The Arabidopsis HOS1 gene negatively regulates cold signal
transduction and encodes a RING finger protein that displays cold-regulated
nucleo--cytoplasmic partitioning.
Lee H, Xiong L, Gong Z, Ishitani M, Stevenson B, Zhu JK.
Department of Plant Sciences, University of Arizona, Tucson, Arizona 85721, USA.
Low temperature is one of the most important environmental stimuli that control
gene transcription programs and development in plants. In Arabidopsis thaliana,
the HOS1 locus is a key negative regulator of low temperature-responsive gene
transcription. The recessive hos1 mutation causes enhanced induction of the CBF
transcription factors by low temperature as well as of their downstream
cold-responsive genes. The hos1 mutant plants flower early, and this correlates
with a low level of Flowering Locus C gene expression. The HOS1 gene was
isolated through positional cloning. HOS1 encodes a novel protein with a RING
finger motif near the amino terminus. HOS1 is ubiquitously expressed in all
plant tissues. HOS1--GFP translational fusion studies reveal that HOS1 protein
resides in the cytoplasm at normal growth temperatures. However, in response to
low temperature treatments, HOS1 accumulates in the nucleus. Ectopic expression
of HOS1 in wild-type plants causes cosuppression of HOS1 expression and mimics
the hos1 mutant phenotypes.