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Supplementary Material 1. Primers used in this research Table S1 RT-PCR primers used in this research. OsABF6 appears not to have been adequately annotated at this time. Its genomic annotation is not yet supported by a fulllength cDNA sequence. The first reverse primer (*), derived from a predicted exon, failed to produce an RT-PCR product (Fig. 2), whereas the second reverse primer (**), derived from a predicted intron, produced an RT-PCR product (result not shown). 1 Gene Name# Locus Forward Primer Reverse Primer OsVP1 Os01g0911700 5' GCAGGAGGGTGATTTCATTGTG 3' 5' CAGGACGACGACACACTACAG 3' OsABF1 Os01g0859300 5' GCGGTCCTATGATGTTCCCAG 3' 5' CTAGTGCCACACCAGAAGCAG 3' OsABF2 Os02g0766700 5' GTTGGAGCAGCAAAAGAATGAG 3' 5' ATACAGGTAGCAGGCACCATG 3' OsABF3 Os06g0211200 5' GCCTTACCCATTCGACACCG 3' 5' GCAACGATCTCGCAGCTAAAC 3' OsABF4 Os09g0456200 5' GGCAGATATCATGGAAATGCAG 3' 5' ATACTTCAGGAAGCAGGTACAG 3' OsABF5/TRAB1 Os08g0472000 5' GCGGTGGTAACGTGGAGAAGG 3' 5' GGTGACAGGGCAAGTTAAGCAC 3' OsABF6 Os01g0813100 5' CGGTTGGAAGAGGTGTTACAG 3' 5' AAATGCTTGACGGGACATGCC 3'* OsABF6 5' GCAGAAGACAATTCCTACACAC 3'** OsABF7 Os05g0489700 5' GAGGAGAATGAGAGGCTAAAG 3' 5' ACCACAAGAAACAGGCAAAGG 3' OsABF8 Os07g0686100 5' GAAGCGCATGATCAAGAACCG 3' 5' CTCTTGTTCACAACAGCCAGC 3' OsEm Os05g0349800 5' CTAGTGTTTGGCAATGGCGTC 3' 5' GCACGGTTACAAAGGACACAC 3' WSI18 Os01g0705200 5' GGGAGCTACATTGGACAGACC 3' 5' AAACATTGACCTCCACACTGGC 3' OsLEA3 Os05g0542500 5' AAGGACAAGACCTCCAGCAC 3' 5' TGCGACGACCACCACTTCAT 3' Os01g0750300 OsCesA4 5’ CACCTCTCTTCCTCTTATTGC 3’ 5' TCCTGGAGCACAAATGTCGC 3' Os10g0467800 OsCesA7 5' CTACCCCTTCACCTCCATTCC 3' 5' CAGAGACACAGAGAAGTAGCAG 3' Os09g0422500 OsCesA9 5' CTCACCGGCAAGTTCATCATG 3' 5' GAAATCGCTGACGCCCTCTC 3' # Names in italics derive from publications mentioned in the text. Other names are given for the first time here. 2 Table S2 Primers for amplification and cloning of probes for RNA in situ hybridization Gene OsVP1 OsABF1 TRAB1 OsEm WSI18 OsLEA3 Forward primer 5' GCGGTTAGCATCTGAAGAAAC 3' 5' TCTCAAGCAGGAGAACGCTCG 3' 5' GAGGCGGTCAACAATCCTTACG 3' 5' TGTAGGTCTTGACGGATGCAC 3' 5' AGGACACCAGCACCTACAAG 3' 5' CTAGACGCCGTGAATGATTTCC 3' 3 Reverse primer 5' TACAGGACGACGACACACTAC 3' 5' CGGTGAACACGATGGCAAGAC 3' 5' GGTGACAGGGCAAGTTAAGCAC 3' 5' GCACGGTTACAAAGGACACAC 3' 5' ACATTGACCTCCACACTGGC 3' 5' AACCACAAATGCGGGCTTTAGG 3' 2. Identification of the structural orthologues of ABI3 and ABI5 in rice Orthologues and paralogues were originally defined by Fitch (1970), but controversy surrounds several aspects of the use of these terms, as noted by Fitch (2000). Although the original definition of orthology emphasized common ancestry, it has often been assumed that orthologues should have a common function and that declaration of orthology should be contingent on demonstration of common