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Plant Physiol, November 2000, Vol. 124, pp. 979-990

Modular Domain Structure of Arabidopsis COP1. Reconstitution of Activity by Fragment Complementation and Mutational Analysis of a Nuclear Localization Signal in Planta1

Minviluz G. Stacey, Olga R. Kopp, Tae-Houn Kim, and Albrecht G. von Arnim*

Department of Botany, The University of Tennessee, Knoxville, Tennessee 37996-1100

The Arabidopsis COP1 protein functions as a developmental regulator, in part by repressing photomorphogenesis in darkness. Using complementation of a cop1 loss-of-function allele with transgenes expressing fusions of cop1 mutant proteins and beta -glucuronidase, it was confirmed that COP1 consists of two modules, an amino terminal module conferring a basal function during development and a carboxyl terminal module conferring repression of photomorphogenesis. The amino-terminal zinc-binding domain of COP1 was indispensable for COP1 function. In contrast, the debilitating effects of site-directed mutations in the single nuclear localization signal of COP1 were partially compensated by high-level transgene expression. The carboxyl-terminal module of COP1, though unable to substantially ameliorate a cop1 loss-of-function allele on its own, was sufficient for conferring a light-quality-dependent hyperetiolation phenotype in the presence of wild-type COP1. Moreover, partial COP1 activity could be reconstituted in vivo from two non-covalently linked, complementary polypeptides that represent the two functional modules of COP1. Evidence is presented for efficient association of the two sub-fragments of the split COP1 protein in Arabidopsis and in a yeast two-hybrid assay.


1 This work was supported by the Department of Energy (grant no. DE-FG02-ER20223 to A.G.v.-A.). Acquisition of the stereomicroscope system and the light sources was supported by a National Science Foundation Instrumentation Grant (no. DBI-9602942).

* Corresponding author; e-mail vonarnim{at}utk.edu; fax 865-974-0978.

© 2000 American Society of Plant Physiologists



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