMPK发挥核心作用。