function. Fitch (2000) and others (Koonin, 2005; Hulsen et al., 2006) disagreed with this tendency, noting that while common function may provide evidence for orthology, it was not a suitable criterion and indeed may often be lost as species diverge. However, Fitch (2000) suggested that the state of confusion might be dealt with better by qualifying “orthologue” with a suitable adjective rather than insisting on an invariant definition. The adjective could indicate the source of evidence for orthology. We have followed this suggestion and use the term “structural orthologue” to indicate that orthology is supported by sequence data. Through the use of BLAST analysis we identified the rice orthologues of ABI3 and ABI5. We confirmed that OsVP1 is the orthologue of ABI3 and established that OsABF1, a protein previously known only from the annotation of the rice genome, is the orthologue of ABI5. OsVP1 is the structural orthologue of the B3-domain protein ABI3 in rice The notion that VP1, OsVP1 and ABI3 are orthologous transcription factors was put forward by Hattori et al. (1992, 1995). Since then, the genomes of both Arabidopsis and rice have been sequenced, revealing that both of these genomes encode 52 B3-domain proteins (Riano-Panchon et al., 2007). However, ABI3 and OsVP1 are the only members 4 of these families with the three additional conserved domains found in VP1: A1, B1 and B2 (Fig. S1a). TBLASTN analysis shows that the next closest homologues of ABI3 in Arabidopsis and rice are much shorter proteins containing only the B3 domain (Fig. S1b). These data confirm the structural orthology of ABI3 and OsVP1. OsABF1 is the structural orthologue of the bZIP protein ABI5 in rice The genomes of Arabidopsis, japonica rice and indica rice encode 70, 85 and 109 bZIP domain proteins, respectively (Riano-Panchon et al., 2007; http://drtf.cbi.pku.edu.cn). Protein alignment shows that at least 8 proteins in both Arabidopsis and rice contain six domains found in ABI5: DNA-binding domain, leucine zipper domain, and C1–C4 domains (Fig. S2a). The cladogram in Fig. S2b compares the whole protein sequence of ABI5 with those of the seven most similar Arabidopsis proteins and the top eight rice proteins (designated as OsABF1–OsABF8), together with three related proteins studied by others (TaABFA, TaABFB and HvABI5). The key result is that ABI5 and AtDPBF2 of Arabidopsis cluster with OsABF1 of rice and TaABFA and TaABFB of wheat. TRAB1, the only OsABF protein to have been studied in detail (Hobo et al., 1999) and often regarded as the orthologue of ABI5, is only fifth in terms of relatedness to ABI5 and is in a different clade. More detailed sequence analysis supports the orthology of ABI5 and OsABF1 (Fig. S3). First, OsABF1, ABI5, AtDPBF2, TaABFA and TaABFB contain a cysteine in domain C2, at a position