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1.
Plants require rapid responses to adapt to environmental stresses. This includes dramatic changes in the size and number of plastoglobule lipid droplets within chloroplasts. Although the morphological changes of plastoglobules are well documented, little is known about the corresponding molecular changes. To address this gap, we have compared the quantitative proteome, oligomeric state, prenyl-lipid content and kinase activities of Arabidopsis thaliana plastoglobules under unstressed and 5-day light-stressed conditions. Our results show a specific recruitment of proteins related to leaf senescence and jasmonic acid biosynthesis under light stress, and identify nearly half of the plastoglobule proteins in high native molecular weight masses. Additionally, a specific increase in plastoglobule carotenoid abundance under the light stress was consistent with enhanced thylakoid disassembly and leaf senescence, supporting a specific role for plastoglobules in senescence and thylakoid remodeling as an intermediate storage site for photosynthetic pigments. In vitro kinase assays of isolated plastoglobules demonstrated kinase activity towards multiple target proteins, which was more pronounced in the plastoglobules of unstressed than light-stressed leaf tissue, and which was diminished in plastoglobules of the abc1k1/abc1k3 double-mutant. These results strongly suggest that plastoglobule-localized ABC1 kinases hold endogenous kinase activity, as these were the only known or putative kinases identified in the isolated plastoglobules by deep bottom-up proteomics. Collectively, our study reveals targeted changes to the protein and prenyl-lipid composition of plastoglobules under light stress that present strategies by which plastoglobules appear to facilitate stress adaptation within chloroplasts.  相似文献   

2.
Chloroplasts contain lipoprotein particles termed plastoglobules. Plastoglobules are generally believed to have little function beyond lipid storage. Here we report on the identification of plastoglobule proteins using mass spectrometry methods in Arabidopsis thaliana. We demonstrate specific plastoglobule association of members of the plastid lipid-associated proteins/fibrillin family as well as known metabolic enzymes, including the tocopherol cyclase (VTE1), a key enzyme of tocopherol (vitamin E) synthesis. Moreover, comparative analysis of chloroplast membrane fractions shows that plastoglobules are a site of vitamin E accumulation in chloroplasts. Thus, in addition to their lipid storage function, we propose that plastoglobules are metabolically active, taking part in tocopherol synthesis and likely other pathways.  相似文献   

3.
Fibrillins are lipid-associated proteins in plastids and are ubiquitous in plants. They accumulate in chromoplasts and sequester carotenoids during the development of flowers and fruits. However, little is known about the functions of fibrillins in leaf tissues. Here, we identified fibrillin 5 (FBN5), which is essential for plastoquinone-9 (PQ-9) biosynthesis in Arabidopsis thaliana. Homozygous fbn5-1 mutations were seedling-lethal, and XVE:FBN5-B transgenic plants expressing low levels of FBN5-B had a slower growth rate and were smaller than wild-type plants. In chloroplasts, FBN5-B specifically interacted with solanesyl diphosphate synthases (SPSs) 1 and 2, which biosynthesize the solanesyl moiety of PQ-9. Plants containing defective FBN5-B accumulated less PQ-9 and its cyclized product, plastochromanol-8, but the levels of tocopherols were not affected. The reduced PQ-9 content of XVE:FBN5-B transgenic plants was consistent with their lower photosynthetic performance and higher levels of hydrogen peroxide under cold stress. These results indicate that FBN5-B is required for PQ-9 biosynthesis through its interaction with SPS. Our study adds FBN5 as a structural component involved in the biosynthesis of PQ-9. FBN5 binding to the hydrophobic solanesyl moiety, which is generated by SPS1 and SPS2, in FBN5-B/SPS homodimeric complexes stimulates the enzyme activity of SPS1 and SPS2.  相似文献   

