Direct and tunable modulation of protein levels in rice and wheat with a synthetic small molecule

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Abstract

Direct control of protein level enables rapid and efficient analyses of gene functions in crops. Previously, we developed the RDDK-Shield1 (Shld1) system in the model plant Arabidopsis thaliana for direct modulation of protein stabilization using a synthetic small molecule. However, it was unclear whether this system is applicable to economically important crops. In this study, we show that the RDDK-Shld1 system enables rapid and tunable control of protein levels in rice and wheat. Accumulation of RDDK fusion proteins can be reversibly and spatio-temporally controlled by the synthetic small-molecule Shld1. Moreover, RDDK-Bar and RDDK-Pid3 fusions confer herbicide and rice blast resistance, respectively, in a Shld1-dependent manner. Therefore, the RDDK-Shld1 system provides a reversible and tunable technique for controlling protein functions and conditional expression of transgenes in crops.

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Zhang, J., Yin, K., Sun, J., Gao, J., Du, Q., Li, H., & Qiu, J. L. (2018). Direct and tunable modulation of protein levels in rice and wheat with a synthetic small molecule. Plant Biotechnology Journal, 16(2), 472–481. https://doi.org/10.1111/pbi.12787

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