a 2025

From Gametophytes to Sporophytes: Investigating Plant Motif Distribution with GOLEM

NEVOSÁD, Lukáš; Božena KLODOVÁ; Jiří RUDOLF; Tomáš RAČEK; Tereza PŘEROVSKÁ et al.

Basic information

Original name

From Gametophytes to Sporophytes: Investigating Plant Motif Distribution with GOLEM

Authors

NEVOSÁD, Lukáš; Božena KLODOVÁ; Jiří RUDOLF; Tomáš RAČEK; Tereza PŘEROVSKÁ; Alžbeta KUSOVÁ; Radka SVOBODOVÁ; David HONYS and Petra PROCHÁZKOVÁ SCHRUMPFOVÁ

Edition

Climate-Proof Crop Reproduction: from lab to farm, 2nd RECROP Annual Meeting, Thessaloniki, 2025

Other information

Language

English

Type of outcome

Konferenční abstrakta

Country of publisher

Greece

Confidentiality degree

is not subject to a state or trade secret

References:

Marked to be transferred to RIV

No

Organization

Středoevropský technologický institut – Repository – Repository

Keywords in English

Cis-regulatory elements (CREs); Plant promoter analysis; GOLEM web tool; Male gametophyte development; Regulatory motif distribution

Links

EH22_008/0004581, research and development project.
Changed: 17/3/2026 00:51, RNDr. Daniel Jakubík

Abstract

In the original language

GOLEM (Gene regulatOry eLEMents, https://golem.ncbr.muni.cz) is a user-friendly tool for visualizing gene regulatory motifs in plant promoters, specially of the genes showing higher expression in male reproductive tissues or leaves, across the selected plant genomes within the plant evolution (streptophyte algae, mosses, ferns, basal angiosperm, monocots and dicots). We demonstrate GOLEM’s utility with motifs associated with male gametophyte development (e.g., LAT52, MEF2, and DOF_core), hormone-responsive elements (e.g., GCC-box, ARR10_core), and conserved motifs (e.g., TATA-box, ABRE, TC-element, I-box, and DRE/CRT element). Promoter analysis using GOLEM revealed that TATA-box-containing promoters are linked to genes expressed during late pollen development but not early pollen development in dicot plants. It was also shown that the LAT52 motif, motif associated with late pollen development, is preferentially located in the 5′ UTR. Moreover, GOLEM demonstrated that the ethylene-responsive element (GCC-box) exhibits a conserved pattern downstream of ATG throughout evolution, even in streptophyte algae. In contrast, the ARR10-binding motif (ARR10_core), associated with cytokinin response, does not show a conserved distribution across evolution, starting from streptophyte algae. This aligns with the fact that components of both signaling cascades are present in land plants, however, the streptophyte algae lacks some components of cytokinin signaling pathway. Additionally, a new Omics Repository focused on plants, which is being developed to support the storage, acquisition, and analysis of omics data also in crop plants, will be discussed.

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