4.
Ultrastructural changes in chloroplasts of tobacco plants (Nicotiana tabacum L.) with the introduced desC gene for the acyl-lipid Δ9-desaturase from the thermophilic cyanobacterium Synechococcus vulcanus were investigated during plant acclimation to cold. Control plants were transformed with an empty pGA482 binary vector. At optimum growth temperature, a decreased number of grana and thylakoids and an increased number of plastoglobules and their larger area were observed in transgenic plants when compared to control ones. In control plants, acclimation to cold (6 days at 10°C) resulted in the larger areas of chloroplasts and grana. These changes indicated starting cold-induced injuries manifested in swelling of the stroma and a slight decrease in the total number of thylakoids in the chloroplast. In contrast, transgenic plants responded to cold by reducing the chloroplast, granal, and plastoglobule areas. Meantime, the number of thylakoids per granum increased noticeably. The total number of thylakoids in the chloroplast increased from 123 to 203. It was concluded that expression of the acyl-lipid Δ9-desaturase gene in tobacco plants provided for the formation of the cell ultrastructure similar to one characteristic of cold-tolerant plants.  相似文献   

5.
Effects of the desA gene from the cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. encoding Δ12 acyl-lipid desaturase and increasing the level of unsaturated fatty acids (linoleic acid (18:2) primarily) in membrane lipids, which was inserted into potato (Solanum tuberosum L., cv. Desnitsa) plants, on chloroplast ultrastructure and plant tolerance to low temperatures were studied. The main attention was focused on modifications in the chloroplast structure and their possible relation to potato plant tolerance to oxidative and low-temperature stresses under the influence to their transformation with the Δ12 acyl-lipid desaturase gene from cyanobacterium (desA-licBM3-plants). Morphometric analysis showed that, in comparison with wild-type (WT) plants, in desA-licBM3-plants the number of grana in chloroplasts increased substantially. The total number of thylakoids in transformant chloroplasts was almost twice higher than in WT plants. The number of plastoglobules per chloroplast of transformed plants increased by 25%. A marked increase in the number of grana, total number of thylakoids, and the number of plastoglobules in chloroplasts of desA-licBM3-plants indicates their more intense lipid metabolism, as compared with WT plants, and this resulted in the conservation of some part of lipids in plastoglobules. In addition, the expression of heterological desA gene encoding Δ12 acyl-lipid desaturase positively influenced stabilization of not only structure but also functioning of chloroplast membranes, thus preventing a transfer of electrons from the ETR to oxygen and subsequent ROS generation at hypothermia. This was confirmed by the analysis of the rate of superoxide anion generation in tested genotypes.  相似文献   

6.
The effects of salinity (300 mM NaCl), putrescine (Put), and the combination of two agents on the structure of chloroplasts and storage deposits were studied in the third leaf pair of a facultative halophyte Mesembryanthemum crystallinum. Within 6 days, the common ice plants responded to NaCl and Put treatments by diminished chloroplast volumes and swollen grana. Different effects of the experimental treatments were primarily manifested in the chloroplast storage inclusions. Under the salinity conditions, the starch content dropped down almost threefold as compared to untreated plants (control), whereas the number of plastoglobules did not change. Put and Put + NaCl treatments further decreased the starch content per unit section area; in contrast, the plastoglobule area per chloroplast section increased eightfold and tenfold in Put and Put + NaCl treatments, respectively. The morphology and electronic density of plastoglobules changed in all treatments. In both Put treatments there ware no destructive changes in the chloroplasts, and therefore the authors presume that the increase in the numbers plastoglobules was related to the redirection of cell metabolism towards the products of the higher reduction potential. The ferritin deposits in the chloroplasts were observed in all treatments they were more abundant in the vascular parenchyma cells, especially under salinity. The ability of the common ice plants to accumulate large Fe quantities in their chloroplasts and the characteristic pectin-filled pockets, which were observed earlier, and intercellular spaces are probably related to the genetically determined traits of plant adaptation to salinity and water deficit.  相似文献   

