Regions of the Pea Lhcb1*4 Promoter Necessary for Blue-Light Regulation in Transgenic Arabidopsis1

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FONTE

American Society of Plant Physiologists

RESUMO

Pea (Pisum sativum) and Arabidopsis contain similar, if not identical, blue-light (BL)-responsive systems that alter expression of specific members of the Lhcb (light-harvesting chlorophyll-binding) gene family. In both plants a single, short pulse of low-fluence BL (threshold = 10−1 μmol m−2) causes an increase in the rate of transcription from specific members of the Lhcb gene family in etiolated seedlings. Constructs of the BL-regulated pea Lhcb1*4 promoter (PsLhcb1*4) were created, which altered sequences previously implicated in light responses, deleted the 5′-promoter sequence, or removed the 5′-untranslated region. These constructs were tested for BL induction in transgenic Arabidopsis. The PsLhcb1*4 promoter deletions to −150 bp maintained normal fluence response, time course, and reciprocity characteristics. The 5′- untranslated region contained enhancer elements, but was not necessary for BL induction. The −95 to +2 promoter was capable of responding to BL, whereas sequences from −50 were not. Promoters that lack conserved light-regulatory elements or sequences directly implicated in phytochrome and circadian responses retained BL activity, suggesting that the low-fluence BL response utilizes regions of the promoter independent of those that modulate the phytochrome and circadian responses.

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