Plant photoperiodic growth is coordinated by interactions between circadian clock and light signaling networks. How post-translational modifications of clock proteins affect these interactions to mediate rhythmic growth remains unclear. Here, we identify five phosphorylation sites in the Arabidopsis core clock protein TIMING OF CAB EXPRESSION 1 (TOC1) which when mutated to alanine eliminate detectable phosphorylation. The TOC1 phospho-mutant fails to fully rescue the clock, growth, and flowering phenotypes of the toc1 mutant. Further, the TOC1 phospho-mutant shows advanced phase, a faster degradation rate, reduced interactions with PHYTOCHROME-INTERACTING FACTOR 3 (PIF3) and HISTONE DEACETYLASE 15 (HDA15), and poor binding at pre-dawn hypocotyl growth-related genes (PHGs), leading to a net de-repression of hypocotyl growth. NUCLEAR FACTOR Y subunits B and C (NF-YB/C) stabilize TOC1 at target promoters, and this novel trimeric complex (NF-TOC1) acts as a transcriptional co-repressor with HDA15 to inhibit PIF-mediated hypocotyl elongation. Collectively , we identify a molecular mechanism suggesting how phos-phorylation of TOC1 alters its phase, stability, and physical interactions with co-regulators to precisely phase PHG expression to control photoperiodic hypocotyl growth.
CITATION STYLE
Yan, J., Li, S., Kim, Y. J., Zeng, Q., Radziejwoski, A., Wang, L., … Somers, D. E. (2021). TOC1 clock protein phosphorylation controls complex formation with NF‐YB/C to repress hypocotyl growth. The EMBO Journal, 40(24). https://doi.org/10.15252/embj.2021108684
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