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Fig. 1. Auxin and gibberellin signalling pathways. (A) Under low
auxin concentrations, the transcription of auxin-response genes via the ARFs
is blocked by the Aux/IAA transcriptional repressor proteins. (B) In
Arabidopsis, auxin is bound by the F-box protein TIR1, or by other
AFB proteins that comprise the SCFTIR1 complex
(RBX1-Cullin-ASK1-TIR1 in the figure). The binding of auxin stimulates the
interaction of Aux/IAAs with SCFTIR1 and so promotes the
ubiquitination of Aux/IAAs proteins, targeting them for destruction by the 26S
proteosome and releasing the ARFs from their inhibitory chaperone proteins.
(C,D) In rice, gibberellin (GA) signalling involves a similar
process, whereby transcription of the gibberellin-response genes is regulated
by the GA-dependent degradation of the DELLA protein SLR1. (C) Under low
gibberellin concentrations, SLR1 represses gibberellin responses. (D) Under
high gibberellin concentrations, GA binds to the GID1 protein directly and
initiates a GA-dependent interaction with SLR1. The SCFGID2 complex
is then recruited to ubiquitinate SLR1, leading to its degradation. It is
unclear whether GID1-GA induces stable conformational changes to SLR1 that
lead to the recruitment of the SCFGID2 complex, or whether the
GA-GID1-SLR1 is targeted by SCFGID2 as a whole. GA-TF,
gibberellin-dependent transcription factors; +mod, unknown modification; NM,
nuclear membrane; OsCUL1, Oryza sativa Cullin homologue 1; OsSKP15,
Oryza sativa ASK1 homologue 15; +ub, ubiquitination.