Heterotrimeric G protein signalling in the plant kingdom

In animals, heterotrimeric G proteins, comprising α-, β-and γ-subunits, perceive extracellular stimuli through cell surface receptors, and transmit signals to ion channels, enzymes and other effector proteins to affect numerous cellular behaviours. In plants, G proteins have structural similarities to the corresponding molecules in animals but transmit signals by atypical mechanisms and effector proteins to control growth, cell proliferation, defence, stomate movements, channel regulation, sugar sensing and some hormonal responses. In this review, we summarize the current knowledge on the molecular regulation of plant G proteins, their effectors and the physiological functions studied mainly in two model organisms: Arabidopsis thaliana and rice (Oryza sativa). We also look at recent progress on structural analyses, systems biology and evolutionary studies.


Summary
In animals, heterotrimeric G proteins, comprising a-, b-and g-subunits, perceive extracellular stimuli through cell surface receptors, and transmit signals to ion channels, enzymes and other effector proteins to affect numerous cellular behaviours. In plants, G proteins have structural similarities to the corresponding molecules in animals but transmit signals by atypical mechanisms and effector proteins to control growth, cell proliferation, defence, stomate movements, channel regulation, sugar sensing and some hormonal responses. In this review, we summarize the current knowledge on the molecular regulation of plant G proteins, their effectors and the physiological functions studied mainly in two model organisms: Arabidopsis thaliana and rice (Oryza sativa). We also look at recent progress on structural analyses, systems biology and evolutionary studies.
cryptochrome-mediated responses [24] (but not all [25]), and seedling and root development [24,26,27]. In rice, the Ga-subunit (RGA1)-deficient line, named dwarf1 (d1) mutant, was found in a screen for mutants defective in gibberellin (GA) responsiveness [28,29]. Subsequently, Gb and Gg genes were cloned in Arabidopsis [30][31][32], rice [33,34] and others [11,30,35]. A general physiological function for Gb was proposed from the phenotype of an Arabidopsis mutant having an altered development of leaves, flowers and fruits [36]. We now know that Gb functions expand to the root [37], ion channels, stoma [38] and fungal defence [18,39]. Gb-and Ggdeficient mutants share some developmental phenotypes (e.g. rounded leaf shape and sugar sensitivity) with Ga mutants, but also differ in others (e.g. lateral root production and fungal defence) [36,37]. In animals, phenotypes shared by both Ga and Gb mutations are indicated to be disruptions in pathways in which the predominant transducer is the Gasubunit. Opposite phenotypes reveal phenotypes in which the Gbg dimer is the predominant transducer. Thus, plant G protein research initially tried to extrapolate from the vast amount of knowledge accumulated in animal systems. However, findings from two different directions came to light by the mid-2000s, indicating that plant G proteins use a regulatory system distinct from animal G proteins [23,40] (see §3). In 2003, the GTPase-accelerating protein (GAP) of regulator of G protein signalling (RGS) protein, AtRGS1, stood out for its hybrid topology [23]. AtRGS1 contains seven N-terminal transmembrane helices (7TM) like a GPCR and a C-terminal RGS box typically found in cytoplasmic animal RGS proteins [23,40]. Such a chimaera between a GPCR and RGS protein had never been reported before; the animal G protein field looked over Arabidopsis G signalling with great curiosity and puzzlement.
The second clue that plant G protein signalling is different from the animal paradigm came in 2007 when Francis Willard and co-workers showed that the Arabidopsis Ga-subunit spontaneously bound GTP in vitro; a guanine nucleotide exchange factor (GEF) was not needed for activation [40]. This 'self-activating' property, a term coined in subsequent publications and described in greater detail below, suggests that plant G proteins do not need, and therefore do not have, GPCRs; a blasphemous notion in the G protein field. Nonetheless, biochemical, structural, evolutionary and computational analyses leave no other conclusion: the plant kingdom uses a distinct regulatory system in G signalling [41][42][43].

Regulatory system of animal and plant
heterotrimeric G proteins 3.1. Basic G protein concept based on its biochemical activity Figure 2 compares the regulatory system of heterotrimeric G proteins in animals versus most plants. In mammals, the cognate heterotrimeric G protein is activated by a GPCR or other GEF [1]. At steady state, the a-subunit of G protein keeps its GDP tightly bound and forms an inactive heterotrimer with the Gbg-subunits (figure 2a, bottom left) [1]. An agonist-stimulated GPCR promotes GDP dissociation from the a-subunit (figure 2a, top), and the nucleotide-free Ga interacts with GTP, which has a concentration 10 times higher than that of GDP in animal cells. This is a rate-limiting step in the animal G protein cycle. The newly GTP-bound Ga changes its conformation to the active form, consequently dissociating from Gbg, and interacts with and regulates the activity of its effectors (figure 2a, bottom right). Known animal effectors are adenylyl cyclases, phospholipase Cb and RGS-RhoGEFs [2], and there are many more (see fig. 1 of [44]). The active g2 g3 a b g1 and g2 g (GS3) g (DEP1) Figure 1. History of plant G protein science. In the 1970s, G proteins were identified as a signal transducer connecting the hormone receptor and the adenylyl cyclase in mammals. In the early 1990s, plant G protein genes were cloned and shown to have conserved domains and motifs with the animal genes. In the late 1990s, much effort went towards physiological roles of G proteins using genetics. In the 2000s, the Gbg-subunits, the regulators (GPCR-like genes and a 7TM-RGS gene) and effectors of G protein were cloned and characterized genetically and biochemically. In 2007, the 'self-activating' property of the plant G protein was revealed. In addition, the transcriptome, proteome and interactome analyses revealed comprehensive knowledge of the plant G protein pathways. In the last few years, the crystal structure and computational simulation solved the mechanism of self-activation. Publications on the physiological functions and signalling components of G protein pathways are exponentially increasing, providing evidence for their important and divergent functions in plants.
