PlantTFDB
PlantRegMap/PlantTFDB v5.0
Plant Transcription Factor Database
Saccharum officinarum
GRAS Family
Species TF ID Description
Sof000314GRAS family protein
Sof001577GRAS family protein
Sof001944GRAS family protein
Sof002295GRAS family protein
Sof002513GRAS family protein
Sof002636GRAS family protein
Sof002912GRAS family protein
Sof003343GRAS family protein
Sof004308GRAS family protein
Sof005394GRAS family protein
Sof005959GRAS family protein
Sof006159GRAS family protein
Sof006754GRAS family protein
Sof006774GRAS family protein
Sof006903GRAS family protein
Sof007237GRAS family protein
Sof007976GRAS family protein
Sof008551GRAS family protein
Sof008601GRAS family protein
Sof008605GRAS family protein
Sof008759GRAS family protein
Sof008873GRAS family protein
Sof008999GRAS family protein
Sof009457GRAS family protein
Sof009787GRAS family protein
Sof010095GRAS family protein
Sof010295GRAS family protein
Sof010534GRAS family protein
Sof010692GRAS family protein
Sof011032GRAS family protein
Sof011833GRAS family protein
Sof011907GRAS family protein
Sof012163GRAS family protein
Sof012953GRAS family protein
Sof013842GRAS family protein
Sof014107GRAS family protein
Sof014363GRAS family protein
Sof014371GRAS family protein
Sof014762GRAS family protein
Sof015535GRAS family protein
Sof019445GRAS family protein
Sof019682GRAS 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