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Articles

CLONING OF A FULL-LENGTH CDNA ENCODING AN ETHYLENE RECEPTOR ERS HOMOLOGUE FROM CITRUS

Article number
535_13
Pages
119 – 126
Language
Abstract
The gaseous phytohormone ethylene plays a very important role in regulating plant dormancy, growth, and development.
An ethylene signal is perceived and responded to by an ethylene receptor protein family in Arabidopsis, and several genes from this family (ETR1, ERS, ETR2, ERS2 and EIN4) have been cloned.
By utilizing Arabidopsis ETR1 gene as a molecular probe, a Citrus homologue was initially isolated from a Citrus (Citrus sinensis [L.] Osbeck cv.
Valencia) genomic library and used to screen a cDNA library prepared from the same plant.
The full length of the cDNA is 2400 bp with an open reading frame of 634 amino acid residues.
The gene shares 69.1% nucleotide homology with ETR1, 73.3% with ERS, 72.4% with RPERS1, and 71.4% with NR of tomato.
Based on sequence alignment analysis, CitrusERS appears to be a homologue of ERS. Both ERS and the Citrus-ERS homologues have an N-terminal ethylene-sensor domain and a histidine kinase domain, but lack a responsor domain found in the C-terminal of ETR1. The four amino acids that confer dominant ethylene insensitivity in the A. thaliana ETR1 mutants are conserved.

Publication
Authors
C.Y. Li, G.Y. Zhong, R. Goren, D. Jacob-Wilk, D. Holland
Keywords
citrus (Citrus sinensis [L.] Osbeck cv. Valencia), Citrus-ERS, signal transduction, gene cloning
Full text
Online Articles (32)
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