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A genome‐scale TF–DNA interaction network of transcriptional regulation of Arabidopsis primary and specialized metabolism
Author(s) -
Tang Michelle,
Li Baohua,
Zhou Xue,
Bolt Tayah,
Li Jia Jie,
Cruz Neiman,
Gaudinier Allison,
Ngo Richard,
ClarkWiest Caitlin,
Kliebenstein Daniel J,
Brady Siobhan M
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
molecular systems biology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 8.523
H-Index - 148
ISSN - 1744-4292
DOI - 10.15252/msb.202110625
Subject(s) - plant biology , plant science , library science , arabidopsis , biology , genome , genetics , gene , botany , computer science , mutant
Plant metabolism is more complex relative to individual microbes. In single‐celled microbes, transcriptional regulation by single transcription factors (TFs) is sufficient to shift primary metabolism. Corresponding genome‐level transcriptional regulatory maps of metabolism reveal the underlying design principles responsible for these shifts as a model in which master regulators largely coordinate specific metabolic pathways. Plant primary and specialized metabolism occur within innumerable cell types, and their reactions shift depending on internal and external cues. Given the importance of plants and their metabolites in providing humanity with food, fiber, and medicine, we set out to develop a genome‐scale transcriptional regulatory map of Arabidopsis metabolic genes. A comprehensive set of protein–DNA interactions between Arabidopsis thaliana TFs and gene promoters in primary and specialized metabolic pathways were mapped. To demonstrate the utility of this resource, we identified and functionally validated regulators of the tricarboxylic acid (TCA) cycle. The resulting network suggests that plant metabolic design principles are distinct from those of microbes. Instead, metabolism appears to be transcriptionally coordinated via developmental‐ and stress‐conditional processes that can coordinate across primary and specialized metabolism. These data represent the most comprehensive resource of interactions between TFs and metabolic genes in plants.

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