rsob.royalsocietypublishing.org Open Biol 3: 120186 Ga-subunit returns to the inactive state by hydrolysing the bound GTP. In this reaction, RGS proteins or other GAPs promote the GTP hydrolysis and terminate G protein signalling. Ga mutants with enhanced activity of GDP dissociation [45] or abolished GTPase activity [46] function as constitutively active G proteins. This suggests that both slow GDP dissociation and rapid GTP hydrolysis are required for keeping the heterotrimer inactive and for the proper signal transduction in animal cells. The activity of RGS proteins also increases the initial amplitude of G signalling by a process called dynamic scaffolding [47]. Although plant G protein signalling uses similar elements, the cycle starkly contrasts with the animal model. In plants, the a-subunit of the G protein spontaneously releases GDP (figure 2b, arrow from bottom left to top) and forms a stable GTP-bound state [40,41,48]. The exchange rate of GDP for GTP in AtGPA1 (k on ¼ 1.4-14.4 min 21 [40,41,48]) is comparable with a constitutively active mutant of human Gas (Gas S366A, k on ¼ 14 min 21 ) [45]. Moreover, the intrinsic GTPase activity of the plant AtGPA1 (k cat ¼ 0.03-0.12 min 21 [40,41,48]) is much lower than mammals (human Gas, k cat ¼ 3.5 min 21 [49]), being close to the GTPase-crippled mutant Gas Q227L (the k cat is probably approx. 0.06 min 21 [46]). While the original rate constants were determined using rice and Arabidopsis G proteins, we recently showed that this self-activating property is found throughout the plant kingdom [48]. In Arabidopsis, a 7TM-RGS protein, AtRGS1 promotes GTP hydrolysis of the a-subunit [40,50], resulting in the formation of an inactive heterotrimer (figure 2b, top). Genetic evidence is consistent with D-glucose being the ligand that halts AtRGS1 GAP activity and, by doing so, allowing AtGPA1 to self-activate (figure 2b, bottom right) [23,40,51,52]. The detailed mechanism for this atypical activation mechanism [53] is described in greater detail in §3.2. Back to the bigger picture, in animals, different ligands stimulate the stimulator (GPCR), whereas it appears that in plants the ligands inhibit the inhibitor (e.g. AtRGS1 in Arabidopsis). 'Inhibiting the inhibitor' seems to be a common theme for receptor regulation in plants [54].

Endocytosis of 7TM receptors in mammals and plants: same actions, different reactions
Many types of cell possess feedback systems to fine-tune the strength, duration and specificity of signals. In mammals, GPCRs are internalized to desensitize in response to excessive and/or continuous stimuli (figure 3a) [5]. Such a mechanism is important to protect cells from harmful doses of the ligands. Some GPCRs are phosphorylated at the carboxyl-terminal region by kinases, such as G-protein receptor kinases (GRKs; figure 3). The phosphorylated GPCRs are recognized by b-arrestin, which functions as an adaptor connecting GPCRs to the endocytic machinery. Then, GPCRs are endocytosed by clathrin-dependent and adaptor protein 2 (AP2)-complex-dependent mechanisms.
Similar to mammalian GPCRs, the plant 7TM-RGS1 is trafficked rapidly from the plasma membrane to the endosome upon D-glucose or other sugar treatments (figure 3b) [53,55]. Like mammalian GPCRs, AtRGS1 is phosphorylated at the C-terminus, shown to be essential for AtRGS1 endocytosis. Although plant genomes do not encode GRK homologues, a WITH NO LYSINE kinase (WNK), AtWNK8, found among the G protein interactome (discussed below), phosphorylates AtRGS1 for endocytosis. Because clathrin-dependent and AP2-complex-dependent systems are conserved between mammals and plants, these trafficking components are possibly critical for AtRGS1 endocytosis. AtGPA1 remains on the plasma membrane, thus AtRGS1 and AtGPA1 become physically uncoupled allowing AtGPA1 to self-activate (figure 3) [53]. Because loss-of-function mutations in AtRGS1 do not confer constitutive sugar signalling, the story is more complex. One explanation is that sugar signalling through activated AtGPA1 at the  3.3. Structure and mechanism of plant 'self-activating' G protein The a-subunit of the G protein complex is composed of distinctive helical and Ras domains (see Arabidopsis AtGPA1 structure in figure 4b). The Ras domain contains motifs to bind guanine nucleotide, Gbg dimer [62], GPCRs and effectors, whereas the helical domain shelters the guanine nucleotide binding pocket. The b-subunit contains an amino-terminal coiled-coil motif and a carboxyl-terminal WD40 repeat domain [62] (figures 4a and 5). The amino-terminus of Gb forms the stable coiledcoil interaction with the g-subunit [62], and the WD40 repeat domain contains the effector and Ga binding surface (figure 4a). The effector binding surface on Gb is normally masked by the GDP-bound form of Ga protein; therefore, Gbg is active only after dissociating from the a-subunit [2]. The g-subunit is a small (normally less than 100 residue) protein containing a coiled-coil region and a prenylation site at its carboxyl-terminus [1] (figures 4a and 5), which is required for its membrane targeting [63,64]. This is described in greater detail below. The human Ga structure is remarkedly altered, depending on the presence or absence of a GPCR [6]. As described earlier, the helical domain of the Ga-subunit covers the guanine rsob.royalsocietypublishing.org Open Biol 3: 120186 nucleotide (figure 4a, left), however, the helical domain is oriented by agonist-bound GPCR (figure 4a, right), and the structural change discloses the guanine nucleotide binding pocket on the Ras domain and promotes GDP dissociation from the Ga protein [6]. Arabidopsis G protein rapidly dissociates its GDP without GEF proteins [35]. As shown in figure 4b, the crystal structure of AtGPA1 is essentially the same as the human inhibitory Ga protein, Gai1 (the root-mean-squared deviation is only 1.8 Å ) [36], but the helical domain of AtGPA1 is the structure that imparts the rapid GDP dissociation property [36]. Molecular dynamics simulations of the AtGPA1 structure indicate spontaneous fluctuation of the Arabidopsis helical domain in the absence of a GPCR [38], suggesting the conserved role of the helical domain to determine nucleotide dissociation from the a-subunit. Overall, the plant G protein rapidly exchanges its guanine nucleotide owing to the spontaneous fluctuation of the helical domain that is normally promoted by agonist-bound GPCR in animals.

