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In plants, fatty acids are synthesized within the plastid and need to be distributed to the different sites of lipid biosynthesis within the cell. Free fatty acids released from the plastid need to be converted to their corresponding coenzyme A thioesters to become metabolically available. This activation is mediated by long-chain acyl-coenzyme A synthetases (LACSs), which are encoded by a family of nine genes in Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana). So far, it has remained unclear which of the individual LACS activities are involved in making plastid-derived fatty acids available to cytoplasmic glycerolipid biosynthesis. Because of its unique localization at the outer envelope of plastids, LACS9 was regarded as a candidate for linking plastidial fatty export and cytoplasmic use. However, data presented in this study show that LACS9 is involved in fatty acid import into the plastid. The analyses of mutant lines revealed strongly overlapping functions of LACS4 and LACS9 in lipid trafficking from the endoplasmic reticulum to the plastid. In vivo labeling experiments with lacs4 lacs9 double mutants suggest strongly reduced synthesis of endoplasmic reticulum-derived lipid precursors, which are required for the biosynthesis of glycolipids in the plastids. In conjunction with this defect, double-mutant plants accumulate significant amounts of linoleic acid in leaf tissue.Two discrete but intimately connected pathways are involved in plant glycerolipid biosynthesis (Roughan et al., 1980). Both pathways follow exactly the same scheme of synthesis within the plastid and at the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) to assemble phosphatidic acid (PA) by two consecutive acylation reactions of glycerol-3-phosphate. Essential substrates for both pathways are fatty acids that are synthesized exclusively in plastids. De novo synthesized fatty acids can feed directly into the so-called prokaryotic lipid synthesis pathway localized within the plastid to produce phosphatidylglycerol (PG), the so-called C16:3 plants (e.g., Arabidopsis [Arabidopsis thaliana]), and also, other thylakoid lipids, like sulfoquinovosyldiacylglycerol, monogalactosyldiacylglycerol (MGDG), and digalactosyldiacylglycerol (DGDG; Heinz and Roughan, 1983). In addition, plastid-derived fatty acids are also substrates for eukaryotic lipid biosynthesis at the ER to produce important membrane lipid precursors, like PA and diacylglycerol (DAG). The main products of the lipid biosynthesis pathway in the ER are, however, phosphatidylcholine (PC), phosphatidylethanolamine (PE), and phosphatidylinositol. Recent studies revealed an additional mechanism to incorporate plastid-derived fatty acids at the ER by acyl editing of PC (Bates et al., 2007). In the proposed model (also designated as the Lands cycle; Lands, 1958), PC is continuously converted to lyso-PC, which becomes reacylated by newly exported fatty acids to generate PC again. However, irrespective of the route taken to attach the fatty acids to the glycerol backbone, the interconnection between plastidial and cytoplasmic lipid metabolism is, in most plant species, further complicated by the fact that the eukaryotic pathway is not only generating lipids for all extraplastidial compartments but also, synthesizing lipid precursors, which are delivered back to the plastid to become thylakoid lipids. Consequently, plastidial membrane lipids represent a mixture of molecules partially synthesized within the plastid and partially assembled at the ER. The contribution of ER and plastidial lipid synthesis to the overall mixture of thylakoid lipids differs strongly between different plant species, but in Arabidopsis, both sites of synthesis are responsible for approximately equal amounts of chloroplast lipids (Browse et al., 1986). Subtle biochemical differences reveal the site of synthesis of a specific lipid molecule. Because of different substrate specificities of the acyltransferases located at the ER and in the plastid, the resulting lipid molecules can be distinguished based on the fatty acids attached to the sn-2 position of the glycerol backbone. Whereas the lysophosphatidyl acyltransferase at the ER is highly specific for 18-carbon fatty acids, its plastidial homolog incorporates exclusively 16-carbon fatty acids into the sn-2 position.Another important difference between plastidial and cytoplasmic lipid metabolism is defined by the nature of the fatty acid substrate. In both cases, fatty acid thioesters are used; however, within the plastid, the fatty acids are provided as acyl-acyl carrier proteins (acyl-ACPs), whereas in the cytoplasm, acyl-CoAs are the established substrates. Acyl-ACP produced by plastidial fatty acid synthase can be used directly by enzymes of the plastidial lipid biosynthesis pathway, but fatty acids need to be exported and converted to acyl-CoA by long-chain acyl-CoA synthetases (LACS) to become substrate for the pathway operating at the ER. The precise mechanism of the fatty acid transport through the plastidial membrane is still unknown; however, the findings of acyl-ACP thioesterase activity in the stroma of plastids (Ohlrogge et al., 1978, 1979) and LACS activity at the outer envelope (Andrews and Keegstra, 1983; Block et al., 1983) suggested both enzymes to be involved in the export of fatty acids from plastids. This model was challenged by the identification of LACS9 as the major plastidial LACS isoform in Arabidopsis and the finding that its inactivation did not result in any substantial changes in lipid composition (Schnurr et al., 2002). Because LACS activity is encoded in Arabidopsis by a small gene family comprising nine genes (Shockey et al., 2002), there must be other LACS isoforms involved in providing acyl-CoA substrate to cytoplasmic lipid metabolism. Surprisingly, none of the lacs mutant lines analyzed so far, including single mutants of all members of the enzyme family, showed pronounced effects on glycerolipid metabolism. The data seem to suggest a network of overlapping LACS activities concealing the effects of individual members of the enzyme family. It may also indicate that mutual interactions between the different LACS enzymes are still poorly understood. To elucidate such interactions and identify those LACS activities contributing to glycerolipid metabolism, we established a comprehensive mutant collection comprising all possible double-mutant lines based on nine members of the LACS gene family. The individual mutants of this collection were screened for visual phenotypes potentially associated with modifications in lipid biosynthesis.Here, we show overlapping functions of LACS4 and LACS9 in Arabidopsis. The combined inactivation of both proteins results in severe morphological phenotypes of the adult plant that are tightly linked to changes in the fatty acid metabolism. The results suggest that both LACS activities are involved in fatty acid channeling and lipid processing. But instead of contributing to fatty acid export from the plastid, both proteins were found to be involved in the process of retrograde lipid flux from the ER to the plastid.  相似文献   

