Short Exogenous Peptides Regulate Expression of CLE, KNOX1, and GRF Family Genes in Nicotiana tabacum.
Fedoreyeva. L I LI; Dilovarova. T A TA; Ashapkin. V V VV; Martirosyan. Yu Ts YT; Khavinson. V Kh VK; Kharchenko. P N PN; Vanyushin. B F BF
Key Findings
- Bronchogen (Ala‑Glu‑Asp‑Leu) at 10⁻⁷‑10⁻⁹ M promotes growth of tobacco callus and leaf development.
- The peptide changes the expression of CLE, KNOX1, and GRF gene families, which are involved in tissue formation and cell differentiation.
- Its effects resemble those of plant hormones, suggesting a signaling and possibly epigenetic mode of action.
Practical Outcomes
- For biohackers focused on human health, this research offers no direct actionable protocol or dosage guidance. It does highlight that very short peptides can act as powerful signaling molecules in plants, but translating that to human physiology would require separate, dedicated studies.
Summary
The study shows that a tiny peptide called bronchogen can boost growth and leaf formation in tobacco plant cells when used at extremely low doses, likely by tweaking the activity of certain plant genes that control development.
Abstract
Exogenous short biologically active peptides epitalon (Ala-Glu-Asp-Gly), bronchogen (Ala-Glu-Asp-Leu), and vilon (Lys-Glu) at concentrations 10<sup>-7</sup>-10<sup>-9</sup> M significantly influence growth, development, and differentiation of tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum) callus cultures. Epitalon and bronchogen, in particular, both increase growth of calluses and stimulate formation and growth of leaves in plant regenerants. Because the regulatory activity of the short peptides appears at low peptide concentrations, their action to some extent is like that of the activity of phytohormones, and it seems to have signaling character and epigenetic nature. The investigated peptides modulate in tobacco cells the expression of genes including genes responsible for tissue formation and cell differentiation. These peptides differently modulate expression of CLE family genes coding for known endogenous regulatory peptides, the KNOX1 genes (transcription factor genes) and GRF (growth regulatory factor) genes coding for respective DNA-binding proteins such as topoisomerases, nucleases, and others. Thus, at the level of transcription, plants have a system of short peptide regulation of formation of long-known peptide regulators of growth and development. The peptides studied here may be related to a new generation of plant growth regulators. They can be used in the experimental botany, plant molecular biology, biotechnology, and practical agronomy.
Study Information
pubmed
2017
10.1134/s0006297917040149