2012
DOI: 10.1093/jxb/ers072
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AtACDO1, an ABC1-like kinase gene, is involved in chlorophyll degradation and the response to photooxidative stress in Arabidopsis

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Cited by 43 publications
(32 citation statements)
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“…Carotenoids were extracted and analyzed as described previously using spectrofluorometry (Yang et al, 2012) and HPLC (Pogson et al, 1996;Li et al, 2009). Pigments were identified by comparing retention times with reference standards.…”
Section: Pigment Analysismentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Carotenoids were extracted and analyzed as described previously using spectrofluorometry (Yang et al, 2012) and HPLC (Pogson et al, 1996;Li et al, 2009). Pigments were identified by comparing retention times with reference standards.…”
Section: Pigment Analysismentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In humans, mutation of an ABC1-like homolog leads to neuromuscular defects such as ataxia (Mollet et al 2008). Recently, two putative kinases have been characterized in Arabidopsis: AtOSA1 (Arabidopsis oxidative stress related ABC1-like protein, At5g64940) localized at the chloroplast inner envelope membrane (Jasinski et al 2008) and AtACDO1 (ABC1-like kinase related to chlorophyll degradation and oxidative stress, At4g31390) (Yang et al 2012). Both were linked to oxidative stress under high light conditions.…”
Section: Abc1-like Kinasesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Additionally, an Arabidopsis insertion mutant of the inner envelope-localized ABC1K8 revealed constitutively high accumulation of reactive oxygen species (ROS) and oxidative stressassociated genes, as well as sensitivity to cadmium stress (Jasinski et al, 2008). Although investigation of the PG-localized ABC1K1 using RNA interference (RNAi) suggested an impairment in chlorophyll degradation, the RNAi strategy used the fulllength coding sequence of the gene, thus targeting many of the ABC1K transcripts and confounding the conclusions (Yang et al, 2012). Kinase activity of any of the ABC1Ks remains to be directly demonstrated, though indirect evidence from point mutants in the ABC1K domain of yeast, human, and bacterial ABC1K proteins strongly supports the putative kinase activity (Lagier-Tourenne et al, 2008;Mollet et al, 2008;Xie et al, 2011).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%