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There is growing interest in engineering green biomass to expand the production of plant oils as feed and biofuels. Here, we show that PHOSPHOLIPID:DIACYLGLYCEROL ACYLTRANSFERASE1 (PDAT1) is a critical enzyme involved in triacylglycerol (TAG) synthesis in leaves. Overexpression of PDAT1 increases leaf TAG accumulation, leading to oil droplet overexpansion through fusion. Ectopic expression of oleosin promotes the clustering of small oil droplets. Coexpression of PDAT1 with oleosin boosts leaf TAG content by up to 6.4% of the dry weight without affecting membrane lipid composition and plant growth. PDAT1 overexpression stimulates fatty acid synthesis (FAS) and increases fatty acid flux toward the prokaryotic glycerolipid pathway. In the trigalactosyldiacylglycerol1-1 mutant, which is defective in eukaryotic thylakoid lipid synthesis, the combined overexpression of PDAT1 with oleosin increases leaf TAG content to 8.6% of the dry weight and total leaf lipid by fourfold. In the plastidic glycerol-3-phosphate acyltransferase1 mutant, which is defective in the prokaryotic glycerolipid pathway, PDAT1 overexpression enhances TAG content at the expense of thylakoid membrane lipids, leading to defects in chloroplast division and thylakoid biogenesis. Collectively, these results reveal a dual role for PDAT1 in enhancing fatty acid and TAG synthesis in leaves and suggest that increasing FAS is the key to engineering high levels of TAG accumulation in green biomass.  相似文献   

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The endoplasmic reticulum (ER) is a network of tubules and sheet-like structures in eukaryotic cells. Some ER tubules dynamically change their morphology, and others form stable structures. In plants, it has been thought that the ER tubule extension is driven by the actin-myosin machinery. Here, we show that microtubules also contribute to the ER tubule extension with an almost 20-fold slower rate than the actin filament-based ER extension. Treatment with the actin-depolymerizing drug Latrunculin B made it possible to visualize the slow extension of the ER tubules in transgenic Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) plants expressing ER-targeted green fluorescent protein. The ER tubules elongated along microtubules in both directions of microtubules, which have a distinct polarity. This feature is similar to the kinesin- or dynein-driven ER tubule extension in animal cells. In contrast to the animal case, ER tubules elongating with the growing microtubule ends were not observed in Arabidopsis. We also found the spots where microtubules are stably colocalized with the ER subdomains during long observations of 1,040 s, suggesting that cortical microtubules contribute to provide ER anchoring points. The anchoring points acted as the branching points of the ER tubules, resulting in the formation of multiway junctions. The density of the ER tubule junction positively correlated with the microtubule density in both elongating cells and mature cells of leaf epidermis, showing the requirement of microtubules for formation of the complex ER network. Taken together, our findings show that plants use microtubules for ER anchoring and ER tubule extension, which establish fine network structures of the ER within the cell.The endoplasmic reticulum (ER) is a complex network composed of tubules and sheet structures. The ER network’s morphology changes dynamically by elongation and shrinkage of tubules, sheet expansion, and sliding junctions. For example, an ER tubule elongates straight forward from a cisterna and subsequently, fuses to another cisterna, producing a linkage between two cisternae. If an elongating tubule fails to fuse to another cisterna, the tubule contracts into the original cisterna. However, the ER has stable anchoring points that associate with other cellular structures, such as the plasma membrane or cytoskeleton. When an elongating ER tubule reaches an association point, it forms a stable ER anchor (i.e. establishment of the ER anchoring points forms stable ER tubules). Hence, increasing the number of ER anchoring points produces fine ER meshwork.ER dynamics in eukaryotes depend on the cytoskeleton. In plants, major contributors for ER organization are actin filaments (Quader et al., 1989; Knebel et al., 1990; Lichtscheidl and Hepler, 1996; Sparkes et al., 2009a) and the actin-associated motor proteins (myosins; Prokhnevsky et al., 2008; Peremyslov et al., 2010; Ueda et al., 2010). However, it had generally been thought that microtubules are not involved in ER organization in plants, because microtubule-depolymerizing drugs do not induce obvious changes in the ER network (Quader et al., 1989; Knebel et al., 1990; Lichtscheidl and Hepler, 1996; Sparkes et al., 2009a). Nevertheless, involvement of microtubules in plant ER organization has been suspected from several electron microscopy observations that showed microtubules located close to the ER membrane in Vicia faba guard cells, Nicotiana alata pollen tubes, and Funaria hygrometrica caulonemata (Lancelle et al., 1987; Hepler et al., 1990; McCauley and Hepler, 1992).Foissner et al. (2009) have suggested that microtubules are involved in motility and orientation of cortical ER in Characean algae (Nitella translucens, Nitella flexilis, Nitella hyalina, and Nitella pseudoflabellata) internodal cells. Characean cortical ER is spatially separated from inner cytoplasmic streaming by the middle layer of fixed chloroplasts. The cortical ER forms a tight meshwork of predominantly transverse ER tubules that frequently coalign with microtubules, and microtubule depolymerization reduces the transverse ER tubules and increases mesh size (Foissner et al., 2009). Consistently, Hamada et al. (2012) have shown in Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) that microtubule depolymerization increases mesh size in young elongating cells. In addition, stable ER tubule junctions are often colocalized with cortical microtubules (Hamada et al., 2012), suggesting that microtubules stabilize ER tubule junctions to form fine ER meshes. Oryzalin-induced ER nodulation (Langhans et al., 2009) was not observed in our experimental conditions.Here, we showed that ER tubules elongate along microtubules in plant cells. In addition, we revealed that the ER is stably anchored to defined points on cortical microtubules. The stable anchoring points are the basis of various ER shapes, such as three-way, two-way, or dead-end ER tubules. These microtubule-ER interactions, together with the actin-myosin system, contribute to ER network organization.  相似文献   

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In this article, we show that the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) in Arabidopsis thaliana undergoes morphological changes in structure during ER stress that can be attributed to autophagy. ER stress agents trigger autophagy as demonstrated by increased production of autophagosomes. In response to ER stress, a soluble ER marker localizes to autophagosomes and accumulates in the vacuole upon inhibition of vacuolar proteases. Membrane lamellae decorated with ribosomes were observed inside autophagic bodies, demonstrating that portions of the ER are delivered to the vacuole by autophagy during ER stress. In addition, an ER stress sensor, INOSITOL-REQUIRING ENZYME-1b (IRE1b), was found to be required for ER stress–induced autophagy. However, the IRE1b splicing target, bZIP60, did not seem to be involved, suggesting the existence of an undiscovered signaling pathway to regulate ER stress–induced autophagy in plants. Together, these results suggest that autophagy serves as a pathway for the turnover of ER membrane and its contents in response to ER stress in plants.  相似文献   

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The unfolded protein response (UPR) is a conserved eukaryotic signaling pathway regulating endoplasmic reticulum (ER) homeostasis during ER stress, which results, for example, from an increased demand for protein secretion. Here, we characterize the homologs of the central UPR regulatory proteins Hac1 (for Homologous to ATF/CREB1) and Inositol Requiring Enzyme1 in the plant pathogenic fungus Ustilago maydis and demonstrate that the UPR is tightly interlinked with the b mating-type-dependent signaling pathway that regulates pathogenic development. Exact timing of UPR is required for virulence, since premature activation interferes with the b-dependent switch from budding to filamentous growth. In addition, we found crosstalk between UPR and the b target Clampless1 (Clp1), which is essential for cell cycle release and proliferation in planta. The unusual C-terminal extension of the U. maydis Hac1 homolog, Cib1 (for Clp1 interacting bZIP1), mediates direct interaction with Clp1. The interaction between Clp1 and Cib1 promotes stabilization of Clp1, resulting in enhanced ER stress tolerance that prevents deleterious UPR hyperactivation. Thus, the interaction between Cib1 and Clp1 constitutes a checkpoint to time developmental progression and increased secretion of effector proteins at the onset of biotrophic development. Crosstalk between UPR and the b mating-type regulated developmental program adapts ER homeostasis to the changing demands during biotrophy.  相似文献   