G-protein-coupled receptor candidates proposed in the plant kingdom
In the race to find plant GPCRs, there were many stumbles. Several GPCR-type candidates were initially proposed but later discredited. GCR1 [11,59,[65][66][67], GCR2 [68], mildew resistance locus O (MLO) proteins [69,70], GPCR-type G protein (GTG) 1 and GTG2 [60], and some others [71,72] were proposed to be GPCRs based on the predicted or proved membrane topology, and some G-protein-related phenotypes were genetically shown in Arabidopsis providing some support. GCR1 shares homology with the cAMP  Figure 5. Domain structures of Arabidopsis G protein-related proteins. AtGPA1, a canonical Ga-subunit, is composed of a Ras-homology domain and a helical domain. Ga sequence contains N-terminal lipid modification sites, three switch regions and guanine nucleotide binding motifs. Ga has a conserved asparagine for cholera toxin (CTX), although there has been no evidence that CTX ADP-ribosylates plant Ga-subunits. AGB1, a Gb-subunit, harbours N-terminal coiled-coil helices and a WD40 repeat propeller. Typical (AGG1 or AGG2) and atypical (AGG3) Gg-subunits: typical Gg-subunit has a coiled-coil region to form a dimer with Gb and a C-terminal CaaX motif for a lipid modification; atypical Gg3 has a potential transmembrane helix in the middle, a cysteine-rich sequence in the C-terminal region and a putative CaaX motif. Notably, the CaaX motif of AGG3 is not conserved in some other plants. XLG, a plant-specific Ga-like protein, has a nuclear localization signal (NLS), cysteine-rich region and a C-terminal Ga-like domain [57]. The Ga-like sequence does not conserve some of the residues for hydrolysing GTP or for interacting with Gbg [57,58]. AtRGS1 is a 7TM protein harbouring a RGS domain; the 7TM region is essential for localizing RGS1 to the plasma membrane [52]. The RGS domain binds to the Ga-subunit and accelerates the GTPase activity [23]. The C-terminal phosphorylation sites are critical in its endocytosis [53]. AtGCR1 is a 7TM protein similar to a slime mould cAMP receptor; the C-terminal region was essential in the Ga interaction [59]. GTG is a GPCR-type GTP-binding protein; AtGTG1 and AtGTG2 possess nine potential transmembrane helices, a homologous region to mammalian RasGAP protein and a nucleotide binding motif-like sequence [60]. The human homologue functions as a pH-dependent anion channel [61], but the structural basis has not been analysed.
rsob.royalsocietypublishing.org Open Biol 3: 120186 receptor (cAR1) of Dictyostelium discoideum [65] and was reported to interact with AtGPA1 [59]. Both G protein genes and GCR1 are involved in abscisic acid (ABA)-dependent stomate closure (see §5 for details) [13,59]. However, direct GEF activity of GCR1 on AtGPA1 is not shown, and the combination of AtGPA1 and GCR1 null mutations indicated the existence of a G-protein-independent function for GCR1 in brassinosteroid (BR) and GA responses [73]. The interaction between GCR1 and AtGPA1 is controversial [59,74].
Using the weak sequence similarity between cAR1 and GCR1 to claim GPCR homology may not be warranted because it is not confirmed whether D. discoideum cAR1 has guanine nucleotide exchange activity on Ga protein(s) [75]. In fact, cAR-like proteins are found in organisms lacking G proteins. Furthermore, the human genome encodes around 800 GPCR genes, but none are homologous to D. discoideum's cAR1 gene [76], and no homologous gene encoding a non-cAR GPCR is found in plant genomes [76]. Therefore, without homology support or biochemical proof and without the need for a GEF to activate a plant Gasubunit, there is no compelling reason to designate GCR1 as a GPCR. Among other plant GPCR candidates published, GCR2 was disproved because it lacks a 7TM domain [77,78] and its published ABA-related phenotypes [68] are not reproducible [78][79][80]. MLO proteins are the only plant 7TM candidates to have a proved GPCR topology; however, there is no genetic evidence that MLOs regulate G proteins [81].
Recently, GTG1 and GTG2 were proposed to be plant GPCRs. GTG proteins are highly homologous to the human GPR89a that was erroneously annotated as GPCR 89 [60]. The human GPR89a protein is a voltage-dependent anion channel and is now re-annotated as a Golgi pH transporter [61]. This biochemical function for GTG proteins is supported by a recent study [82] showing that GTG1 is localized primarily in Golgi bodies and in the endoplasmic reticulum, but not in the plasma membrane, raising doubts about whether GTG proteins function as GPCRs. It should be emphasized that not all seven transmembrane proteins function as GPCRs. Instead, they also have other functions such as ion channels in insects, channel rhodopsins in green algae or bacterial rhodopsins [83][84][85]. Finally, many of the so-called plant GPCRs have homologues in organisms that lack G signalling altogether, indicating that the constrained evolutionary function is something other than G protein activation [86]. Therefore, plant biologists must exercise extreme caution in interpreting plant GPCR functionality, especially because some human GPCR-like genes, such as those called orphan receptors, are not yet proved to have G-protein-dependent functions [87].

G protein components and their regulators in plants
The Arabidopsis genome contains one canonical Ga (AtGPA1) [7], one Gb (AGB1) [30] and three Gg (AGG1, AGG2 and AGG3) genes [31,32,88]. This is roughly the G protein inventory for most diploid plants; for example, rice encodes one canonical Ga, one Gb and 5 Gg-subunits [89]. The few species having more than one Ga-subunit are recent polyploids, and there is no reason to conclude that these Ga-subunits evolved subfunctions [12]. Loss-of-function mutants of AtGPA1 and AGB1 share phenotypes, including altered sugar sensing [21,22,90,91], stomate closure [13,38] and seedling development [26,37], whereas agb1 mutants, but not gpa1 mutants, show increased lateral root production [37] and are hypersensitive to fungal infection (table 1) [16,18,39]. agg1 and agg2 mutants singly and in combination selectively phenocopy the AGB1 null mutant in pathogen resistance, development and sugar sensing [39,93], whereas the triple agg1 agg2 agg3 mutant displays all the AGB1 null mutant phenotypes examined [88,94]. Therefore, as in mammalian systems, the Gbg dimer functions as one signalling element and not as free Gb-or Gg-subunits. G protein g-subunits exhibit an extraordinary level of structural diversity (figure 5) and show important differences to their animal counterparts [89]. While all animal g-subunits are very small proteins (less than 100 amino acids), AGG3 is 251 amino acids long and some AGG3 homologues can be in excess of four times the average mammalian size (the rice AGG3 homologue DEP1 is 426 amino acids long). Another important difference is that many plant g-subunits do not contain an isoprenylation motif at their C-terminus, an obligate requisite in all animal g-subunits and essential for membrane anchoring. At this time, there are three classes of g-subunits based on their structure [89]. Type A groups the prototypical g-subunits, small in size and containing a C-terminal CaaX isoprenylation motif (CaaX means cytosine, then any 2 aliphatic residues and then, X, any residue). Type B g-subunits are similar to type A, still small in size but lacking the CaaX motif, or indeed any cysteine residues at the C-terminal end of the protein. Type C g-subunits have two well-defined regions: an N-terminal domain with high similarity to classic g-subunits and a C-terminal domain highly enriched in cysteine residues [89]. Importantly, Arabidopsis does not have a type B g-subunit, with AGG1 and AGG2 both being type A subunits, whereas AGG3 is type C. Arabidopsis AGG1 and AGG2 and rice Gg1 (RGG1) have the prototypical Gg architecture [27][28][29]. Rice Gg2 (RGG2) lacks the prenylation site [29]. Arabidopsis AGG3 has an N-terminal Gg domain, a weakly predicted transmembrane helix near the centre, and a C-terminal-cysteine-rich region [72]. The rice genome encodes three AGG3 homologues: GS3, DEP1 and G protein g-subunit type C 2 (OsGGC2) [73]. Compared with the Gg-domain possessing typical length and predicted secondary structure, the cysteine-rich domain is highly divergent among different species [73].
