NO way!:Is nitric oxide level in tomato regulated by a mammalian IKK/NFκB-like signaling pathway?
NO way!:Is nitric oxide level in tomato regulated by a mammalian IKK/NFκB-like signaling pathway?
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Date
2011-01-01
Authors
Negi, Sangeeta
Kharshiing, Eros V.
Sharma, Rameshwar
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Abstract
Nitric oxide (NO) is an essential signaling molecule in plants. However little is known about signaling pathways regulating NO levels in plants. Recently we reported a NO overproducing mutant of tomato that had extremely short roots (shr) at seedling stage. The scavenging of NO restored root elongation in the shr mutant providing us with a convenient bioassay to analyze the signaling pathway upstream of NO production. The application of previously reported pharmacological inhibitors of ubiquitin-proteasome signaling caused a drastic reduction in NO levels and restored root elongation in the mutant. Since these pharmacological inhibitors specifically inhibit mammalian IKK/NFκB signaling, we propose that a pathway functionally similar to IKK/NFκB pathway regulates NO levels in tomato. © 2011 Landes Bioscience.
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Keywords
NFκB,
Nitric oxide,
Pharmacological inhibitors,
Root growth,
Short root mutant (shr),
Tomato (Solanum lycopersicum)
Citation
Plant Signaling and Behavior. v.6(7)