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In contrast with animal-infecting viruses, few known plant viruses contain a lipid envelope, and the processes leading to their membrane envelopment remain largely unknown. Plant viruses with lipid envelopes include viruses of the Bunyaviridae, which obtain their envelope from the Golgi complex. The envelopment process is predominantly dictated by two viral glycoproteins (Gn and Gc) and the viral nucleoprotein (N). During maturation of the plant-infecting bunyavirus Tomato spotted wilt, Gc localizes at endoplasmic reticulum (ER) membranes and becomes ER export competent only upon coexpression with Gn. In the presence of cytosolic N, Gc remains arrested in the ER but changes its distribution from reticular into punctate spots. Here, we show that these areas correspond to ER export sites (ERESs), distinct ER domains where glycoprotein cargo concentrates prior to coat protein II vesicle–mediated transport to the Golgi. Gc concentration at ERES is mediated by an interaction between its cytoplasmic tail (CT) and N. Interestingly, an ER-resident calnexin provided with Gc-CT was similarly recruited to ERES when coexpressed with N. Furthermore, disruption of actin filaments caused the appearance of a larger amount of smaller ERES loaded with N-Gc complexes, suggesting that glycoprotein cargo concentration acts as a trigger for de novo synthesis of ERES.  相似文献   

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Lipid secretion from epidermal cells to the plant surface is essential to create the protective plant cuticle. Cuticular waxes are unusual secretory products, consisting of a variety of highly hydrophobic compounds including saturated very-long-chain alkanes, ketones, and alcohols. These compounds are synthesized in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) but must be trafficked to the plasma membrane for export by ATP-binding cassette transporters. To test the hypothesis that wax components are trafficked via the endomembrane system and packaged in Golgi-derived secretory vesicles, Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) stem wax secretion was assayed in a series of vesicle-trafficking mutants, including gnom like1-1 (gnl1-1), transport particle protein subunit120-4, and echidna (ech). Wax secretion was dependent upon GNL1 and ECH. Independent of secretion phenotypes, mutants with altered ER morphology also had decreased wax biosynthesis phenotypes, implying that the biosynthetic capacity of the ER is closely related to its structure. These results provide genetic evidence that wax export requires GNL1- and ECH-dependent endomembrane vesicle trafficking to deliver cargo to plasma membrane-localized ATP-binding cassette transporters.The aerial, nonwoody tissues of all land plants are covered by a waxy cuticle that protects the plant against nonstomatal water loss. The cuticle also provides the first barrier between the plant and its environment and mediates important biotic and abiotic interactions. The cuticle has two main components: cutin and waxes. Cutin is a tough, cross-linked polyester matrix primarily composed of C16 and C18 oxygenated fatty acids and glycerol (Pollard et al., 2008). Wax is a heterogenous mixture, primarily composed of very-long-chain (VLC) fatty acid derivatives (predominantly 29-carbon alkane in Arabidopsis [Arabidopsis thaliana] stems).As a result of biochemical approaches, forward genetic screens yielding the eceriferum (cer) mutants (Koornneef et al., 1989), and reverse genetics approaches (Greer et al., 2007), almost all of the enzymes in the wax biosynthesis pathway have been identified. The enzymes that elongate C16 or C18 fatty acids to VLC (greater than 20C) fatty acids are localized in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER; for review, see Haslam and Kunst, 2013). Primary alcohols are synthesized by the fatty acyl reductases (Rowland et al., 2006), while alkanes are generated via an undefined mechanism involving CER1, CER3, and an unidentified cytochrome b5 (Bernard et al., 2012). These alkanes may be modified by the midchain alkane hydroxylase cytochrome P450 (MAH1) to generate secondary alcohols and ketones (Greer et al., 2007). All of these wax synthesis enzymes have also been localized to the ER (Greer et al., 2007; Bernard et al., 2012).In contrast to wax synthesis, comparatively little is known about how waxes are trafficked within the cell from their site of synthesis at the ER to the plasma membrane. ATP-binding cassette (ABC) transporters of the G subfamily are required for wax export, and when either half-transporter is disrupted, waxes accumulate in the ER (McFarlane et al., 2010). Two extracellular glycosylphosphatidylinositol-anchored lipid transfer proteins (LTPs) are further required for wax accumulation on the plant surface (DeBono et al., 2009; Kim et al., 2012). Although these components of the molecular machinery of wax transport at the plasma membrane have been identified, the intracellular mechanisms by which waxes are transported to the plasma membrane remain undefined.Several mechanisms have been hypothesized for the transport of waxes from the ER to the plasma membrane (for review, see Samuels et al., 2008). Waxes could be incorporated into vesicles at the ER, travel to and through the Golgi apparatus and the trans-Golgi network (TGN), and then move to the plasma membrane via vesicle secretion. These vesicles could carry wax components within their membranes, as computational modeling of wax components in lipid bilayers indicates that VLC alkanes partition entirely into the hydrophobic phase of the bilayer (Coll et al., 2007). Alternatively, lipoproteins may bind to lipid molecules in order to solubilize them so that they can be transported as cargo in the vesicle lumen, by analogy to mammalian systems where lipoproteins are secreted from hepatocytes into the circulatory system by exocytosis via post-Golgi vesicles (for review, see Mansbach and Siddiqi, 2010). However, no analogous lipid-binding apoproteins or transport vesicles have been found in plants. It is also possible that LTPs in membrane contact sites between the ER and the plasma membrane could transfer cuticular lipids directly from the ER to the plasma membrane. However, although these membrane contact sites have been observed in plant cells (Samuels and McFarlane, 2012), no structural or functional components of membrane contact sites are known.Early studies of VLC fatty acid trafficking used pulse-chase labeling to show that treatment with monensin, a post-Golgi trafficking inhibitor, results in decreased VLC fatty acid trafficking to the plasma membrane and a corresponding increase in these lipids in the Golgi apparatus (Bertho et al., 1991), suggesting a Golgi-dependent mechanism of VLC lipid trafficking to the plasma membrane. However, the “Golgi” fraction in this study contained significant elongase activity, which has subsequently been localized to the ER, making interpretation of these data difficult. While a variety of inhibitors are available that disrupt different stages in the secretory pathway (Zhang et al., 1993; Robinson et al., 2008), inhibitor studies of wax trafficking have proven ineffective, since the wax-producing epidermal cells do not effectively take up solutions carrying these inhibitors. This illustrates the difficulties of studying the transport of highly hydrophobic cargo, such as wax, within the single cell layer of epidermis.The objective of this study was to determine the intracellular trafficking mechanisms underlying cuticular wax transport from the ER to the plasma membrane. Arabidopsis mutants, which have been successfully applied in wax biosynthesis studies, were used to investigate wax secretion. Well-characterized mutants with defects in vesicle traffic and protein secretion were chosen to test the hypothesis that wax components are trafficked via endomembrane vesicles. These mutant analyses indicate that wax movement from the ER to the plasma membrane requires vesicle traffic at both the ER-Golgi interface and the TGN. Independent of secretion phenotypes, strong decreases in wax synthesis were observed in mutants with altered ER morphology, which implies that ER structure influences its biosynthetic capacity for wax production.  相似文献   