In addition to the single canonical Ga-subunit, Arabidopsis has three extra-large G protein genes (XLG1, XLG2 and XLG3), composed of a C-terminal Ga-like domain and an N-terminal extension containing a nuclear localization signal and a cysteine-rich region (figure 5) [57]. The XLG proteins bind and hydrolyse guanine nucleotides [101], interact with Gb [102], localize primarily to the nucleus [103] and exhibit physiological functions in root morphogenesis [103]. While typical a-subunits use small bivalent cations (e.g. magnesium, calcium or manganese) for optimal nucleotide binding and hydrolysis, XLG proteins require an extremely low amount of calcium as cofactor, but not magnesium. These findings are not consistent with structural predictions [58]; thus our understanding of these unusual Ga-subunits is unclear, and future work will undoubtedly yield new surprises. Figure 6 summarizes the presence of G protein components and regulators in representative species in eudicots (Arabidopsis thaliana), monocots (Oryza sativa and Phoenix dactylifera), gymnosperms (Picea sitchensis), spikemosses (Selaginella moellendorffii), bryophytes (Marchantia polymorpha and Physcomitrella patens) and green algae (Micromonas pusilla and Chlamydomonas reinhardtii) [48]. With few exceptions, the G protein components (a-, b-and g-subunits) and the RGS genes are either found or deleted together in each genome [104]. This suggests that these four proteins function together, and deletion of one of the components from the genome releases the other elements from an evolutionary constraint to keep them intact in the genome. Homologous genes of Arabidopsis Ga, Gb, Gg and XLG are broadly found in land plants, except the moss, P. patens, which encodes no Ga homologous gene [48]. No G protein elements are yet found in the sequenced green algae genomes. The 7TM-RGS genes are found in eudicots, a monocot (date palm), gymnosperms and Selaginella, but not in the fully sequenced genomes of true grasses (e.g. rice and maize), bryophytes and green algae [48]. Both the 7TM domain and the RGS box of the 7TM-RGS genes are well conserved throughout the land plants, suggesting that the two domains were fused early during plant evolution [48].
The two 'RGS-less' exceptions in plants raise the opportunity to find still another mechanism for G protein activation. While monocots have 7TM-RGS proteins, the cereals, a subgroup of monocots, and the liverwort M. polymorpha lack functional RGS proteins [48]. Interestingly, the liverwort Ga-subunit hydrolyses its GTP rapidly in the absence of any regulatory protein (M. polymorpha MpGa, k cat ¼ 0.87 min 21 ) [48] likely to compensate for the loss of the 7TM-RGS protein in liverwort. This drastic difference in the intrinsic property of the liverwort Ga-subunit indicates that an intrinsic regulatory feature of signalling molecules is constrained or determined by the binding partner, and that a loss of the regulator gene may lead to a drastic change of intrinsic property of the target molecule during evolution. In contrast to liverwort, the rice G protein is self-activating-like AtGPA1, because of  [100] rsob.royalsocietypublishing.org Open Biol 3: 120186 its rapid nucleotide exchange (RGA1; k on ¼ 0.9-2.4 min 21 ) and slow hydrolysis of GTP (RGA1, k cat ¼ 0.05 min 21 ) [48,105]. No regulatory element of rice G protein has been identified so far, but the intrinsic property of RGA1 implies that it is regulated by unknown GAP proteins. These observations make study of rice and liverwort signalling of foremost importance; no doubt we will find even more bizarre mechanisms controlling the G protein activation state. It should be noted that GCR1, GCR2, GTG and MLO proteins are well conserved in land plants and green algae, even in species lacking encoded Ga and/or the other G protein components in their genomes ( figure 6). The homologies between the A. thaliana and the green alga M. pusilla genes are supported by high expectation values (AtGCR1, E-value ¼ 7e 221 ; AtGTG1 E-value ¼ 1e 237 ; and AtMLO1, E-value ¼ 2e 295 ). Normally, genes losing their functional partners are released from genetic constraint, quickly mutate and become deleted from the genome (neutral theory of evolution [106]). The lineage of green algae was separated from land plants more than 1 billion years ago [107]. Therefore, these GPCR-like genes conserved in green algae probably have a function irrelevant to G signalling [86].  [121]. Among many G protein interactors [91,115,116,[119][120][121][122][123], some function as potential G protein effectors, such as thylakoid formation 1 (THF1) for Ga [91] and ACI-reductone dioxygenase 1 for Gbg [119], although effectors identified so far are not sufficient to explain divergent functions of plant G proteins. An international consortium of plant G protein researchers undertook a focused screen to identify, ab initio, plant G protein effectors [42]. The interactors include many proteins having different intracellular localizations, physiological functions and domain architectures. Some of them are completely uncharacterized proteins, but others have well-defined domains, such as kinases, phosphatases and transcription factors. Within the set of kinases, AtWNK8 phosphorylates AtRGS1 and induces AtRGS1 endocytosis [53]. Interestingly, AtRGS1 is predicted to interact with some receptor-like kinases (RLKs) [42]. The Arabidopsis genome has more than 600 genes in the RLK gene family, and many of them have known ligands and signal transduction pathways. Because there are genetic links between the RLKs, such as ERECTA [16,36], and heterotrimeric G proteins, it is possible that the RLKs may transmit signals to G proteins through the phosphorylation and endocytosis of AtRGS1. As mentioned earlier, despite the small subset of the genes, plant G proteins operate in many signal pathways; adding the RLK to the mix is a possible explanation of how so many signals can propagate through this G protein nexus. Because plant G proteins are detected in a huge protein complex in vivo [33,124], the RLKs or other unidentified proteins would compose the stable machinery with G proteins.

