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AI-summarized plant biology research papers from bioRxiv

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Latest 3 Papers

The functional divergence of two ethylene receptor subfamilies that exhibit Ca2+-permeable channel activity

Authors: Pan, C., Cheng, J., Lin, Z., Hao, D., Xiao, Z., Ming, Y., Song, W., Liu, L., Guo, H.

Date: 2025-11-29 · Version: 1
DOI: 10.1101/2025.11.28.691086

Category: Plant Biology

Model Organism: General

AI Summary

The study demonstrates that subfamily I ethylene receptors form the core ethylene‑sensing module and act epistatically over subfamily II receptors, uniquely possessing Ca2+‑permeable channel activity that drives ethylene‑induced cytosolic calcium influx. This reveals a mechanistic link whereby subfamily I receptors integrate hormone perception with calcium signaling in plants.

ethylene signaling subfamily I receptors Ca2+ influx epistasis hormone‑induced calcium channel

Rapid ethylene-triggered protein complex remodeling in dark grown hypocotyls

Authors: Lee, Y., Park, H. L., Yoon, G. M., Szymanski, D. B.

Date: 2025-05-16 · Version: 1
DOI: 10.1101/2025.05.15.654145

Category: Plant Biology

Model Organism: General

AI Summary

The study used quantitative proteomics and co‑fractionation mass spectrometry to uncover rapid ethylene‑induced changes in protein abundance and complex formation during early seedling development, revealing extensive protein multimerization events that correlate with hypocotyl growth modulation. Small‑scale validation confirmed several identified proteins impact hypocotyl development, highlighting novel components of ethylene‑mediated growth regulation.

ethylene signaling protein multimerization hypocotyl development quantitative proteomics seedling morphogenesis

Impaired methyl recycling induces substantial shifts in sulfur utilization in Arabidopsis

Authors: Tremblay, B. J.-M., Adeel, S. A., Saechao, M., Dong, Y., Andrianasolo, E., Steele, J. M., Traa, A., Yogadasan, N., Waduwara-Jayabahu, I., Katzenback, B. A., Hell, R., Wirtz, M., Moffatt, B. A.

Date: 2025-03-13 · Version: 1
DOI: 10.1101/2025.03.09.642221

Category: Plant Biology

Model Organism: General

AI Summary

Reduced activity of methylthioadenosine (MTA) nucleosidase causes MTA over‑accumulation in reproductive tissues, leading to lowered cysteine, methionine, and S‑adenosylmethionine levels and altered sulfur and energy metabolism. These metabolic disturbances trigger misregulation of cell‑cycle progression, widespread down‑regulation of developmental genes, and genome‑wide changes in DNA methylation patterns, highlighting the extensive role of MTA recycling in plant growth and methyl‑index maintenance.

sulfur metabolism methylthioadenosine nucleosidase methionine/S‑adenosylmethionine biosynthesis DNA methylation reproductive development