EPP1 is an ancestral component of the plant Common SymbiosisPathway
Authors: Rich, M. K., Vernie, T., Tiwari, M., Chauderon, L., Causse, J., Pellen, T., Boussaroque, A., Bianconi, M. E., Vandenbussche, M., Chambrier, P., Le Ru, A., Castel, B., Nagalla, S., Cullimore, J., Keller, J., Valdes-Lopez, O., Mbengue, M., Ane, J.-M., Delaux, P.-M.
The study identifies EPP1 as a fourth, conserved component of the ancestral common symbiosis pathway required for intracellular plant–microbe interactions, showing that its loss impairs arbuscular mycorrhizal colonization across diverse plant clades. EPP1 is phosphorylated by the plasma‑membrane receptor SYRMK, and this modification is essential for downstream activation of the nuclear kinase CCaMK, positioning EPP1 upstream in the signaling cascade.
The study demonstrates that ABI5‑Binding Proteins (AFPs) interact with multiple components of the core ABA signaling pathway and serve as substrates for SnRK2 kinases and PP2C phosphatases, linking them to MAP kinases and 14‑3‑3 proteins. Phosphorylation of AFP2, promoted by ABA, stabilizes the protein and influences its subcellular localization, thereby modulating its ability to inhibit ABA responses during seed germination.
The study investigates the evolutionary shift from archegonial to embryo‑sac reproduction by analyzing transcriptomes of Ginkgo reproductive organs and related species. It reveals that the angiosperm pollen‑tube guidance module MYB98‑CRP‑ECS is active in mature Ginkgo archegonia and that, while egg cell transcription is conserved, changes in the fate of other female gametophyte cells drove the transition, providing a molecular framework for this major reproductive evolution.
The study profiled root transcriptomes of Arabidopsis wild type and etr1 gain-of-function (etr1-3) and loss-of-function (etr1-7) mutants under ethylene or ACC treatment, identifying 4,522 ethylene‑responsive transcripts, including 553 that depend on ETR1 activity. ETR1‑dependent genes encompassed ethylene biosynthesis enzymes (ACO2, ACO3) and transcription factors, whose expression was further examined in an ein3eil1 background, revealing that both ETR1 and EIN3/EIL1 pathways regulate parts of the network controlling root hair proliferation and lateral root formation.
A comparative physiological study of persimmon cultivars with flat (Hiratanenashi) and round (Koushimaru) fruit shapes revealed that differences in cell proliferation, cell shape, and size contribute to shape variation. Principal component analysis of elliptic Fourier descriptors tracked shape changes, while histology and transcriptome profiling identified candidate genes, including a WOX13 homeobox gene, potentially governing fruit shape development.
The study identifies the RNA‑binding protein AtG3BP1 as a phosphorylation target of MAPKs MPK3, MPK4, and MPK6 at Ser257 in Arabidopsis thaliana and shows that this modification promotes susceptibility to bacterial pathogens, suppresses ROS accumulation and salicylic acid biosynthesis, and maintains stomatal opening. Phospho‑mimic and phospho‑dead mutants reveal that phosphorylation stabilizes AtG3BP1 by preventing proteasomal degradation, highlighting a novel post‑translational control layer in plant immunity.
A moss N-Acetyltransferase-MAPK protein controls 2D to 3D developmental transition via acetylation and phosphorylation changes
Authors: de Luxan Hernandez, C., Ammitsoe, T. J., Kanne, J. V., Stanimirovic, S., Roux, M., Weeks, Z., Schutzbier, M., Dürnberger, G., Roitinger, E., Zhang, L., Spadiut, O., Ishikawa, M., Hasebe, M., Moody, L., Dagdas, Y., Rodriguez, E., Petersen, M.
The study identifies a moss‑specific fusion protein, Rosetta NATD‑MAPK 1 (RAK1), that combines a MAPK domain with an N‑acetyltransferase and demonstrates that its acetyltransferase activity is enhanced upon MAPK activation. Knockout of RAK1 impairs the 2D‑to‑3D developmental transition in Physcomitrium patens, and mass‑spectrometry reveals associated changes in acetylation and phosphorylation linked to metabolic reprogramming.
The study reveals that a conserved serine adjacent to the catalytic glutamate in TIR domains is essential for NAD+‑cleaving activity, and that phosphorylation of this serine by plant calcium‑dependent protein kinases (CPKs) or mammalian kinases (CAMK2D, TBK1) inhibits the activity, thereby preventing growth repression and cell death. This phosphorylation-based mechanism provides a universal means to balance growth and immune defense across species.
The study identifies RAF24, a B4 Raf-like MAPKKK, as a novel regulator of flowering time in Arabidopsis, demonstrating that RAF24 controls the phosphorylation of the ubiquitin ligase HUB2 via SnRK2 kinases, thereby modulating H2Bub1 levels. Phospho‑mimetic and phospho‑ablative HUB2 mutants confirm that phosphorylation at S314 is critical for proper flowering timing.
The study investigated how Arabidopsis thaliana SR protein kinases (AtSRPKs) regulate alternative RNA splicing by using chemical inhibitors of SRPK activity. Inhibition with SPHINX31 and SRPIN340 caused reduced root growth and loss of root hairs, accompanied by widespread changes in splicing and phosphorylation of genes linked to root development and other cellular processes. Multi‑omics analysis (transcriptomics and phosphoproteomics) revealed that AtSRPKs modulate diverse splicing factors and affect the splicing landscape of numerous pathways.