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Supramolecular organization of enzymes is proposed to orchestrate metabolic complexity and help channel intermediates in different pathways. Phenylpropanoid metabolism has to direct up to 30% of the carbon fixed by plants to the biosynthesis of lignin precursors. Effective coupling of the enzymes in the pathway thus seems to be required. Subcellular localization, mobility, protein–protein, and protein–membrane interactions of four consecutive enzymes around the main branch point leading to lignin precursors was investigated in leaf tissues of Nicotiana benthamiana and cells of Arabidopsis thaliana. CYP73A5 and CYP98A3, the two Arabidopsis cytochrome P450s (P450s) catalyzing para- and meta-hydroxylations of the phenolic ring of monolignols were found to colocalize in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) and to form homo- and heteromers. They moved along with the fast remodeling plant ER, but their lateral diffusion on the ER surface was restricted, likely due to association with other ER proteins. The connecting soluble enzyme hydroxycinnamoyltransferase (HCT), was found partially associated with the ER. Both HCT and the 4-coumaroyl-CoA ligase relocalized closer to the membrane upon P450 expression. Fluorescence lifetime imaging microscopy supports P450 colocalization and interaction with the soluble proteins, enhanced by the expression of the partner proteins. Protein relocalization was further enhanced in tissues undergoing wound repair. CYP98A3 was the most effective in driving protein association.  相似文献   

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Diacylglycerol (DAG) is an intermediate in metabolism of both triacylglycerols and membrane lipids. Probing the steady-state pools of DAG and understanding how they contribute to the synthesis of different lipids is important when designing plants with altered lipid metabolism. However, traditional methods of assaying DAG pools are difficult, because its abundance is low and because fractionation of subcellular membranes affects DAG pools. To manipulate and probe DAG pools in an in vivo context, we generated multiple stable transgenic lines of Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) that target an Escherichia coli DAG kinase (DAGK) to each leaflet of each chloroplast envelope membrane. E. coli DAGK is small, self inserts into membranes, and has catalytic activity on only one side of each membrane. By comparing whole-tissue lipid profiles between our lines, we show that each line has an individual pattern of DAG, phosphatidic acid, phosphatidylcholine, and triacylglycerol steady-state levels, which supports an individual function of DAG in each membrane leaflet. Furthermore, conversion of DAG in the leaflets facing the chloroplast intermembrane space by DAGK impairs plant growth. As a result of DAGK presence in the outer leaflet of the outer envelope membrane, phosphatidic acid accumulation is not observed, likely because it is either converted into other lipids or removed to other membranes. Finally, we use the outer envelope-targeted DAGK line as a tool to probe the accessibility of DAG generated in response to osmotic stress.Diacylglycerol (DAG) is a central metabolite in plant lipid metabolism. Its glycerol backbone is modified with two acyl chains. If a third acyl chain is added, triacylglycerol (TAG) is formed, whereas if a head group is added, it is converted into polar lipids such as a galactolipid. In green tissues, the majority of DAG is used as an intermediate in galactolipid synthesis, because the extensive thylakoid membrane system consists of approximately 85% galactolipids (Block et al., 1983). Although under normal conditions the galactolipids are exclusively chloroplastic, in Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana), the DAG used to make galactolipids is derived from assembly pathways in both the chloroplast and the endoplasmic reticulum (ER; Benning, 2009). In both pathways, the bulk of the fatty acids are synthesized in the chloroplast stroma (Browse et al., 1986) in the following order of abundance: 18:1, 16:0, and 18:0 (Wallis and Browse, 2002).In the chloroplast pathway, these fatty acids are directly attached to a glycerol-3-P, generating first lyso-phosphatidic acid (l-PtdOH) and then phosphatidic acid (PtdOH) in the inner leaflet of the chloroplast inner envelope (Fig. 1; Frentzen et al., 1983). The acyltransferases involved are specific to the extent that the sn-2 position of the glycerol backbone predominantly receives a 16:0 fatty acid. PtdOH is then used directly for phosphatidylglycerol (PtdGro) synthesis (Babiychuk et al., 2003) or converted to DAG by a PtdOH phosphatase (Joyard and Douce, 1977). The PtdOH phosphatase activity is known to be associated with the inner envelope, though which leaflet is obscured by the fact that DAG can efficiently flip across membranes (Hamilton et al., 1991) and the actual enzyme has not been unambiguously identified and located (Nakamura et al., 2007). However, the leaflet associations of two other enzymes that use DAG in the inner envelope have been established. MGD1, which uses DAG to synthesize the most abundant galactolipid, monogalactosyldiacylglycerol (MGDG), is on the outer leaflet of the inner envelope membrane (Xu et al., 2005), while SQD2, which uses DAG to generate the less abundant sulfolipid, sulfoquinovosyldiacylglycerol (SQDG), is located on the inner leaflet of the inner envelope membrane (Tietje and Heinz, 1998). Also associated with the inner envelope membrane are a number of fatty acid desaturases, including FAD4, FAD5, FAD6, FAD7, and FAD8 (Joyard et al., 2010). Two of these are specific, generating lipids with signature desaturations: FAD4 desaturates only the 16:0 fatty acid of PtdGro, giving plastidic PtdGro a distinct 16:1 Δ3 trans moiety (Browse et al., 1985; Gao et al., 2009), and FAD5 desaturates primarily the 16:0 fatty acid of MGDG, producing 16:1 Δ7 cis (Kunst et al., 1989). The remaining desaturases are less specific, with little preference for head group or acyl tail. They further desaturate 16:1 or 18:1 in the cis conformation to 16:2 or 18:2 (FAD6; Browse et al., 1989) and on to 16:3 or 18:3 (FAD7 and FAD8; Wallis and Browse, 2002). The combined actions of these FADs result in the highly desaturated fatty acid profiles seen for most chloroplast lipids.Open in a separate windowFigure 1.Overview of DAG pools in the chloroplast envelope membranes. Processes that are known to have activity feeding into or withdrawing from DAG pools in the chloroplast envelope membranes are shown. Enzymes are indicated, and their substrates and products are connected with black arrows. However, for space reasons, not all reactants are shown. Membrane leaflets are indicated, and enzymes with known membrane topology are displayed correctly, while those without known topology are displayed in the center of