FEBS Letters
Volume 580, Issue 4 , Pages 1123-1130, 13 February 2006

Organization and function of the plant pleiotropic drug resistance ABC transporter family

Edited by Ulf-Ingo Flügge

Unité de Biochimie Physiologique, Institut des Sciences de la Vie, University of Louvain, Croix du Sud 5-15, 1348 Louvain-la-Neuve, Belgium

Received 3 November 2005; received in revised form 9 December 2005; accepted 13 December 2005. published online 20 December 2005.

Abstract 

Among the ABC transporters, the pleiotropic drug resistance (PDR) family is particular in that its members are found only in fungi and plants and have a reverse domain organization, i.e., the nucleotide binding domain precedes the transmembrane domain. In Arabidopsis and rice, for which the full genome has been sequenced, the family of plant ABC transporters contains 15 and 23 PDR genes, respectively, which can be tentatively organized using the sequence data into five subfamilies. Most of the plant PDR genes so far characterized belong to subfamily I and have been shown to be involved in responses to abiotic and biotic stress, in the latter case, probably by transporting antimicrobial secondary metabolites to the cell surface. Only a single subfamily II member has been characterized. Induction of its expression by iron deficiency suggests its involvement in iron deficiency stress, thus, enlightening a new physiological role for a PDR gene.

Keywords: Biotic stress, Abiotic stress, Sclareol, Diterpenes, Botrytis, Iron

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PII: S0014-5793(05)01518-8

doi:10.1016/j.febslet.2005.12.043

FEBS Letters
Volume 580, Issue 4 , Pages 1123-1130, 13 February 2006