PlantTFDB
PlantRegMap/PlantTFDB v5.0
Plant Transcription Factor Database
Macleaya cordata
GRAS Family
Species TF ID Description
OUZ99150.1GRAS family protein
OVA01709.1GRAS family protein
OVA02528.1GRAS family protein
OVA02529.1GRAS family protein
OVA03359.1GRAS family protein
OVA04501.1GRAS family protein
OVA04544.1GRAS family protein
OVA06544.1GRAS family protein
OVA08349.1GRAS family protein
OVA08838.1GRAS family protein
OVA09613.1GRAS family protein
OVA09804.1GRAS family protein
OVA10283.1GRAS family protein
OVA10438.1GRAS family protein
OVA10784.1GRAS family protein
OVA10957.1GRAS family protein
OVA11649.1GRAS family protein
OVA11856.1GRAS family protein
OVA11967.1GRAS family protein
OVA12403.1GRAS family protein
OVA13118.1GRAS family protein
OVA13172.1GRAS family protein
OVA14158.1GRAS family protein
OVA15109.1GRAS family protein
OVA16047.1GRAS family protein
OVA17098.1GRAS family protein
OVA17146.1GRAS family protein
OVA17434.1GRAS family protein
OVA17577.1GRAS family protein
OVA17847.1GRAS family protein
OVA20838.1GRAS 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