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Award ID contains: 1557942

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  1. Summary The plant hormone abscisic acid (ABA) plays crucial roles in regulation of stress responses and growth modulation. Heterotrimeric G‐proteins are key mediators of ABA responses. Both ABA and G‐proteins have also been implicated in intracellular redox regulation; however, the extent to which reversible protein oxidation manipulates ABA and/or G‐protein signaling remains uncharacterized.To probe the role of reversible protein oxidation in plant stress response and its dependence on G‐proteins, we determined the ABA‐dependent reversible redoxome of wild‐type and Gβ‐protein null mutantagb1of Arabidopsis.We quantified 6891 uniquely oxidized cysteine‐containing peptides, 923 of which show significant changes in oxidation following ABA treatment. The majority of these changes required the presence of G‐proteins. Divergent pathways including primary metabolism, reactive oxygen species response, translation and photosynthesis exhibited both ABA‐ and G‐protein‐dependent redox changes, many of which occurred on proteins not previously linked to them.We report the most comprehensive ABA‐dependent plant redoxome and uncover a complex network of reversible oxidations that allow ABA and G‐proteins to rapidly adjust cellular signaling to adapt to changing environments. Physiological validation of a subset of these observations suggests that functional G‐proteins are required to maintain intracellular redox homeostasis and fully execute plant stress responses. 
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  2. Summary Plants being sessile integrate information from a variety of endogenous and external cues simultaneously to optimize growth and development. This necessitates the signaling networks in plants to be highly dynamic and flexible. One such network involves heterotrimeric G‐proteins comprised of Gα, Gβ, and Gγ subunits, which influence many aspects of growth, development, and stress response pathways. In plants such as Arabidopsis, a relatively simple repertoire of G‐proteins comprised of one canonical and three extra‐large Gα, one Gβ and three Gγ subunits exists. Because the Gβ and Gγ proteins form obligate dimers, the phenotypes of plants lacking the soleGβor allGγgenes are similar, as expected. However, Gα proteins can exist either as monomers or in a complex with Gβγ, and the details of combinatorial genetic and physiological interactions of different Gα proteins with the sole Gβ remain unexplored. To evaluate such flexible, signal‐dependent interactions and their contribution toward eliciting a specific response, we have generated Arabidopsis mutants lacking specific combinations ofGαandGβgenes, performed extensive phenotypic analysis, and evaluated the results in the context of subunit usage and interaction specificity. Our data show that multiple mechanistic modes, and in some cases complex epistatic relationships, exist depending on the signal‐dependent interactions between the Gα and Gβ proteins. This suggests that, despite their limited numbers, the inherent flexibility of plant G‐protein networks provides for the adaptability needed to survive under continuously changing environments. 
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