PT - JOURNAL ARTICLE AU - Johanna Krahmer AU - Greg Goralogia AU - Akane Kubota AU - Richard S. Johnson AU - Young Hun Song AU - Michael J. MacCoss AU - Thierry LeBihan AU - Karen J Halliday AU - Takato Imaizumi AU - Andrew J. Millar TI - Time-resolved Interaction Proteomics of the Putative Scaffold Protein GIGANTEA in <em>Arabidopsis thaliana</em> AID - 10.1101/162271 DP - 2017 Jan 01 TA - bioRxiv PG - 162271 4099 - http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2017/08/28/162271.short 4100 - http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2017/08/28/162271.full AB - The large, plant-specific protein GIGANTEA (GI) is involved in many physiological processes, mediating rhythmic, post-translational regulation in part through circadian and light regulation of GI RNA expression. GI binds several proteins implicated in the circadian clock, the control of photoperiodic flowering, and abiotic stress responses, and has co-chaperone activity. By extension, further interaction partners might mediate the less well-understood roles of GI but the number and rhythmicity of these interactors is unknown. Here, we seek potential interactors in a time-specific manner, using quantitative proteomics from a time series study of transgenic Arabidopsis thaliana plants constitutively expressing an epitope-tagged GI protein. Previously-identified, direct and indirect interactors of GI were detected but no further F-box proteins related to known GI partners ZTL/FKF1/LKP2. The predominantly non-rhythmic, interacting proteins were implicated in protein folding or degradation, metabolism and chromatin modification, including a small set of partners shared with other clock-related proteins. A transcription factor homologue that we name CYCLING DOF FACTOR 6 (CDF6) was shown to interact both with GI and the ZTL/FKF1/LKP2 proteins and to control photoperiodic flowering. Our results indicate the biochemical pathways, beyond circadian and flowering regulation, that might be affected by GIGANTEA’s rhythmic, post-translational control.Significance Statement Significance statement of up to two sentences of no more than 75 words total;The GIGANTEA protein of Arabidopsis was known for circadian and flowering functions, mediated by the FKF1/LKP2/ZTL family of GI-interacting, F-box proteins, then for a co-chaperone activity of unknown scope. We performed time-resolved, interaction proteomics, identifying CDF6 (At1g26790) as a morning-specific GI interactor that controls flowering time. Unlike FKF1 and CDF proteins, most of the 240 candidate partners were not rhythmically enriched. They link GI to proteostasis and metabolic functions that might mediate GI’s physiological functions.