Volume 48, Issue 12 pp. 1450-1457
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Complementation and Expression Analysis of SoRab1A and SoRab2A in Sugarcane Demonstrates Their Functional Diversification

Jia-Ming Zhang

Corresponding Author

Jia-Ming Zhang

State Key Biotechnology Laboratory for Tropical Crops, Institute of Tropical Bioscience and Biotechnology, Chinese Academy of Tropical Agricultural Sciences, Haikou 571101, China

Department of Botany, University of Wyoming, Laramie, Wyoming 82071, USA

*Author for correspondence. Tel: +86 (0)898 6698 4866; Fax: +86 (0)898 6689 0978; E-mail: <[email protected]>.Search for more papers by this author
Anne W Sylvester

Anne W Sylvester

Department of Botany, University of Wyoming, Laramie, Wyoming 82071, USA

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Ding-Qin Li

Ding-Qin Li

State Key Biotechnology Laboratory for Tropical Crops, Institute of Tropical Bioscience and Biotechnology, Chinese Academy of Tropical Agricultural Sciences, Haikou 571101, China

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Xue-Piao Sun

Xue-Piao Sun

State Key Biotechnology Laboratory for Tropical Crops, Institute of Tropical Bioscience and Biotechnology, Chinese Academy of Tropical Agricultural Sciences, Haikou 571101, China

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First published: 05 December 2006
Citations: 5

Supported by Grants from Chinese Academy of Tropical Agricultural Sciences and the US Department of Energy, Division of Energy Biosciences (PR 03-00ER15098.00) and USDA-NRI (2001-35304-09899).

The nucleotide sequences reported in this paper have been submitted to GenBank under accession numbers: DQ397200, DQ397201, DQ397202, DQ397203.

Abstract

Mammalian and plant Rab1 and Rab2 are small GTPases that regulate vesicle trafficking in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) to Golgi compartments. Little is known about their functional diversification or potential interaction. We cloned sugarcane (Saccharum officinarum L.) Rab1A and Rab2A genes and studied their functional differences by expression and complementation experiments. We found differential expression of the two genes during sugarcane leaf development: SoRab2A expression declined from the dividing base to the maturing tip of the growing leaves, whereas SoRab1A was constitutively expressed, suggesting that SoRab2A is required for cell division and expansion and SoRab1A is required for cells at all developmental stages. We used a yeast temperature sensitive ypt1-A136D mutant strain to further investigate these shared and unique functions. Ypt1 is a small GTPase that regulates vesicle transport in the same cellular location as Rab1 and Rab2. Neither SoRab1A nor SoRab2A alone could restore the growth of the mutant at restrictive temperatures when SoRab1A and SoRab2A were transformed separately. However, SoRab1A transformants maintained normal morphology and viability at non-permissive temperature, and resumed growth when returned to permissive temperature, whereas SoRab2A transformants died at non-permissive temperature, suggesting that SoRab1A function is required for a cell's viability. Mutant growth was fully restored when SoRab1A and SoRab2A were co-transformed, indicating that SoRab1A and SoRab2A complement each other and they both are needed to restore the function of ypt1-A136D. These results demonstrate that SoRab1A and SoRab2A serve distinct but overlapping functions, mostly by regulating the transportation of different sets of proteins.

(Managing editor: Li-Hui Zhao)

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