the appropriate membrane. The acyl group preferred by each l-PtdOH acyltransferase is given in parentheses. Proposed processes transporting lipids from the ER to the chloroplast are shown with dashed arrows. Enzymes are as follows: 1, ATS1; 2, ATS2; 3, lipid phosphate phosphatase γ; 4, MGD1; 5, SQD2; 6, cytosolic phospholipases; 7, MGD2 or MGD3; 8, SFR2; 9, acyl-CoA:glycerol-3-P acyltransferase; 10, l-PtdOH acyltransferase; 11, PtdOH phosphatase; 12, cytidine diphosphate-choline:DAG cholinephosphotransferase; 13, TGD4; and 14, TGD1, TGD 2, TGD3 lipid transport complex. OE, Chloroplast outer envelope membrane; IE, chloroplast inner envelope membrane; ACP, acyl carrier protein. [See online article for color version of this figure.]In unstressed plants, DAG seems to be used primarily in the inner chloroplast envelope. However, several conditions are known to cause extensive DAG use in the chloroplast outer envelope. During phosphate deprivation, MGD2 and MDG3 synthesize MGDG from DAG on the outer leaflet of the outer envelope membrane (Kobayashi et al., 2009). The DAG backbones are probably supplied from the phosphatidylcholine (PtdCho) pool by phospholipase activity, which was shown to be simultaneously up-regulated (Andersson et al., 2004; Nakamura et al., 2005). DAG is also generated during freezing stress by a galactolipid:galactolipid galactosyltransferase named Sensitive to FReezing2 (SFR2). This enzyme transfers the galactosyl head group of MGDG onto another MGDG, giving rise to digalactosyldiacylglycerol (DGDG) and DAG (Moellering et al., 2010). The DAG is subsequently sequestered into a lipid droplet by formation of TAG by an as yet unidentified enzyme.In the ER pathway, fatty acids synthesized in the chloroplast stroma are exported through a still poorly defined mechanism to the ER and activated to acyl-CoAs. Acyltransferases sequentially catalyze formation of l-PtdOH and PtdOH from glycerol-3-P and acyl-CoAs. Again, the acyltransferase working on the sn-2 position of the glycerol backbone is specific, but unlike the chloroplast isoform, it prefers an 18:1 carbon fatty acid (Frentzen et al., 1983). Newly generated PtdOH can be converted to PtdGro or phosphatidyl inositol (PtdIns) (Collin et al., 1999) or hydrolyzed to DAG (Shimojima et al., 2009). DAG can then be further metabolized to TAG and PtdCho. PtdCho acyl groups (18:1/18:1 and 18:1/16:0) are desaturated sequentially by desaturases FAD2 (Okuley et al., 1994) and FAD3 (Browse et al., 1993). These desaturases prefer PtdCho as substrate. The acyl chains modified on PtdCho are transferred to other ER lipids, including DAG, as a result of continual acyl editing of the PtdCho pool (Bates et al., 2012). Furthermore, PtdOH and many of the other extraplastidic phospholipids can be converted to DAG by action of phospholipases (Shimojima et al., 2009). These have as yet partially defined roles in response to stress or recycling of membrane lipids (Testerink and Munnik, 2005).Glycerolipid precursors generated by de novo synthesis, acyl editing, and possibly stress conditions in the ER are transported to the chloroplast by a mechanism that is likely to involve at least two putative lipid transporters: trigalactosyldiacylglycerol4 (TGD4) in the chloroplast outer envelope membrane and the TGD1, TGD2, and TGD3 complex in the inner envelope membrane (Wang and Benning, 2012). The actual lipid species transported remains unclear, but PtdCho, lyso-phosphatidylcholine, PtdOH, and DAG have been discussed in the literature (Andersson and Dörmann, 2009). The DAG moieties are then fully incorporated into all plastidic lipids except PtdGro, presumably using the same pathways that metabolize plastidic DAG, described above. Because of the preference of chloroplast and ER sn-2 acyltransferases for 16 or 18 carbon fatty acids, respectively, the origin of the DAG moieties can be distinguished by positional analysis of the acyl groups on the glycerol backbone (Roughan and Slack, 1982). In Arabidopsis, the chloroplast and ER lipid synthesis pathways contribute nearly equally to mature chloroplast lipids (Browse et al., 1986; Mongrand et al., 1998). Thus, the DAG pools described so far in the chloroplast inner and outer envelope membranes are each of dual origin.A challenge for the analysis of the different DAG pools is that this compound is not a bilayer-forming lipid and thus does not accumulate stably to high levels. Furthermore, during any lengthy fractionation procedure, its levels can be expected to alter, as DAG-modifying enzymes exist in multiple membranes. Moreover, because DAG is quickly metabolized and may have efficient transport systems (Dong et al., 2012), it is difficult to confirm whether metabolizing enzymes are accessing the same or separate DAG pools.To probe different DAG pools of chloroplast membranes in vivo, we have generated a series of stable transgenic Arabidopsis lines in which we target an Escherichia coli DAG kinase (DAGK) to each leaflet of the chloroplast envelope membranes. The basic utility of this approach was previously shown by targeting a DAGK to the chloroplast in tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum) using a single construct fusing the bacterial protein to the Rubisco small subunit N-terminal peptide (Fritz et al., 2007). Here, we present a full phenotypic analysis of these lines, determining which chloroplast membranes show steady-state alterations of DAG and PtdOH levels predicted by ectopic DAGK activity. We further determine the accessibility of DAG pools generated on the outer leaflet of the chloroplast outer envelope membrane during osmotic stress. Having this system established in Arabidopsis will allow characterization of DAG pools in multiple lipid mutant lines.  相似文献   

16.
The halotolerant microalgae Dunaliella bardawil accumulates under nitrogen deprivation two types of lipid droplets: plastoglobuli rich in β-carotene (βC-plastoglobuli) and cytoplasmatic lipid droplets (CLDs). We describe the isolation, composition, and origin of these lipid droplets. Plastoglobuli contain β-carotene, phytoene, and galactolipids missing in CLDs. The two preparations contain different lipid-associated proteins: major lipid droplet protein in CLD and the Prorich carotene globule protein in βC-plastoglobuli. The compositions of triglyceride (TAG) molecular species, total fatty acids, and sn-1+3 and sn-2 positions in the two lipid pools are similar, except for a small increase in palmitic acid in plastoglobuli, suggesting a common origin. The formation of CLD TAG precedes that of βC-plastoglobuli, reaching a maximum after 48 h of nitrogen deprivation and then decreasing. Palmitic acid incorporation kinetics indicated that, at early stages of nitrogen deprivation, CLD TAG is synthesized mostly from newly formed fatty acids, whereas in βC-plastoglobuli, a large part of TAG is produced from fatty acids of preformed membrane lipids. Electron microscopic analyses revealed that CLDs adhere to chloroplast envelope membranes concomitant with appearance of small βC-plastoglobuli within the chloroplast. Based on these results, we propose that CLDs in D. bardawil are produced in the endoplasmatic reticulum, whereas βC-plastoglobuli are made, in part, from hydrolysis of chloroplast membrane lipids and in part, by a continual transfer of TAG or fatty acids derived from CLD.Eukaryotic cells accumulate neutral lipids in different tissues mainly in the form of lipid droplets (Murphy, 2012). Most lipid droplets consist of a core of triglycerides (TAGs) and/or sterol esters coated by a phospholipids monolayer and embedded with proteins (Zweytick et al., 2000). Plants accumulate TAGs in different tissues, primarily in seeds but also in fruit, such as palm oil, flowers, and leaves. The best characterized system for TAG metabolism is oil seeds, in which TAG serves as the major carbon and energy reservoir to be used during germination (Huang, 1992, 1996). Recent studies show