The G protein effectors and the plant G protein interactome
There are a few findings that should be noted but still do not make sense. Wang's group reported that AtGPA1 directly inhibits activity of the phospholipase, PLDa [105], and that this enzyme possesses a 'DRY' motif [116] found on GPCRs that is important for G activation in animals. The PLDa interaction is to the GDP form and purportedly stimulates steadystate hydrolysis, but this is unexpected because increased hydrolysis dictates interaction with the GTP-bound form or the transition state. Moreover, their published PLDa 'DRY' sequence was shown to be incorrect [125], and there are no follow-up publications of this exciting finding, suggesting this avenue may be a dead end. Similarly, a claim is made that pea and wheat Ga-subunit interacts with PLC [11,126], but, again, with no follow-up in 5 years and the fact that plant PLCs do not have the G activation 'bells and whistles' of the corresponding animal PLC enzymes, there is cause for pause and bewilderment.

Physiological function of G proteins
This section summarizes physiological functions found from loss-of-function G protein mutants in Arabidopsis and rice (figure 7; tables 1 and 3).   Figure 6. G protein components in the plant kingdom. Homologous genes of Arabidopsis G protein components (the a-, band g-subunits), AtRGS1, XLG and 7TM proteins were searched using the BLAST program. The candidates of homologues were further evaluated by the membrane topology, domain structure, and other featured sequences. Coloured dots show conservation of homologous genes. See also [48,89] for the phylogenetic trees, accession numbers and Gg classes. Asterisk denotes a conifer XLG which is not registered in NCBI (nr/nr) data for P. sitchensis, but is found in EST data for Picea glauca.

Growth and morphology
rsob.royalsocietypublishing.org Open Biol 3: 120186  bind AGB1-AGG1 and AGB1-AGG2 a positive modulator of primary root growth and lateral root formation; positively modulate basipetal and negatively modulate acropetal auxin transport in an AGB1-dependent manner; work together with AGB1 to regulate primary root length and lateral root density through modulation of auxin transport; AGB1 is required for NDL1 protein stability in regions of the root where auxin gradients are established [120] rsob.royalsocietypublishing.org Open Biol 3: 120186 except that agb1, but not gpa1, promotes lateral root production [37]. Although loss-of-function alleles of Arabidopsis Gg1 (AGG1) and Gg2 (AGG2) appear to be largely normal, agg3 single and agg1 agg2 agg3 triple mutants exhibit many similar morphological phenotypes previously observed in agb1 mutants [39,88,93,94], indicating that the repertoire of Gg-subunits in Arabidopsis is complete [94]. Table 1 lists visible morphological phenotypes reported in G protein mutants. Four of these phenotypes are frequently described as characteristic of G protein mutants: (i) short hypocotyl and open apical hook in etiolated seedlings in gpa1 and agb1 mutants; (ii) round-shaped rosette leaves in gpa1, agb1, agg3 and agg1 agg2 agg3 mutants; (iii) reduced lateral root formation in gpa1 mutant and increased lateral root formation in agb1 mutants; and (iv) erecta-like flower morphology in agb1 and agg1 agg2 agg3 mutants. Although the precise cause of these growth and morphological phenotypes of G protein mutants is unclear, many of them are attributed to their fundamental cellular defects in cell division or elongation. For example, the short hypocotyl in gpa1 and agb1 etiolated seedlings is due to reduced axial cell division in hypocotyl epidermal cells [26,37]. The round-shaped rosette leaves in gpa1 mutants contain larger and fewer epidermal cells, presumably owing to increased cell expansion compensating reduction in cell division [26]. The reduced lateral root formation in gpa1 mutant and increased lateral root formation in agb1 mutant is largely due to altered activity in lateral root primordia, again pointing to a modulatory role on cell proliferation [37]. However, the molecular mechanism underlying the regulation of cell proliferation by G protein remains unclear. Because overexpression of AtGPA1 in synchronized tobacco BY-2 cells shortens the G1 phase of the cell cycle and promotes the formation of nascent cell plate [26], AtGPA1 may modulate the cell cycle at the G1-to-S transition phase. Some striking differences in growth and morphological phenotypes are observed between Arabidopsis and rice G protein mutants (table 1 and figure 7). The dwarf rice d1 mutant has dark green and broad leaves as well as compact panicles and short grains [130]. While Arabidopsis G protein mutants, gpa1 and agb1, are largely similar to wild-type plant in terms of height, both rice G protein mutants, rga1 and rgb1, are dwarf [28,29,95,97]. Moreover, two rice type C Gg-subunits, grain size 3 (GS3) and dense and erect panicle 1 (DEP1), are important quantitative trait loci for grain size and yield [89,[98][99][100], and mutations in both rice Gg-subunits enhanced yield. In Arabidopsis, gpa1, agb1 and agg3 mutant seeds are shorter and wider [88], contrasting to  [97]. (g) Seed shape; rice seeds for wild-type Nipponbare, Ga knockout (DK22) or Gb knockdown (5-4-1) lines. Ga knockout causes abnormal round shape of seeds [28,29].  the seed phenotype of the gs3 mutant. These findings suggest that cereals may use G protein signalling mechanisms distinct from other flowering plants. For example, a key regulator of G protein signalling (RGS) protein has been discovered in Arabidopsis but not in rice. A single amino substitution found in grass Ga is responsible for the physical decoupling of the RGS protein and its cognate Ga partner [48]. This may help explain some fundamental differences in growth and morphological phenotypes observed in G protein mutants between Arabidopsis and rice.

Hormone and glucose responses
Plant hormones regulate every aspect of plant growth and development. Given that G protein mutants display an array of phenotypes, it is not surprising that G protein mutants show alterations in responses to multiple plant hormones. Table 3 lists all published responses of G protein mutants to plant hormones. The most direct and compelling evidence for the involvement of G protein in a plant hormone response came from the work on rice dwarf mutant, d1 [28,29,95]. d1 was initially identified as a GA-insensitive mutant. Map-based cloning revealed that the defect in the d1 mutant was, in fact, due to a loss-of-function mutation in the gene encoding Ga, RGA1. Consistent with a role in GA, signalling, d1 rice aleurone cells are markedly less sensitive to GA, as quantitated by transcription of a-amylase and OsGAMYB that encodes a GAinducible transcription factor that positively regulates the expression of a-amylase. Similar to the rice d1 mutant, Arabidopsis G protein mutants also display reduced sensitivity to GA in seed germination [21,73].
gpa1, agb1 and agg3 mutants all are hypersensitive to ABA inhibition of seed germination [21,22,88], early seedling development and root elongation [21,22], and ABA-induced gene expression [22]. On the other hand, these mutants are hyposensitive to ABA inhibition of stomatal opening and inward K þ -channels [13,38,88]. These findings suggest that G proteins function as both negative and positive regulators of ABA signalling, depending on the specific cell type. Consistent with a role of G proteins in ABA signalling, several AtGPA1interacting proteins regulate ABA responses. For example, similar to gpa1 mutants, the gcr1 mutants are hypersensitive to ABA inhibition of seed germination, early seedling development and ABA-induced gene expression [22]. Similarly, pirin1 mutants are hyposensitive to ABA inhibition of seed germination and early seedling development [115].