where most other bZIP proteins in Fig. S3 contain a serine. This serine is predicted to be part of a PRXXS phosphorylation site for a SnRK2 protein kinase (Huang & Huber, 2001). Indeed, in TRAB1, this serine (S102) is phosphorylated 5 as part of a mechanism to activate the transcription factor in response to ABA (Kagaya et al., 2002). The kinases that phosphorylate the site include three members of the SnRK2 protein kinase family, SAPK8, SAPK9 and SAPK10 (Kobayashi et al., 2005). ABI5 is known to be regulated by phosphorylation elsewhere in the polypeptide (Lopez-Molina et al., 2001) and OsABF1 is presumably similar. Second, there is a question as to whether OsABF1 is orthologous to ABI5 or AtDPBF2. These two Arabidopsis proteins appear to have arisen through gene duplication since divergence from the last common ancestor of rice and Arabidopsis (Fig. S2b). As the dimerizing properties of bZIP proteins are determined principally by the DNA-binding domain and the leucine zipper domain (Fujii et al., 2000; Vinson et al., 2006), we compared these contiguous domains in OsABF1, ABI5 and AtDPBF2 over 69 amino acids (Fig. S3). The DNA-binding and leucine zipper domains of the three proteins are identical at 38 positions and different at 15 positions. At the remaining 16 out of 69 positions, two of the proteins differ from the third. ABI5 and AtDPBF2 differ from OsABF1 at 6 positions, OsABF1 and ABI5 differ from AtDPBF2 at 9 positions, and OsABF1 and AtDPBF2 differ from ABI5 at only one position. We conclude that, in these domains, OsABF1 shows greater homology to ABI5 than to AtDPBF2, strengthening the case for the orthology of ABI5 and OsABF1. Fitch WM. 1970. Distinguishing homologous from analogous proteins. Systematic Zoology 19: 99–113. Fitch WM. 2000. Homology: a personal view on some of the problems. Trends in Genetics 16: 227–231. 6 Fujii Y, Shimizu T, Toda T, Yanagida M, Hakoshima T. 2000. Structural basis for the diversity of DNA recognition by bZIP transcription factors. Nature Structural & Molecular Biology 7: 889 -893. Hattori T, Terada T, Hamasuna S. 1995. Regulation of the Osem gene by abscisic acid and the transcriptional activator VP1: analysis of cis-acting promoter elements required for regulation by abscisic acid and VP1. Plant Journal. 7: 913–925. Hattori T, Vasil V, Rosenkrans L, Hannah LC, McCarty DR, Vasil IK. 1992. The Viviparous-1 gene and abscisic acid activate the C1 regulatory gene for anthocyanin biosynthesis during seed maturation in maize. Genes and Development 6: 609-618. Hobo T, Kowyama Y, Hattori T. 1999. A bZIP factor, TRAB1, interacts with VP1 and mediates abscisic acid-induced transcription. