Transcription factor TGA2 is essential for UV-B stress tolerance controlling oxidative stress in Arabidopsis

Abstract
Plants possess a diversity of Reactive Oxygen Species (ROS)-processing enzymes involved in sensing and controlling ROS levels under basal and stressful conditions. There is little information on the transcriptional regulators that control the expression of these ROS-processing enzymes, particularly at the onset of the defense response to abiotic stress. Filling this gap, this paper reports a critical role for Arabidopsis TGA class II factors (TGA2, TGA5, and TGA6) in the tolerance response to UV-B light and photooxidative stress, by activating the expression of genes with antioxidative roles. We identified two clusters of genes responsive to UV-B and activated by TGA2/5/6 were identified using RNAseq and clustering analysis. The GSTU gene family, which encodes glutathione transferase enzymes from the Tau subclass, was overrepresented in these clusters. We corroborated the TGA2-mediated activation in response to UV-B for three model genes (GSTU7, GSTU8, and GSTU25) using RT-qPCR and ChIP analyses. Interestingly, using tga256 mutant and TGA2- and GSTU7-complemented mutant plants, we demonstrated that TGA2-mediated induction of GSTU genes is essential to control ROS levels and oxidative damage after UV-B and MeV treatments. This evidence positions TGA class II factors, particularly TGA2, as a key players in the redox signaling network of Arabidopsis plants.
Description
Keywords
Arabidopsis, Glutathione transferase, GSTU7, Photooxidative stress, Redox-signaling, ROS, TGA class II, TGA2, Transcription factor, UV-B stress
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