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欧阳亦聃

Supervisor of Doctorate Candidates
Supervisor of Master's Candidates
Name (Simplified Chinese):欧阳亦聃
Name (Pinyin):Ouyang Yidan
Professional Title:Professor
Status:Employed
Education Level:With Certificate of Graduation for Doctorate Study
Degree:Doctoral degree
Business Address:作物遗传改良国家重点实验室(第二综合楼)C502
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Alma Mater:华中农业大学
Teacher College:College of Life Sciences & Technology
School/Department:生命科学技术学院
Discipline:Biochemistry and Molecular Biology    
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Paper Publications
Sun S*, Cheng J*, Zhang Y, Wang Y, Wang L, Wang T, Wang Z, Li X, Zhou Y, Li X, Xiao J, Yan C#, Zhang Q#, Ouyang Y#. Novel repetitive elements in plant-specific tails of Gγ proteins as the functional unit in G-protein signalling in crops
Release time:2025-04-10    Hits:

DOI number:10.1093/plcell/koaf052

Journal:The Plant Cell

Abstract:AB Heterotrimeric G proteins act as molecular switches in signal transduction in response to stimuli in all eukaryotes. However, what specifies G protein signalling in plants and how the mechanism evolved and diverged remain unsolved. Here, we found that the recently evolved tails of three Gγ subunits, Dense and erect panicle 1 (DEP1), G protein gamma subunit 2 of type C (GGC2), and Grain size 3 (GS3), determine their distinct functions and specify grain size in rice (Oryza sativa L.). These Gγ subunits originated and expanded by an ancestral σ duplication ∼130 million years ago (mya) and a pancereal ρ duplication ∼70 mya in monocots, increasing genome complexity and inspiring functional innovations. In particular, through the comprehensive creation of artificial chimeric Gγ proteins, we found that this signalling selectivity is driven by repetitive elements and a link region hidden in plant-specific Gγ tails, allowing crops to switch from positive regulation to negative control. Unlike the tails, the conserved Gγ heads did not bias the signalling specificity; however, the change in the interaction between the mutated Gβ and Gγ affected the subsequent downstream signal transduction and grain size. Manipulating G protein signalling also affects organ size in maize (Zea mays) and is expected to constitute a general mechanism for crop improvement. Collectively, these findings reveal that plant-specific Gγ tails drive signaling selectivity and serve as valuable targets for optimizing crop traits through G protein manipulation.

Indexed by:Journal paper

ISSN No.:1040-4651

Translation or Not:no

Date of Publication:2025-03-15

Included Journals:SCI

Links to published journals:https://doi.org/10.1093/plcell/koaf052