G proteins are not essential for auxin responses because G protein mutants have wild-type responses to auxin inhibition of hypocotyl growth and primary root elongation [37]. However, G protein mutants have altered sensitivity to auxin in lateral root formation. While gpa1 mutants are less sensitive to auxin, agb1, agg1, agg2 and agg1 agg2 mutants are more sensitive to auxin in lateral root formation [37,88,127]. Data from follow-up studies of these observations indicate that G proteins modulate auxin transport. The effect of the auxin polar transport inhibitor, N-1-naphthylphthalamic acid (NPA), either applied at the shoot-root junction (to block polar auxin transport from the shoot) or at the root tip (to block basipetal auxin polar transport from the root tip), proves that AGG1 (together with AGB1) acts within the central cylinder to attenuate signalling from acropetally transported auxin, and that AGG2 (together with AGB1) affects the action of basipetally n.d. [95,128,129] rsob.royalsocietypublishing.org Open Biol 3: 120186 transported auxin within the epidermis and/or cortex [127]. These findings indicate that the Gg-subunits provide functional selectivity in Gbg dimer signalling.
Arguably the most known about the role of G proteins is in sugar signalling. All G protein subunit mutants are hypersensitive to glucose in seed germination [21,22,88,91,127]. gpa1 and agb1 are hypersensitive to glucose inhibition of early seedling development and root elongation [21,22,91]. The loss-of-function of AtRGS1 confers glucose hyposensitivity [23,40,51,73]. Glucose also attenuates G protein modulation of lateral root formation [90]. Because glucose regulates AtRGS1 activity towards AtGPA1 [40], and glucose stimulates the endocytosis of AtRGS1 protein and subsequently physically uncouples the GAP activity of AtRGS1 from AtGPA1, permitting the sustained activation of AtGPA1 [53], it has been proposed that AtRGS1 functions as a receptor or co-receptor for glucose. Considering the regulatory role of glucose in diverse hormone biosynthesis and signalling, it is possible that many of the hormone sensitivity phenotypes observed in G protein mutants may be due to altered glucose signalling. An attractive hypothesis is that plant hormone signalling integrates information about the plant nutrient status. This information is relayed, in part, by the RGS1 pathway.
Glucose and auxin merged recently in research on G-proteinmediated root growth and development [90,120,131,132]. Root architecture is established and maintained by gradients of auxin and nutrients such as sugars. Auxin is transported acropetally through the root within the central stele and then, upon reaching the root apex, auxin is transported basipetally through the outer cortical and epidermal cells. In Arabidopsis, AGG1 and AGG2 are differentially localized to the central and cortical tissues of the root, respectively. AGB1/AGG dimers bind a protein designated N-MYC downregulated-like1 (NDL1) [120]. NDL proteins act in a signalling pathway that modulates root auxin transport and auxin gradients in part by affecting the levels of at least two auxin transport facilitators. Gain-and lossof-function mutations place NDL proteins central to root architecture through a direct effect on auxin transport and auxin maxima patterns. Feedback controls involving AGB1, auxin and sugars are required for NDL1 protein stability in the regions of the root where auxin gradients are established.
Finally, gpa1 and agb1 mutants are hyposensitive to BR [21,26,128,129,133] in BR promotion of seed germination [26,73], and in BR inhibition of hypocotyl and root elongation [26]. agb1 mutants are hyposensitive to methyl jasmonate (MeJA) inhibition of root elongation and seed germination [18]. Rice rga1 mutants are hyposensitive to 24-epi-BR inhibition of root growth, the inclination of leaf lamina, the promotion of coleoptile and second leaf sheath elongation [128,129].
In addition to hormonal and sugar responses, G proteins are involved in light responses [24,134,135], in mechanical sensing at the root tip [130] and in calcium response to extracellular nucleotides [136], although the detailed mechanisms are unknown.

Stomatal movements and ion channel regulation
Stomata allow plants to exchange gases and water with the atmosphere. Oxygen and carbon dioxide diffuse out of or into leaves for photosynthesis, and water is lost from the leaves through transpiration. Stomatal opening and closing are regulated by environmental signals (e.g. light and humidity), plant hormones and pathogen infection [137][138][139]. The stomatal aperture size is determined by a pair of guard cells, which change cell shape through turgor pressure. The cell turgor is determined by ionic strength, gated by transmembrane flux of K þ , Cl 2 and malate [138,139]. In addition, cytosolic calcium and reactive oxygen species (ROS) function as second messengers to regulate the ionic strength and stomatal movements [138,139].
G proteins are involved in ABA-induced stomatal movements by controlling inward-and outward-rectifying potassium current or an anion channel [13,14,38,88,140]. Loss-of-function mutants of Arabidopsis AtGPA1, AGB1 or AGG3 are impaired in ABA-dependent inhibition of inward K þ channels, and are hypersensitive to ABA in inhibiting light-induced stomatal opening [13,38,88]. In agb1, agg3 or gpa1 agb1 mutant leaves, stomatal movement does not occur either with ABA or light, and K þ flux is not changed with ABA treatment [38,88]. However, the ABA-dependent regulation is not impaired in the Gg1/Gg2 double null plants [93], suggesting that the Gbg3 (AGB1/AGG3) complex specifically regulates this pathway. The Ga null plant has wild-type responsiveness to the pathogen bacterial peptide flg22 known to inhibit inward K þ channels and stomatal opening [140].
In addition to ion channel regulation, G protein mutations affect water availability [141,142], but this cannot be explained simply by aberrant stomate development [143]. gpa1 null mutations confer reduced, but agb1 or rgs1 mutations confer increased stomate density on cotyledons [142]. The gpa1 mutations also confer reduced stomate formation on mature leaves [141].
Arabidopsis G protein mutants have altered responsiveness to ozone [20], a chemical that elicits a bimodal oxidative burst in leaf cells [19,144]. Both gpa1 and agb1 mutants lack the early peak in the ozone-induced oxidative burst, whereas only gpa1 lacks the second peak [19]. In addition, when exposed to ozone, gpa1 mutants are more sensitive to damage, whereas agb1 mutants are less sensitive than wild-type plants. G proteins are also involved in the production of cytoplasmic H 2 O 2 necessary for the stomata closure induced by extracellular calmodulin (ExtCaM), also dependent on nitric oxide accumulation [15,62]. ExtCaM induces an increase in H 2 O 2 levels and cytosolic calcium, leading to a reduction in stomatal aperture. gpa1 mutants are impaired in ExtCaM-induced production of H 2 O 2 in guard cells and the subsequent stomata closure. ExtCaM-mediated NO generation is regulated by AtGPA1, whereas AtGPA1 activation of NO production depends on H 2 O 2 . Finally, the involvement of G proteins is not confined to the induction of ROS; agb1 mutants are more sensitive to H 2 O 2 than wild-type plants, suggesting that G proteins also influence sensitivity to ROS [63].

