ZmGCT1/2 negatively regulate drought tolerance in maize by inhibiting ZmSLAC1 to maintain guard cell turgor.

Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A

State Key Laboratory of Plant Environmental Resilience, Frontiers Science Center for Molecular Design Breeding, Center for Crop Functional Genomics and Molecular Breeding, Department of Plant Science, College of Biological Sciences, China Agricultural University, Beijing 100193, China.

Published: April 2025


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Article Abstract

Stomata, which are essential for the exchange of CO and water vapor between plant leaves and the atmosphere, are regulated by a variety of environmental and internal factors. In this study, we identified and characterized two genes, () and its closest homolog , which encode rapidly accelerated fibrosarcoma (RAF)-like protein kinases that play a critical role in maintaining guard cell turgor in . We found that overexpression of and confers resistance to abscisic acid (ABA)-promoted stomatal closure, whereas the double loss-of-function mutants exhibit a loss of guard cell turgor, resulting in nearly closed stomata even under favorable growth conditions. A dominant mutation, , which lacks nine amino acids including T80, retains its kinase activity and plasma membrane localization but displays insensitive to ABA-, CO-, Ca-, or HO-promoted stomatal closure. ABA-activated ZmSnRK2.8/9 phosphorylates ZmGCT1 at T80, reducing its plasma membrane localization. Intriguingly, the ZmSnRK2.10 or ZmSLAC1 mutant can suppress the reduced turgor phenotype in guard cells of the mutant. Furthermore, ZmGCT1 phosphorylates the penultimate threonine residue (T573) of ZmSLAC1, inhibiting both the constitutively active ZmSLAC1 and ZmSnRK2.8-activated ZmSLAC1 in oocytes, a process dependent on ZmGCT1 kinase activity. These findings suggest that ZmGCT1 and ZmGCT2 directly inhibit ZmSLAC1 to maintain guard cell turgor under favorable growth conditions, while ABA treatment alleviates this inhibition primarily by reducing ZmGCT1's plasma membrane localization. This study provides mechanistic insights into the regulation of stomatal movement by ZmGCT1/2 kinases under both favorable and stress conditions.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC12012462PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2423037122DOI Listing

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