7.
Plastoglobules are lipoprotein particles inside chloroplasts. Their numbers have been shown to increase during the upregulation of plastid lipid metabolism in response to oxidative stress and during senescence. In this study, we used state-of-the-art high-pressure freezing/freeze-substitution methods combined with electron tomography as well as freeze-etch electron microscopy to characterize the structure and spatial relationship of plastoglobules to thylakoid membranes in developing, mature, and senescing chloroplasts. We demonstrate that plastoglobules are attached to thylakoids through a half-lipid bilayer that surrounds the globule contents and is continuous with the stroma-side leaflet of the thylakoid membrane. During oxidative stress and senescence, plastoglobules form linkage groups that are attached to each other and remain continuous with the thylakoid membrane by extensions of the half-lipid bilayer. Using three-dimensional tomography combined with immunolabeling techniques, we show that the plastoglobules contain the enzyme tocopherol cyclase (VTE1) and that this enzyme extends across the surface monolayer into the interior of the plastoglobules. These findings demonstrate that plastoglobules function as both lipid biosynthesis and storage subcompartments of thylakoid membranes. The permanent structural coupling between plastoglobules and thylakoid membranes suggests that the lipid molecules contained in the plastoglobule cores (carotenoids, plastoquinone, and tocopherol [vitamin E]) are in a dynamic equilibrium with those located in the thylakoid membranes.  相似文献   

8.
The changes in the contents of chlorophyll (Chl) a, Chl b, carotenoid, and plastoquinone in sugar beet (Beta vulgaris) chloroplasts were investigated during Cu deficiency and resupply. With the onset of Cu deficiency, extrachloroplastic Cu decreased more rapidly than chloroplast Cu, which eventually accounted for all of the Cu present in the leaf. The ultrastructure of Cu-deficient chloroplasts did not differ from the control except in very young, severely deficient leaves. During Cu depletion and resupply, Chl a, Chl b, carotenoid, and plastoquinone contents changed concomitantly. Because of the concurrent changes in the contents of terpenoid-containing pigments and plastoquinone with Cu depletion and resupply, we suggest that Cu might be involved in the regulation of the early steps of terpenoid biosynthesis prior to the formation of geranyl-geranyl-pyrophosphate.  相似文献   

9.
Plastoglobules (PG) are lipid droplets in chloroplasts and other plastid types having important functions in lipid metabolism. Plastoglobulins (PGL) also known as fibrillins (FBN) are evolutionary conserved proteins present at the PG surface but also to various extents at the thylakoid membrane. PGLs are thought to have structural functions in PG formation and maintenance. The targeting of an Arabidopsis PGL (PGL34) to PG required the full protein sequence with the exception of a short C-terminal stretch. This indicated that PGL targeting relies on correct folding rather than a discrete sequence. PGLs lack strongly hydrophic regions and may therefore extrinsically associate with PG and thylakoid membranes via interaction with hydrophilic headgroups of surface lipids. Here, we report on the expression of the Arabidopsis plastoglobulin of 35kD (PGL35 or FBN1a) expressed as a mature protein fused to HIVp24 (human immunodeficiency virus capsid particle p24) or HCV (hepatitis C virus core protein) in transplastomic tobacco. A PGL35–HIVp24 fusion targeted in part to plastoglobules but a larger proportion was recovered in the thylakoid fraction. The findings indicate that transplastomic PGL35–HIVp24 folded correctly after its synthesis inside the chloroplast and then dually targeted to plastoglobules as well as thylakoid membranes.  相似文献   

10.
Photosynthetic activity, the content of various photosynthetic pigments, and the chloroplast ultrastructure were examined in the leaves of cucumber (Cucumis sativus L.) and pea (Pisum sativum L.) plants of different ages grown under red light (600–700 nm, 100 W/m2). In pea leaves tolerant to red-light irradiation, chloroplast ultrastructure did not essentially change. In the first true leaves of cucumber plants susceptible to red-light irradiation, we observed a considerable increase in the number and size of plastoglobules, the appearance of chloroplasts lacking grana or containing only infrequent grana, and stromal thylakoids. In the upper leaves of 22-day-old cucumber plants, the chloroplast structure was essentially similar to that of the control chloroplasts in white light, and we therefore suppose that these plants have acclimated to red light.  相似文献   