Pathogen resistance
In order to confront a huge variety of pathogens, plants use a two-tiered defence strategy; the primary defence recognizes conserved microbial molecules called pathogen-associated molecular patterns (PAMPs; sometimes referred to as microbe-associated molecular patterns) and trigger a response known as PAMP-triggered immunity (PTI). The second tier recognizes specific pathogen-effector proteins, unleashing the effector-triggered immunity (ETI). The PTI response is elicited by a variety of membrane-bound pattern recognition receptors that recognize PAMPs such as flagellin from bacterial pathogens or chitin from fungal pathogens. During evolution, some pathogens developed strategies to overcome PTI using virulence effectors, but plants acquired ETI.
The involvement of G proteins in plant defence was suspected early on [64,145]. The first evidence was obtained using chemical modulators of G protein activity, although these chemicals have questioned specificity. Cultured soya bean cells treated with an antigen-binding antibody fragment recognizing a highly conserved fragment in the Ga-subunit show a ten-fold enhancement of the elicitor-induced oxidative burst, whereas heat-inactivated antibody has no effect [146]. In addition, the synthetic peptide mastoparan, an activator for inhibitory Ga-subunits in animals, cause a typical defence-associated oxidative burst even in the absence of elicitors, although it should be noted that the action of mastoparan in plants has been called into question [147]. Transgenic tobacco plants expressing cholera toxin (CTX) under the light-inducible promoter have reduced susceptibility to Pseudomonas tabaci, accumulate high levels of salicylic acid and display constitutive expression of several pathogenesis-related (PR) genes [148]. CTX covalently modifies stimulatory Ga-subunits in animals, but its mode of action in plants is unknown. G proteins and the oxidative burst seem to be linked by activation of phospholipase C (PLC); however, if true, this would be by a mechanism dissimilar to animal systems [149] because plant PLCs lack domains known for G protein activation [150]. In potato, treatment with a non-hydrolysable analogue of GTP, which results in G protein activation, inhibited resistance to Phytophthora infestans [151]. Soya bean suspension cultures pre-treated with suramin, a G-protein inhibitor, lack the typical oxidative burst induced by Pseudomonas syringae pv. glycinea harbouring the avrA (avirulence) gene [152]. Additional direct and indirect evidence using chemical modulators links plant G proteins to defence responses [153][154][155][156][157][158][159][160][161], although chemical treatments could produce artefacts owing to uneven tissue penetration and the documented lack of specificity in plants [147,162].
The Arabidopsis and rice mutants prove the involvement of G proteins in defence. Rice d1 mutant alleles are susceptible to an avirulent race of the fungal pathogen Magnaporthe grisea, the causal agent of the rice blast disease [163]. Induction of the PR genes PR1 and PBZ1 compared with wild-type plants are delayed in the d1 mutant. Several d1 mutants treated with M. grisea sphingolipid elicitors produce little H 2 O 2 and fail to induce the PBZ1 gene [163]. Interestingly, by day 2 the steady-state level of RGA1 mRNA decreases upon infection with a virulent race of M. grisea and increases by an avirulent race, especially at the points of infection [163], indicating that induction of RGA1 expression is R-gene-dependent. In rice, the production of defence-related ROS is mediated by a small GTPase, OsRac1. OsRac1 acts downstream of RGA1 in the production of H 2 O 2 in response to M. grisea elicitors, but not in the expression of PR genes, emphasizing the complexity of the mechanism. The RGA1/OsRac1 defence pathway uses the mitogen-activated protein kinases (MAPK). OsMAPK6 is post-translationally activated by an M. grisea sphingolipid elicitor, and silencing of the gene severely suppresses the elicitor-activated expression of the PR protein, phenyl ammonia-lyase [164]. Both d1 and OsRac1 mutants strongly reduce the elicitor-induced OsMAPK6 activation as well as the OsMAPK6 protein levels, indicating that OsMAPK6 acts downstream of both G proteins. The link between OsMAPK6 and OsRac1 is further substantiated by co-immunoprecipitation experiments showing that OsMAPK6 interacts with the active OsRac1 but not with the inactive form. The lignin biosynthetic enzyme OsCCR1 and the ROS scavenger metallothionein (OsMT2b) are also regulated by OsRac1, and could be involved in the RGA1/OsRac1 defence pathway, although a direct link with RGA1 has not yet been demonstrated [165,166].
In contrast to the rice Ga-subunit, Arabidopsis Ga's involvement in defence is limited, and in fact Arabidopsis gpa1 mutants have slightly increased resistance to several pathogens. The link between G proteins and plant defence in Arabidopsis is nevertheless clearly established through the Gbg dimer [16,18]. Mutants deficient in AGB1 are more susceptible to the fungal pathogens Alternaria brassicicola, Botrytis cinerea, Fusarium oxysporum and Plectosphaerella cucumerina [16,18]. Upon infection with A. brassicicola or treatment with methyl jasmonate MeJA, agb1 mutants show a significant delay in the induction of the MeJA-induced PR genes PDF1.2, OPR3 and PAD3 [18], whereas expression of the salicylic-acid-dependent PR1 was increased after infection with P. cucumerina [16]. The abovementioned fungal pathogens are necrotrophs (or in some cases considered hemi-biotrophs, i.e. undergoing biotrophic and necrotrophic phases during their life cycle). When agb1 mutants are challenged with the bacterium P. syringae and the oomycete Peronospora parasitica, they do not show differences compared with the wild-type plants [16,18]. Cell wall callose deposition, a typical response to pathogen attack, is greatly reduced in agb1 mutants challenged with P. cucumerina, but not with P. parasitica. The increased susceptibility to necrotrophic fungi and the delayed induction of the MeJA-related PR genes suggests an involvement of AGB1 in the MeJA-mediated defence pathway. This hypothesis is supported by the decreased sensitivity displayed by the agb1 mutants to several MeJA-induced developmental phenotypes [18].
