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Abstract

Despite increasing progress in the study of CK2 activity in plants, a clear understanding of its functional role remains elusive. The high pleiotropic nature of the enzyme, the fact that it is absolutely necessary to maintain life, and the existence of multiple isoforms have made it difficult to obtain loss-of-function mutants with which to study the impact of CK2 depletion in the organisms. To avoid all these difficulties, we have used a dominant-negative mutant approach, by constructing a CK2 alpha kinase-inactive subunit (CKA3mut) that was cloned downstream of an inducible promoter. Stably transformed Arabidopsis plants showed that longtime inductions of the transgene were lethal, causing growth and development arrests and ultimately resulting in plant death. However, short-time inductions were not lethal and revealed broad phenotypical changes that uncovered novel functions of CK2 in plants. The high pleiotropy of CK2 was sustained by analysis of global transcript profiles that showed a huge number of genes affected, involved in a wide variety of cellular processes.

Keywords

Protein kinase CK2; Transcript profiling; Plant development; Arabidopsis

Published in

Molecular and Cellular Biochemistry
2011, volume: 356, number: 1-2, pages: 233-240

SLU Authors

  • Moreno Romero, Jordi

    • Autonomous University of Barcelona (UAB)

UKÄ Subject classification

Molecular Biology
Biochemistry

Publication identifier

  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s11010-011-0970-7

Permanent link to this page (URI)

https://res.slu.se/id/publ/84501