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the USA 96: 15348-15353. Huang JZ, Huber SC. 2001. Phosphorylation of synthetic peptides by a CDPK and plant SNF1-related protein kinase. Influence of proline and basic amino acid residues at selected positions. Plant and Cell Physiology 42:1079-1087. Hulsen T, Huynen MA, de Vlieg J, Groenen PMA. 2006. Benchmarking ortholog identification methods using functional genomics data. Genome Biology 7(4): R31. Kagaya Y, Hobo T, Murata M, Ban A, Hattori T. 2002. Abscisic acid-induced transcription is mediated by phosphorylation of an abscisic acid response element binding factor, TRAB1. Plant Cell 14: 3177-3189. Kobayashi Y, Murata M, Minami H, Yamamoto S, Kagaya Y, Hobo T, Yamamoto A, Hattori T. 2005. Abscisic acid-activated SNRK2 protein kinases function in the gene- 7 regulation pathway of ABA signal transduction by phosphorylating ABA response element-binding factors. Plant Journal 44:939-949. Koonin EV. 2005. Orthologs, paralogs and evolutionary genomics. Annual Reviews of Genetics 39: 309-338. Lopez-Molina L, Mongrand S, Chua NH. 2001. A postgermination developmental arrest checkpoint is mediated by abscisic acid and requires the ABI5 transcription factor in Arabidopsis. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the USA 98: 47824787. Riano-Pachon DM, Ruzicic S, Dreyer I, Mueller-Roeber B. 2007. PlnTFDB: An integrative plant transcription factor database. BMC Bioinformatics 8: 42 Vinson C, Acharya A, Taparowsky EJ. 2006. Deciphering B-ZIP transcription factor interactions in vitro and in vivo. Biochimica et Biophysica Acta 1759: 4-12. Fig. S1 OsVP1 is the rice orthologue of ABI3. (a) Conserved domain structure of ABI3, VP1 and OsVP1. (b) Cladogram of ABI3, VP1, OsVP1 and four closely related B3 proteins from Arabidopsis (FUSCA3 and LEAFY COTYLEDON2) and rice (NP_001044053 and NP_001054257). Accession numbers for ABI3, VP1, OsVP1, FUSCA3 and LEC2 are CAA48241, AAA33506, BAA04066, AAC35247 and AAL12005. Numbers of amino acids in polypeptide chains are shown on the right. Fig. S2 OsABI5 is the rice orthologue of ABI5. (a) Conserved domain structure of ABI5 and related bZIP proteins. DB, DNA-binding domain. LZ, leucine zipper domain. (b) Cladogram of ABI5 and related proteins from Arabidopsis, rice, wheat and barley. Box: ABI5 and orthologues. See Table S1 for locus numbers for OsABF1-OsABF8. The 8 following synonyms (and accession numbers) are currently in use in the literature: ABI5/AtDPBF-1 (AAD21438), AtABF2/AREB1 (BAB12404), AtDPBF2/AtbZIP67 (AAK19600), AtDPBF3/AREB3 (BAB12406), AtDPBF4/AbZIP12/EEL (AAK19602), ABRE/AtABF1 (BAE99050), AtDPBF5/AtABF3 (NP_567949), AtABF4 (NP_566629), OsABF5/TRAB1 (BAD09357), TaABFA (AAM75354), TaABFB (AAM75355), HvABI5 (AAO06115). Fig. S3 Alignment of C2 domains, basic DNA-binding domains and leucine zipper domains of ABI5 and similar Arabidopsis, rice, wheat and barley proteins. The downward-pointing arrow marks the conventional boundary between the DNA-binding domain and the leucine zipper domain. PRXXS: putative phosphorylation motif. Shading in C2 domain highlights cysteine conserved among ABFs clustered in box in Fig. S2b. Shading in DNA-binding domain and leucine zipper domain indicates amino acids conserved between two or three of ABI5, AtDPBF2 and OsABF1. 