NCBI Accession #
NP_193325.1
NCBI GenBank Nucleotide #
NM_117682.3
NCBI Official Full Name
pleiotropic regulatory locus 1
NCBI Official Symbol
PRL1
NCBI Official Synonym Symbols
DL3990W; FCAALL.40; pleiotropic regulatory locus 1; PRL1 PROTEIN
NCBI Protein Information
pleiotropic regulatory locus 1
NCBI Summary
Mutations confer hypersensitivity to glucose and sucrose and augments sensitivity to cytokinin, ethylene, ABA and auxin. Encodes a nuclear WD40 protein that is imported into the nucleus. Essential for plant innate immunity. Interacts with MOS4 and AtCDC5. It is also predicted to have two DWD motifs. It can bind to DDB1a in Y2H assays, and DDB1b in co-IP assays, and may be involved in the formation of a CUL4-based E3 ubiquitin ligase, and may affect the stability of AKIN10.
UniProt Synonym Gene Names
MAC2; Protein PRL1; MAC protein 2
UniProt Protein Name
Protein pleiotropic regulatory locus 1
UniProt Synonym Protein Names
MOS4-associated complex protein 2; MAC protein 2
UniProt Primary Accession #
Q42384
UniProt Related Accession #
Q42384
UniProt Comments
Pleiotropic regulator of glucose, stress and hormone responses. Also regulates cytochrome P450 CYP90A1/CPD. Coordinates the expression of hormone- and stress-related genes and genes related to cell wall modification and growth, leading to altered sugar-dependent growth and developmental responses. Component of the MAC complex that probably regulates defense responses through transcriptional control and thereby is essential for plant innate immunity. By suppressing the expression of several (1)O2-responsive genes, PRL1 seems to play a major role in modulating responses of plants to environmental changes by interconnecting (1)O2-mediated retrograde signaling with other signaling pathways. Acts as negative regulator of SNF1-related protein kinases AKIN10 and AKIN11 via the inhibition of their interaction with SKP1/ASK1. Component of the CUL4-RBX1-DDB1-PRL1 E3 ubiquitin-protein ligase complex, PRL1 may function as the substrate recognition module within this complex, leading to the AKIN10 degradation.