that lipid droplets are not just static pools of lipids but have diverse metabolic functions (Farese and Walther, 2009). In addition, plants also contain plastoglobuli, small chloroplastic lipid droplets consisting primarily of storage lipids and pigments. Proteome analyses of plastoglobuli suggest that they are involved in synthesis and degradation of lipids, pigments, and coenzymes (Ytterberg et al., 2006; Lundquist et al., 2012). It has been shown that plant plastoglobuli are associated with thylakoid membranes (Austin et al., 2006; Ytterberg et al., 2006).It is not entirely clear where the TAGs are synthesized in the plant cell. Until recently, it has been assumed that most TAGs are made in the endoplasmatic reticulum (ER) from fatty acids, which are mostly synthesized in the chloroplast and imported to the cytoplasm (Joyard et al., 2010). However, the recent identification of the enzyme diacylglycerol acyl transferase in plant plastoglobuli (Lundquist et al., 2012) suggests that TAG may be synthesized directly in chloroplasts, although direct evidence is missing. TAG may be synthesized also from galactolipid fatty acids during stress or senescence by phytyl ester synthases, which catalyze acyl transesterification from galactolipids to TAGs (Lippold et al., 2012). Phosphatidyl choline (PC) plays a major role in acyl transfer of newly synthesized fatty acids from the chloroplast into TAGs at the ER in plants (Bates et al., 2009). An indication for the origin of glycerolipids in plants is the identity of the fatty acids at the sn-2 position: if it originates in the chloroplast, it is mostly C16:0, whereas if it was made in the ER, it is mostly C:18 (Heinz and Roughan, 1983).Many species of unicellular microalgae can accumulate large amounts of TAGs under growth-limiting conditions, such as nitrogen deprivation (Shifrin and Chisholm, 1981; Roessler, 1990; Avron and Ben-Amotz, 1992; Thompson, 1996). In green microalgae (Chlorophyceae), TAGs are usually synthesized and accumulated in cytoplasmatic lipid droplets (CLDs; Murphy, 2012), although in some cases, such as in Chlamydomonas reinhardtii starchless mutants, they also accumulate in chloroplasts (Fan et al., 2011; Goodson et al., 2011). Recent studies indicate that the CLDs are closely associated with ER membranes and possibly, chloroplast envelope membranes as well (Goodson et al., 2011; Peled et al., 2012).Green microalgae also contain two distinct types of chloroplastic lipid droplets. The first type is plastoglobuli, similar in morphology to higher plants plastoglobuli (Bréhélin et al., 2007; Kessler and Vidi, 2007). The second type is the eyespot (stigma), part of the visual system in microalgae. The eyespot is composed of a cluster of β-carotene-containing lipid droplets organized in several layers between grana membranes in the chloroplast (Häder and Lebert, 2009; Kreimer, 2009). Recent proteomic analysis of algal eyespot proteins revealed that they contain diverse structural proteins, lipid and carotenoid metabolizing enzymes, transporters, and signal transduction components (Schmidt et al., 2006).The origin of TAG in microalgae is still not clear. In C. reinhardtii, it was found that the major fatty acids in the sn-2 position are 16:0, which according to the plant dogma, is made in the chloroplast (Fan et al., 2011). In C. reinhardtii, which lacks PC, monogalactosyldiacylglycerol (MGDG) was proposed to replace PC in the mobilization of fatty acids from plastidal galactoglycerolipids into TAG based on mutation of a galactoglycerolipid lipase (Li et al., 2012). Based on these results and others, it has been proposed that, in C. reinhardtii, triglycerides are primarily produced in the chloroplast or combined with ER (Li et al., 2012; Liu and Benning, 2013).Plants and algae lipid droplets contain structural major proteins localized at the lipid droplet periphery, and their major function seems to be stabilization and prevention of fusion (Huang, 1992, 1996; Katz et al., 1995; Frandsen et al., 2001; Liu et al., 2009). In plant seed oils, the major classes of lipid droplet proteins are oleosins and caleosins, which have a characteristic hydrophobic loop with a conserved three Pro domain (Hsieh and Huang, 2004; Capuano et al., 2007; Purkrtova et al., 2008; Tzen, 2012). Oleosin and caleosin analogs were also recently identified in some green microalgal species (Lin et al., 2012; Vieler et al., 2012; Huang et al., 2013). However, the most abundant lipid droplets proteins in green algae (Chloropyceae) are a new family of major lipid droplet proteins (MLDPs) structurally distinct from plant oleosins and caleosins (Moellering and Benning, 2010; Peled et al., 2011; Davidi et al., 2012). Plastoglobules have different major lipid-associated proteins termed plastoglobules-associated protein-fibrillins, which form a distinct protein family with no sequence or structural similarities to oleosins (Kim and Huang, 2003). We have previously identified in the plastoglobuli rich in β-carotene (βC-plastoglobuli) a lipid-associated protein termed carotene globule protein (CGP), whose degradation destabilized the lipid droplets (Katz et al., 1995). The proteome of C. reinhardtii lipid droplet indicates that algal CLDs also contain several enzymes, suggesting that they are involved in lipid metabolism (Nguyen et al., 2011).The halotolerant green algae Dunaliella bardawil and Dunaliella salina ‘Teodoresco’ are unique in that they accumulate under high light stress or nitrogen deprivation large amounts of plastidic lipid droplets (βC-plastoglobuli), which consist of TAG and two isomers of β-carotene, all trans and 9-cis (Ben-Amotz et al., 1982, 1988). D. bardawil also accumulates CLD under the same stress conditions, similar to other green algae (Davidi et al., 2012). It has been shown that the function of βC-plastoglobuli is to protect the photosynthetic system against photoinhibition (Ben-Amotz et al., 1989). The enzymatic pathway for β-carotene synthesis in D. bardawil and D. salina has been partly identified, but the subcellular localization of β-carotene biosynthesis is not known (Jin and Polle, 2009). The synthesis of β-carotene depends on TAG biosynthesis (Rabbani et al., 1998); however, the origin of βC-plastoglobuli is not known. Are they formed within the chloroplast, or are they made in the cytoplasm? Is the TAG in βC-plastoglobuli and CLD identical or different, and where is it formed?D. bardawil is an excellent model organism for isolation of lipid droplet for several reasons. First, D. bardawil contains large amounts of both CLD and βC-plastoglobuli (Ben-Amotz et al., 1982; Fried et al., 1982), making it possible to obtain sufficient amounts of proteins and lipids from the two types of lipid pools for detailed analyses. Second, Dunaliella do not have a rigid cell wall and can be lysed by a gentle osmotic shock, which does not rupture the chloroplast. Therefore, it is possible to sequentially release pure CLD and βC-plastoglobuli by a two-step lysis (Katz et al., 1995). Third, D. bardawil seems to lack the eyespot structure, which can be clearly observed in other Dunaliella spp. even in a light microscope or by electron microscopy, but has never been observed in D. bardawil by us. It avoids the risk of cross contamination of βC-plastoglobuli with eyespot proteins. Fourth, the availability of protein markers for the major lipid droplet-associated proteins, CGPs and MLDPs, enabled both good immunolocalization and careful monitoring of the purity of the preparations by western analysis.In this work, we describe the purification, lipid compositions, and protein profiles of two lipid pools from D. bardawil: CLD and plastidic βC-plastoglobuli. A detailed proteomic analysis of these lipid droplets will be described in another work. Combined with detailed electron microscopy studies, these results led to surprising conclusions regarding the origin of the plastidic βC-plastoglobuli.  相似文献   

17.