9 Fig. S1 (a) N C A1 (b) B1 B2 B3 NP:001044053 (289aa) FUSCA3 (313 aa) OsVP1 (727 aa) ZmVP1 (723 aa) AtABI3 (720 aa) LEC2 (362 aa) NP:001054257 (433 aa) 10 Fig. S2 (a) C N C1 C2 C3 DB LZ C4 (b) TaABFA TaABFB OsABF1 ABI5 AtDPBF2 OsABF2 OsABF3 AtABF2 OsABF4 HvABI5 OsABF5/TRAB1 AtABF1 AtABF4 AtABF3 OsABF6 OsABF7 OsABF8 AtDPBF3 AtDPBF4 11 Fig. S3 Domain C2 AtDPBF2:LPRQGSLSLPVPLCKKTVDEVWLEI AtABI5 :LPRQGSLTLPAPLCRKTVDEVWSEI TaABFA :LARQESFSLPPPLCRKTVEEVWAEI TaABFB :LARQESFSLPPPLCRKTVDEVWAEI OsABF1 :LCRQGSFSLPLPLCQKTVEEVWTEI OsABF2 :VQRQGSLTLPRTLSQKTVDEVWRDM OsABF3 :IQRQGSLTLPRTLSQKTVDEVWRDI OsABF4 :LQRQGSLTLPRTLSAKTVDEVWRNL OsABF5 :LQRQGSLTLPRTLSVKTVDEVWRDL OsABF6 :LLRQGSITMPPELSKKTVDEVWKGI OsABF7 :LQRQGSITMPPELSKKTVDEVWKGI OsABF8 :----AAAAAAETAGRKTVDEVWRDI HvABI5 :LQGQGSLTLPRTLSAKTVDEVWRNL AtABF1 :LQRQGSLTLPRTLSQKTVDEVWKYL AtABF2 :LQRQGSLTLPRTLSQKTVDQVWKDL AtABF3 :LQRQGSLTLPRTISQKRVDDVWKEL AtABF4 :LQRQGSLTLPRTISQKTVDEVWKCL AtDPBF3:LSRQGSLTLPRDLSKKTVDEVWKDI AtDPBF4:LVRQGSLTLPRDLSKKTVDEVWRDI PRXXS Basic DNA-binding domain Leucine zipper domain TaABFA :CERSIERRHRRMIKNRESAARSRARKQAYTVELEAELNHLKEENARLKAEEKTILLTKKQMLVEKMIEQ TaABFB :CERSIERRHRRMIKNRESAARSRARKQAYTVELEAELNHLKEENARLKAEEKTILLTKKQMLVEKMIEQ AtDPBF2:PEILMERRQRRMIKNRESAARSRARRQAYTVELELELNNLTEENTKLKEIVEENEKKRRQEIISRSKQV AtABI5 :VEKVVERRQRRMIKNRESAARSRARKQAYTVELEAELNQLKEENAQLKHALAELERKRKQQYFESLKSR OsABF1 :AEKTVERRQRRMIKNRESAARSRARKQAYTVELEAELNYLKQENARLKEAEKTVLLTKKQMLVEKMMEQ OsABF2 :IEKVVERRQRRMIKNRESAARSRQRKQAYMMELEAEVAKLKELNDELQKKQDEMLEQQKNEVLERMSRQ OsABF3 :VEKVVERRQRRMIKNRESAARSRARKQAYIMELEAEVAKLKEQKAELQKKQVEMIQKQNDEVMERITQQ OsABF4 :VEKVVERRQRRMIKNRESAARSRARKQAYTLELEAEVQKLKEMNKELERKQADIMEMQKNEVEEMIKDP OsABF5 :VEKVVERRQRRMIKNRESAARSRARKQAYTMELEAEVQKLKEQNMELQKKQEEIMEMQKNFFPEMQKNQ OsABF6 :ADKLMERRQKRMIKNRESAARSRARKQAYTNELENKVSRLEEENVRLKRQKESDYLHYTRSNLVMENIE OsABF7 :ADKLVERRQKRMIKNRESAARSRARKQAYTNELENKVLRLEEENERLKKQKELDEILNSAPPPEPKYQL OsABF8 :VEKTVERRQKRMIKNRESAARSRARKQAYTNELENKISRLEEENQRLREHKAVADFSTFPSCVDFLKAF HvABI5 :VEKVVERRQRRMIKNRESAARSRARKQAYTMELEAEVQKLKDLNEELVKKQTEILKMQKREAPE-MKDQ AtABF1 :LEKVVERRQKRMIKNRESAARSRARKQAYTLELEAEIESLKLVNQDLQKKQAEIMKTHNSELKEFSKQP AtABF2 :VEKVVERRQRRMIKNRESAARSRARKQAYTVELEAEVAKLKEENDELQRKQARIMEMQKNQETEMRNLL AtABF3 :LEKVIERRQKRMIKNRESAARSRARKQAYTMELEAEIAQLKELNEELQKKQVCLASSLSQLRISRFSYF AtABF4 :LEKVIERRQRRMIKNRESAARSRARKQAYTLELEAEIEKLKKTNQELQKKQAEMVEMQKNELKETSKRP AtDPBF3:VEKTVERRQKRMIKNRESAARSRARKQAYTHELEIKVSRLEEENERLRKQKEVEKILPSVPPPDPKRQL AtDPBF4:VEKTVERRQKRMIKNRESAARSRARKQAYTHELEIKVSRLEEENEKLRRLKEVEKILPSEPPPDPKWKL 12