PlantTFDB
PlantRegMap/PlantTFDB v5.0
Plant Transcription Factor Database
Spirodela polyrhiza
GATA Family
Species TF ID Description
Spipo0G0043400GATA family protein
Spipo0G0060600GATA family protein
Spipo0G0060800GATA family protein
Spipo10G0007900GATA family protein
Spipo11G0034200GATA family protein
Spipo11G0059200GATA family protein
Spipo11G0059500GATA family protein
Spipo14G0016600GATA family protein
Spipo18G0006400GATA family protein
Spipo18G0038700GATA family protein
Spipo19G0021800GATA family protein
Spipo1G0002500GATA family protein
Spipo1G0015100GATA family protein
Spipo1G0082500GATA family protein
Spipo1G0104600GATA family protein
Spipo21G0024900GATA family protein
Spipo21G0036200GATA family protein
Spipo5G0062500GATA family protein
Spipo8G0036600GATA family protein
Spipo8G0071900GATA family protein
GATA Family Introduction

GATA factors were first identified as proteins that interact with conserved WGATAR (W = T or A; R = G or A) motifs involved in erythroid-specific gene expressionin vertebrates.

GATA factors are characterised by the presence of conserved, type-IV zinc-finger motifs Animal factors typically contain two C-x2-Cx17-C-x2-C zinc-finger domains. The majority of known fungal GATA factors contain a single C-x2-C-x17-C-x2-C finger with greatest similarity to the carboxyl (C) terminal finger of animal GATA factors.Several examples of fungal GATA factors containing a variant C-x2-C-x18-C-x2-C DNA-binding domain are also known.

Examples of both C-x2-C-x17-Cx2-C (Type IVa) and C-x2-C-x18-C-x2-C (Type IVb) GATA factors are found within fungi; animals onlycontain the former configuration, and plants only the latter. Plant GATA factors typically contain a single zinc finger. The Arabidopsis type-IV zinc-finger proteins may represent the previously defined family of nuclear GATA-binding proteins implicated in light-responsive transcription.

Teakle GR, Manfield IW, Graham JF, Gilmartin PM.
Arabidopsis thaliana GATA factors: organisation, expression and DNA-binding characteristics.
Plant Mol Biol. 2002 Sep;50(1):43-57.
PMID: 12139008