Three different Gg-subunits potentially confer functional selectivity to the Gbg dimer [39]. To investigate such selectivity, the involvement of all three Ggs in defence was studied, with AGG1 being clearly implicated in the response against F. oxysporum and A. brassicicola [39]. agg1 mutants are hypersensitive to F. oxysporum and A. brassicicola [39], the role of AGG2 is unclear, and AGG3 has no defence-related role [88]. Transgenic plants expressing AGG2 under the control of the AGG1 promoter complement agg1 mutants and restore resistance to wild-type levels, indicating that the defence specificity observed for AGG1 does not reside in its primary sequence and is transcriptional or post-transcriptional (L. Thung & J. S. Botella 2013, unpublished results) [167]. agb1 mutants are hypersensitive to the pathogen P. cucumerina, whereas gpa1, agg1 and agg2 mutants display similar levels of sensitivity to wild-type plants [168]. The double agg1 agg2 mutant exhibits identical sensitivity levels to agb1, implicating both Gg-subunits in the defence against this pathogen. The level of resistance in all mutants is correlated with lower xylose content in the cell wall [42,168].
Aside from the canonical subunits, one of three extra-large a-subunit XLGs [57], XLG2, is linked to plant defence [102]. xlg2 mutants have enhanced susceptibility to P. synringae and reduced induction of the pathogenesis-related gene PR2. Microarray analysis revealed that, aside from PR2, other pathogen-inducible genes are downregulated in xlg2 mutants in response to P. syringae infection, whereas overexpression of XLG2 resulted in the production and accumulation of aberrant transcripts for several defencerelated genes [102]. XLG2 physically interacts with AGB1, but the interaction is restricted to infected tissues. Interestingly, in contrast to agb1 mutants, xlg2 mutants show wild-type levels of resistance to the necrotrophic pathogens B. cinerea or A. brassicicola [102].
In addition to the direct resistance evidence obtained for a number of pathogens, G proteins are associated with plant defence responses such as cell death and the oxidative burst. Rice d1 mutants reduce hypersensitive response (HR)associated cell death upon infection with avirulent races of M. grisea [163]. AtGPA1, but not AGB1, is required for the cell death observed in response to ozone treatment in Arabidopsis [19]. agb1 mutations decrease cell death induced by tunicamycin, an antibiotic that inhibits N-linked protein glycosylation, implicating AGB1 in the unfolded protein response (UPR) [169,170]. The UPR is activated in response to disruption of the protein folding machinery and results in apoptotic cell death in mammalian systems [171]. Although the UPR is not well characterized in plants, it is well established that the endoplasmic reticulum's secretory machinery is important in plant immunity [169]. G proteins are also involved in phytochrome A-mediated cell death that occurs when hypocotyls of far redgrown seedlings are exposed to white light [63]. In contrast to the UPR, in this case, agb1 mutants show increased cell death, whereas gpa1 mutants show decreased cell death.
A rapid increase in ROS is observed following recognition of a pathogen by plants. Although ROS are intimately linked to the plant immune response, they also play important signalling roles in development, hormonal response and abiotic stress [19,144,172,173]. Pathogen-induced ROS production in rice contrasts with that in Arabidopsis G protein mutants. Rice d1 mutant cell cultures treated with elicitors derived from M. grisea show a reduced H 2 O 2 production, perhaps explaining the reduced resistance shown by the mutant [163]. Or perhaps not, because even though agb1 mutants are hypersensitive to P. cucumerina, no reduction in ROS production is observed upon infection with the pathogen [16,18]. These profound differences in pathogen resistance in rice and Arabidopsis G mutants bring us back again to one of the 'take home' lessons from this review. Because of mechanistic differences in G activation, it is important that both rice and Arabidopsis be adopted as models for G signalling research. For example, it is clear that G proteins play very different roles in Arabidopsis and rice defence, possibly owing to the absence of RGS proteins in grasses that might have resulted in divergent functional evolution at least for the a-subunit. Therefore, G protein mutants need to be produced and studied in other species before a 'universal' picture can be revealed.

Summary and perspective
Phenotypes of the loss-and gain-of-function mutants of G protein components, their regulators and the proposed effectors leave no doubt that plant G signalling does not follow in step with animal G signalling. The vast knowledge from the field of animal science is therefore of limited value to researchers studying G protein activation mechanisms in plants. This global difference is largely due to the unique 'self-activating' property of plant G proteins (see §3). The identification of G protein effectors and regulators will definitely advance the field. Great progress was made recently through a genome-wide screening for physical interactions with key signalling components in the G protein pathway in Arabidopsis [42]. It behoves the plant biology community to take advantage of this valuable plant resource (http:// bioinfolab.unl.edu/emlab/Gsignal/index.pl).
As for regulatory molecules, several 7TM proteins were identified as GPCR candidates, but there is no proof of their GEF activities. The rate-limiting step of the plant G protein cycle is different from that of animals. It appears that in most plants, if not all, the GTP hydrolysis is the rate-limiting step, and 7TM-RGS modulates the hydrolysis rate. However, G protein regulators are absent in the grasses, where 7TM-RGS genes cannot be found in fully sequenced genomes, implying that other proteins possessing GAP activity may modulate GTP hydrolysis in grasses. Furthermore, plant G proteins are apparently involved in divergent physiological processes, but the mechanism of how the G protein system perceives the extracellular stimuli remains unclear. We proposed that endocytosis of AtRGS1 by a kinase pathway decouples the 'self-activating' G protein from the negative regulator. Therefore, it will be informative to determine whether other potential ligands for G protein pathways (e.g. ABA and other hormones), in addition to D-glucose and other sugars, promote the AtRGS1 phosphorylation and endocytosis. Also, because several receptor kinases, including ERECTA [16,36], are genetically related to G protein mutants, it is interesting to test if the kinases directly phosphorylate AtRGS1 and promote its endocytosis. When the regulator candidates are identified, a biochemical approach is preferable to clarify the functionality in vitro. In parallel, use of FRET to measure in vivo activation of the Ga-Gbg complex is needed [124]. The downstream G protein effectors are also unclear, although much progress has been made in this arena (table 2).
In conclusion, Arabidopsis and rice have emerged as important model systems to advance our understanding of G signalling beyond what we have learned using animal cell lines and fungi. Because plants are the most distant eukaryotes from opisthokonts (e.g. animals and fungi) and have distinct G protein systems, plants make it possible to address the evolution of G signalling and network architecture. However, much is still to be done; a complete set of effectors and a better understanding of the apical reactions in G signalling are sorely needed.
Because G signalling is at the heart of many plant physiologies of agronomic importance, such as disease resistance and harvest index, translational work on G signalling will certainly improve agriculture [174]. The last 10 years brought great surprises, and we predict more to come in the next 10 years.