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Supplementary Material
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Reference (24). Experimental conditions for Fig. 1. Arabidopsis plants were grown on soil under short-day conditions (16 hours light:8 hours dark). Wild-type, phyA- (phyA-201) and phyB- (phyB-5) mutant seedlings were grown for 4 days on paper in darkness or (pulse-) irradiated with white (2.8 × 10-6 mol/m2s), red (3.2 × 10-6 mol/m2s), or far-red (0.5 × 10-6 mol/m2s ) light. Plant tissue and seedlings were extracted in SDS-sample buffer, and extracts were subjected to SDS polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) and immunoblots as described in (15).
ARR2 and ARR4 were detected with antisera generated in mice. As recombinant, (His)6-tagged antigens a protein fragment of the output domain of ARR2 (amino acid 204 to 644) and a protein fragment of ARR4 (amino acid 9 to 259) were expressed in the Escherichia coli strain BL21(DE3). Recombinant proteins were purified on Ni-NTA-agarose (Qiagen) followed by in-gel purification as described previously (23). The antisera were diluted 1:500 (
ARR4, PHYA, PHYB and PHYB-101 cDNAs were cloned into pASK-IBA2 (ARR4), pAA7 (PHYA) and pYES (PHYB, PHYB-101). Strep-tagged ARR4 was expressed from the pASK-IBA2 construct in E. coli strain XL1-blue and purified on StrepTactin beads (IBA, Germany). Expression of PHYA, PHYB and PHYB-101 apoproteins in yeast and self-assembly to the holoproteins with phycocyanobilin in crude protein extracts was done as described (12). 200 ng of Strep-tagged ARR4 were added to an aliquot of yeast extract containing 15
For yeast two-hybrid studies ARR4, PHYA and PHYB cDNAs and cDNA fragments were cloned into pGAD424 (ARR4, PHYBFL, PHYB179-1171) and pGBT9 (ARR4, PHYB1-173, PHYA1-137) and the assays for protein-protein interaction (growth on interaction-selective media CSM-L,W,H and CSM-L,W,A; For the analysis of the intracellular partitioning of ARR4 the corresponding ARR4 cDNA was cloned into the GFP vector pMAV4 (23). Transient transformation of parsley protoplasts and microscopic techniques were carried out as described (23).
For the generation of transgenic Arabidopsis lines, the ARR4 cDNA was cloned into the binary vector pPCV812 (15). Introduction of the construct into Agrobacterium tumefaciens strain GV3101, transformation of Arabidopsis (Columbia and ABO/A-) and selection for transgenic plants were carried out as described in (15). Growth of seedlings on paper and determination of hypocotyl length were carried out as reported (15). In vivo Pfr-to-Pr dark reversion in yeast and dark-grown Arabidopsis seedlings was measured in a dual wavelength ratio spectrophotometer as described in (12) and (17), respectively. The fluence-rate of the blue light source was 1.8 × 10-6 mol/m2s and of the red light source used for the irradiation of ABO/A- and ARR4-overexpressing ABO/A- lines, respectively, was 0.4 × 10-8 mol/m2s. The HSC70 antiserum (27) served as a loading control. References 12. T. Kunkel et al., Eur. J. Biochem. 215, 587 (1993). 14. J. Lohrmann et al., Mol. Genet. Genomics 265, 2 (2001). 15. S. Kircher et al., Plant Cell 11, 1445 (1999). 17. K. Eichenberg, L. Hennig, A. Martin, E. Schäfer, Plant Cell Environ. 23, 311 (2000). 22. A. Nagatani et al., Cell Physiol. 25, 1059 (1985). 23. S. Kircher et al., J. Cell Biol. 144, 201 (1999). 26. L. Krall, J. W. Reed, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 97, 8169 (2000). 27. D. Neumann, L. Nover, Biol. Zentbl. 108, 1 (1989).
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Science. ISSN 0036-8075 (print), 1095-9203 (online)