PlantTFDB
PlantRegMap/PlantTFDB v5.0
Plant Transcription Factor Database
Selaginella moellendorffii
GRAS Family
Species TF ID Description
102071GRAS family protein
102631GRAS family protein
102726GRAS family protein
106387GRAS family protein
106490GRAS family protein
113376GRAS family protein
113858GRAS family protein
122435GRAS family protein
122441GRAS family protein
12696GRAS family protein
139506GRAS family protein
142207GRAS family protein
149826GRAS family protein
22445GRAS family protein
22449GRAS family protein
232175GRAS family protein
24847GRAS family protein
24848GRAS family protein
24851GRAS family protein
32919GRAS family protein
33543GRAS family protein
36301GRAS family protein
406689GRAS family protein
406691GRAS family protein
406693GRAS family protein
417095GRAS family protein
417099GRAS family protein
424843GRAS family protein
432055GRAS family protein
444260GRAS family protein
53339GRAS family protein
56382GRAS family protein
59613GRAS family protein
64241GRAS family protein
64559GRAS family protein
64588GRAS family protein
70744GRAS family protein
74492GRAS family protein
74605GRAS family protein
77165GRAS family protein
80549GRAS family protein
82663GRAS family protein
83123GRAS family protein
83267GRAS family protein
83811GRAS family protein
83927GRAS family protein
84560GRAS family protein
84762GRAS family protein
84991GRAS family protein
85562GRAS family protein
88625GRAS family protein
88990GRAS family protein
90295GRAS family protein
96442GRAS family protein
GRAS Family Introduction

The GRAS family of putative transcriptional regulators is found throughout the plant kingdom, and these proteins have diverse roles in plant development, including root development, axillary shoot development, and maintenance of the shoot apical meristem (Bolle, 2004). GRAS proteins show conserved residues in the C terminus but contain a variable N terminus with homopolymeric stretches of certain amino acids. It has recently been shown that two GRAS proteins that regulate root growth, SCARECROW (SCR) and SHORTROOT (SHR), interact with each other (Cui et al., 2007), while a class of GRAS proteins involved in regulating plant growth, the DELLA proteins, interact with a transcription factor involved in phytochrome signaling (de Lucas et al., 2008; Feng et al., 2008).

Hirsch S, Kim J, Munoz A, Heckmann AB, Downie JA, Oldroyd GE.
GRAS proteins form a DNA binding complex to induce gene expression during nodulation signaling in Medicago truncatula.
Plant Cell, 2009. 21(2): p. 545-57.
PMID: 19252081