The endoplasmic reticulum (ER) is a ubiquitous organelle that plays roles in secretory protein production, folding, quality control, and lipid biosynthesis. The cortical ER in plants is pleomorphic and structured as a tubular network capable of morphing into flat cisternae, mainly at three-way junctions, and back to tubules. Plant reticulon family proteins (RTNLB) tubulate the ER by dimerization and oligomerization, creating localized ER membrane tensions that result in membrane curvature. Some RTNLB ER-shaping proteins are present in the plasmodesmata (PD) proteome and may contribute to the formation of the desmotubule, the axial ER-derived structure that traverses primary PD. Here, we investigate the binding partners of two PD-resident reticulon proteins, RTNLB3 and RTNLB6, that are located in primary PD at cytokinesis in tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum). Coimmunoprecipitation of green fluorescent protein-tagged RTNLB3 and RTNLB6 followed by mass spectrometry detected a high percentage of known PD-localized proteins as well as plasma membrane proteins with putative membrane-anchoring roles. Förster resonance energy transfer by fluorescence lifetime imaging microscopy assays revealed a highly significant interaction of the detected PD proteins with the bait RTNLB proteins. Our data suggest that RTNLB proteins, in addition to a role in ER modeling, may play important roles in linking the cortical ER to the plasma membrane.The endoplasmic reticulum (ER) is a multifunctional organelle (Hawes et al., 2015) and is the site of secretory protein production, folding, and quality control (Brandizzi et al., 2003) and lipid biosynthesis (Wallis and Browse, 2010), but it is also involved in many other aspects of day-to-day plant life, including auxin regulation (Friml and Jones, 2010) and oil and protein body formation (Huang, 1996; Herman, 2008). The cortical ER network displays a remarkable polygonal arrangement of motile tubules that are capable of morphing into small cisternae, mainly at the three-way junctions of the ER network (Sparkes et al., 2009). The cortical ER network of plants has been shown to play multiple roles in protein trafficking (Palade, 1975; Vitale and Denecke, 1999) and pathogen responses (for review, see Pattison and Amtmann, 2009; Beck et al., 2012).In plants, the protein family of reticulons (RTNLBs) contributes significantly to tubulation of the ER (Tolley et al., 2008, 2010; Chen et al., 2012). RTNLBs are integral ER membrane proteins that feature a C-terminal reticulon homology domain (RHD) that contains two major hydrophobic regions. These regions form two V-shaped transmembrane wedges joined together via a cytosolic loop, with the C and N termini of the protein facing the cytosol. RTNLBs can dimerize or oligomerize, creating localized tensions in the ER membrane, inducing varying degrees of membrane curvature (Sparkes et al., 2010). Hence, RTNLBs are considered to be essential in maintaining the tubular ER network.The ability of RTNLBs to constrict membranes is of interest in the context of cell plate development and the formation of primary plasmodesmata (PD; Knox et al., 2015). PD formation involves extensive remodeling of the cortical ER into tightly furled tubules to form the desmotubules, axial structures that run through the PD pore (Overall and Blackman, 1996; Ehlers and Kollmann, 2001). At only 15 nm in diameter, the desmotubule is one of the most constricted membrane structures found in nature, with no animal counterparts (Tilsner et al., 2011). PD are membrane-rich structures characterized by a close association of the plasma membrane (PM) with the ER. The forces that model the ER into desmotubules, however, are poorly understood. RTNLBs are excellent candidates for this process and can constrict fluorescent protein-labeled ER membranes into extremely fine tubules (Sparkes et al., 2010). We showed recently that two of the RTNLBs present in the PD proteome, RTNLB3 and RTNLB6 (Fernandez-Calvino et al., 2011), are present in primary PD at cytokinesis (Knox et al., 2015). However, nothing is known of the proteins that interact with RTNLBs identified in the PD proteome or that may link RTNLBs to the PM. To date, the only protein shown to bind to plant RTNLBs is RHD3-LIKE2, the plant homolog of the ER tubule fusion protein ATLASTIN (Lee et al., 2013).Here, we used a dual approach to identify interacting partners of RTNLB3 and RTNLB6 (Fernandez-Calvino et al., 2011; Knox et al.., 2015). First, we used GFP immunoprecipitation assays coupled to mass spectrometry (MS) to identify proteins potentially binding to RTNLB3 and RTNLB6. Second, from the proteins we identified, we conducted a detailed Förster resonance energy transfer by fluorescence lifetime imaging microscopy (FRET-FLIM) analysis to confirm prey-bait interactions in vivo.The application of time-resolved fluorescence spectroscopy to imaging biological systems has allowed the design and implementation of fluorescence lifetime imaging microscopy (FLIM). The technique allows measuring and determining the space map of picosecond fluorescence decay at each pixel of the image through confocal single and multiphoton excitation. The general fluorescence or Förster resonance energy transfer (FRET) to determine the colocalization of two color chromophores can now be improved to determine physical interactions using FRET-FLIM and protein pairs tagged with appropriate GFP fluorophores and monomeric red fluorescent protein (mRFP). FRET-FLIM measures the reduction in the excited-state lifetime of GFP (donor) fluorescence in the presence of an acceptor fluorophore (e.g. mRFP) that is independent of the problems associated with steady-state intensity measurements. The observation of such a reduction is an indication that the two proteins are within a distance of 1 to 10 nm, thus indicating a direct physical interaction between the two protein fusions (Osterrieder et al., 2009; Sparkes et al., 2010; Schoberer and Botchway, 2014). It was shown previously that a reduction of as little as approximately 200 ps in the excited-state lifetime of the GFP-labeled protein represents quenching through a protein-protein interaction (Stubbs et al., 2005).Our interaction data identified a large percentage (40%) of ER proteins, including other RTNLB family members. However, we also found a relatively large number (25%) of proteins present in the published PD proteome (Fernandez-Calvino et al., 2011) and a surprisingly high proportion (35%) of PM proteins. Of the PD-resident proteins we identified, a significant number were shown previously to be targets of viral movement proteins (MPs) or proteins present within lipid rafts, consistent with the view that PD are lipid-rich microdomains (Bayer et al., 2014). Additional proteins identified suggested roles for RTNLBs in transport and pathogen defense. We suggest that RTNLBs may play key roles in anchoring and/or signaling between the cortical ER and PM.  相似文献   

18.
Regulation of membrane lipid biosynthesis is critical for cell function. We previously reported that disruption of PHOSPHATIDIC ACID PHOSPHOHYDROLASE1 (PAH1) and PAH2 stimulates net phosphatidylcholine (PC) biosynthesis and proliferation of the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) in Arabidopsis thaliana. Here, we show that this response is caused specifically by a reduction in the catalytic activity of the protein and positively correlates with an accumulation of its substrate, phosphatidic acid (PA). The accumulation of PC in pah1 pah2 is suppressed by disruption of CTP:PHOSPHOCHOLINE CYTIDYLYLTRANSFERASE1 (CCT1), which encodes a key enzyme in the nucleotide pathway for PC biosynthesis. The activity of recombinant CCT1 is stimulated by lipid vesicles containing PA. Truncation of CCT1, to remove the predicted C-terminal amphipathic lipid binding domain, produced a constitutively active enzyme. Overexpression of native CCT1 in Arabidopsis has no significant effect on PC biosynthesis or ER morphology, but overexpression of the truncated constitutively active version largely replicates the pah1 pah2 phenotype. Our data establish that membrane homeostasis is regulated by lipid composition in Arabidopsis and reveal a mechanism through which the abundance of PA, mediated by PAH activity, modulates CCT activity to govern PC content.  相似文献   

19.
Like many other viruses, Tobacco mosaic virus replicates in association with the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) and exploits this membrane network for intercellular spread through plasmodesmata (PD), a process depending on virus-encoded movement protein (MP). The movement process involves interactions of MP with the ER and the cytoskeleton as well as its targeting to PD. Later in the infection cycle, the MP further accumulates and localizes to ER-associated inclusions, the viral factories, and along microtubules before it is finally degraded. Although these patterns of MP accumulation have been described in great detail, the underlying mechanisms that control MP fate and function during infection are not known. Here, we identify CELL-DIVISION-CYCLE protein48 (CDC48), a conserved chaperone controlling protein fate in yeast (Saccharomyces cerevisiae) and animal cells by extracting protein substrates from membranes or complexes, as a cellular factor regulating MP accumulation patterns in plant cells. We demonstrate that Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) CDC48 is induced upon infection, interacts with MP in ER inclusions dependent on the MP N terminus, and promotes degradation of the protein. We further provide evidence that CDC48 extracts MP from ER inclusions to the cytosol, where it subsequently accumulates on and stabilizes microtubules. We show that virus movement is impaired upon overexpression of CDC48, suggesting that CDC48 further functions in controlling virus movement by removal of MP from the ER transport pathway and by promoting interference of MP with microtubule dynamics. CDC48 acts also in response to other proteins expressed in the ER, thus suggesting a general role of CDC48 in ER membrane maintenance upon ER stress.Plant viruses are obligate intracellular pathogens that replicate in association with host membranes (Laliberté and Sanfaçon, 2010) and subvert host intra- and intercellular trafficking pathways to achieve cell-to-cell and systemic spread (Harries and Ding, 2011; Niehl and Heinlein, 2011). In the case of the well-studied Tobacco mosaic virus (TMV), viral replication factories form on membranes of the endoplasmic reticulum (ER; Heinlein et al., 1995, 1998). As the plant ER is continuous between cells through plasmodesmata (PD; Ding et al., 1992), this membrane network provides a direct pathway for the spread of replicated virus from the replication sites in infected cells into the ER network of noninfected cells. The spread of plant viruses depends on virus-encoded movement proteins (MPs; Deom et al., 1987; Lucas, 2006). The MP of TMV facilitates the cell-to-cell passage of the infectious particle by forming a ribonucleoprotein complex with the viral RNA (Citovsky et al., 1990) and by increasing the size exclusion limit of PD (Wolf et al., 1989).During the course of infection, as well as when ectopically expressed, the MP associates with PD, the ER/actin network, and microtubules (Heinlein et al., 1995, 1998; Reichel and Beachy, 1998; Wright et al., 2007; Sambade et al., 2008; Hofmann et al., 2009; Boutant et al., 2010; Peña and Heinlein, 2012; Supplemental Fig. S1). Shortly after infection of a new cell, the MP localizes to small, mobile, ER-associated particles proposed to play a role in PD targeting of the viral RNA (Boyko et al., 2007; Sambade et al., 2008). Similar small, mobile MP particles are observed early upon ectopic expression of the protein. These particles colocalize with RNA and undergo stop-and-go movements in association with the ER (Sambade et al., 2008). The particle movements pause at microtubule proximal sites and their detachment requires microtubule polymerization (Sambade et al., 2008). These observations suggest that the interaction with the microtubule system plays a critical role in the maturation and ER-mediated delivery of infectious viral RNA particles to PD during early infection stages. Consistently, tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum) mutants with reduced microtubule dynamics exhibit reduced TMV movement (Ouko et al., 2010). Following virus movement, the previously infected cell further accumulates MP at the ER, a process that coincides with the formation of large ER inclusions that contain viral replicase and viral RNA in addition to MP and likely function as virus factories (Heinlein et al., 1998; Más and Beachy, 1999). In mature form, these inclusions may represent the so-called viroplasms or X-bodies described in the classical literature (Bawden and Sheffield, 1939; Esau and Cronshaw, 1967; Hills et al., 1987). Their formation is associated with rearrangements of the ER membrane and likely mediated by the accumulated MP since the inclusions diminish and reconstitute a native ER structure when MP becomes degraded by the 26S proteasome (Reichel and Beachy, 1998, 2000). Transfected cells accumulate MP in similar inclusions as those formed during infection, indicating that accumulated MP is indeed necessary and sufficient to form inclusions in association with the ER (Reichel and Beachy, 1998; Supplemental Fig. S1). Following accumulation of MP in virus factories, the infected cells accumulate the MP also along microtubules (Heinlein et al., 1998). The accumulation of MP in virus factories and on microtubules in cells behind the leading front of infection is dispensable for virus movement (Heinlein et al., 1998; Boyko et al., 2000a). At these late infection stages, the virus factories may enable the virus to produce high virion titers (Laliberté and Sanfaçon, 2010; Tilsner et al., 2012), and the subsequent accumulation along microtubules may play a role in withdrawing MP from the cell-to-cell communication pathway (Curin et al., 2007) and in stockpiling MP prior to degradation (Padgett et al., 1996; Gillespie et al., 2002).The molecular mechanisms that guide the MP to the ER and subsequently to microtubules during infection are not known. The MP is a hydrophobic protein that behaves like a membrane-integral or tightly membrane-associated protein in differential fractionation experiments and contains two predicted transmembrane domains (Reichel and Beachy, 1998; Brill et al., 2000, 2004) involved in ER association (Fujiki et al., 2006). The association with microtubules depends on MP amino acids 1 to 213 required for MP function (Kahn et al., 1998; Boyko et al., 2000b,Boyko et al., 2000c, 2002; Kotlizky et al., 2001). Moreover, certain amino acid exchange mutations known to affect the function of MP in virus movement in a temperature-sensitive manner also affect the ability of MP to interact with microtubules (Boyko et al., 2007,Boyko et al., 2000b). Interestingly, these mutations cluster together in a short domain of 25 amino acids showing a structural similarity with the M-loop of tubulin involved in tubulin-tubulin interactions (Boyko et al., 2000b; Waigmann et al., 2007). Importantly, this M-loop similarity domain overlaps with the predicted transmembrane domain (Brill et al., 2000, 2004) thus suggesting that the association of MP with membranes or microtubules is an alternative event that may depend on specific posttranslational modifications or specific folds of MP. However, although the different subcellular localizations of MPs during the course of infection indicate directional transport of MP from the ER to microtubules and may indicate different folds and functions of the protein when associated with these different subcellular components, the mechanism that controls the subcellular localization and, thus, the fate and function of MP is not known.Here, we identify CELL-DIVISION-CYCLE protein48 (CDC48), named p97/VCP (Valosin-containing protein) in mammals and Cdc48p in yeast (Saccharomyces cerevisiae), as a cellular factor regulating MP subcellular accumulation patterns. CDC48 functions are well characterized in mammalian and yeast systems but remain poorly investigated in plants. Yeast and mammalian CDC48s are essential, conserved chaperones involved in diverse cellular processes by controlling protein fate through extraction of substrates from membranes or complexes (Tsai et al., 2002; Meusser et al., 2005; Römisch, 2005; Rumpf and Jentsch, 2006; Schrader et al., 2009; Eisele et al., 2010; Meyer et al., 2012; Yamanaka et al., 2012). We show that virus infection leads to the induction of Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) CDC48 isoforms and demonstrate a function of CDC48 in ER maintenance upon ER stress conditions. We further demonstrate that CDC48 interacts with MP and that CDC48 activity is required for MP degradation. Interaction of CDC48 with MP depends on the MP N terminus, which is required for degradation of the protein, for PD localization and microtubule accumulation of MP, and for function of MP in cell-to-cell transport of the viral RNA. Overexpressed CDC48 shifts MP subcellular localization from ER inclusions to microtubules, suggesting that CDC48 extracts the MP from ER-associated inclusions, where it accumulates in midstages of infection, to the cytosol, where it accumulates along microtubules during late infection stages. Moreover, overexpression of active, but not inactive, CDC48 inhibits virus movement. Our data demonstrate that a CDC48-dependent pathway leading to the clearance of ER-associated protein inclusions exists in plants, that plant viral MPs are substrates for this pathway, and that this pathway determines viral protein fate during infection. We suggest that CDC48-mediated extraction of MP from the ER is part of a plant defense response to remove MP from the ER, the compartment the virus uses for replication and movement.  相似文献   

20.
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