11.
The spindle-shaped chromoplasts of the ripe fruit of Asparagusofficinalis developed from chloroplasts that lost grana andstroma lamellae and accumulated large-sized plastoglobules,most of which transformed into fibrils of exceptionally largediameter. The carotenoid concentration was high in ripe fruits(2520 µg g–1 fresh wt) and consisted mainly of capsanthin,ß-carotene and zeazanthin. A. officinalis is onlythe third species reported to contain both capsanthin and capsorubin. The large diameter of both fibrils and their associated plastoglobulesenabled verification that flbrils pass through plastoglobules.Unlike most fibrillar chromoplasts, the plastoglobules remainedassociated with flbrils even in fully-ripe fruit, and a straightline relationship can be established between plastoglobule andfibril diameter. The presence of more than one fibril developingfrom a plastoglobule, and the occasional existence of fibrilstwisted helically around one another, is interpreted to meanthat fibril growth by lateral addition of microfibrils is unlikely. The microfibrillar ultrastructure of Asparagus flbrils was differentto that found for Capsicum fibrils, and these differences areillustrated in two models. These differences, however, do notnecessarily mean that the fibrils of each species are constructedof different protein sub-units, although the bonding betweensub-units is different.  相似文献   

12.
We investigated the relationship between nonphotochemical plastoquinone reduction and chlororespiration in leaves of growth-chamber-grown sunflower (Helianthus annuus L.). Following a short induction period, leaves of previously illuminated sunflower showed a substantially increased level of minimal fluorescence following a light-to-dark transition. This increase in minimal fluorescence was reversed by far-red illumination, inhibited by rotenone or photooxidative methyl viologen treatment, and stimulated by fumigation with CO. Using flash-induced electrochromic absorption-change measurements, we observed that the capacity of sunflower to reduce plastoquinone in the dark influenced the activation state of the chloroplast ATP synthase, although chlororespiratory transmembrane electrochemical potential formation alone does not fully explain our observations. We have added several important new observations to the work of others, forming, to our knowledge, the first strong experimental evidence that chlororespiratory, nonphotochemical plastoquinone reduction and plastoquinol oxidation occur in the chloroplasts of higher plants. We have introduced procedures for monitoring and manipulating chlorores-piratory activity in leaves that will be important in subsequent work aimed at defining the pathway and function of this dark electron flux in higher plant chloroplasts.  相似文献   

13.
Contradictory concepts on whether the differentiation of plastids is monotropically directed or reversibly transformable with one another have been argued for a long time. In the present report, the evidence to support the latter concept, i.e. the reversible transformation, will be presented. The seasonal yellowing and regreening ofEuonymus leaves were observed by means of electron microscopic study. In the yellowing of chloroplasts during winter, plastoglobules appeared in the plastid stroma and increased in number according to the disintegration of lamellae; then the degenerated chloroplasts (chromoplasts) were filled up with these plastoglobules. In the next spring, however, regreening of the yellowed leaves took place; the lamellae were regenerated in the chromoplasts to again restore the normal chloroplast structure. Infolding of the inner membrane was never observed in these regreening plastids. The number of plastoglobules in the plastids decreased as the lamellae regenerated, and the chlorophyll content increased. These observations suggest that the plastoglobules in chromoplasts (plastids in yellowed leaves) are made of material of the disintegrating lamellae and are re-used as the source of supply for the reformation of lamellae in the spring reversal.  相似文献   

14.
Cellular and chloroplast lipids of the leaves of Mimosa pudica have been analysed. Qualitatively the total lipid composition of this plant is similar to that reported for the photosynthetic tissues of other plants. Chloroplast lipids show some resemblance to those of algae. The cerebroside fraction of both leaves and chloroplasts contains a polyunsaturated fatty acid (20:4ω3) and a long chain sphingosine base whose Rf value coincides with that from ox brain cerebroside and not with that of phytosphingosine from spinach.  相似文献   

15.
Growth, CO2 exchange, and the ultrastructure of chloroplasts were investigated in the leaves of potato plants (Solanum tuberosum L., cv. Désirée) of wild type and transformed with a gene for yeast invertase under the control of patatin class I B33 promoter (for apoplastic enzyme) grown in vitro on the Murashige and Skoog medium supplemented with 2% sucrose. At a temperature of 22°C optimal for growth, the transformed plants differed from the plants of wild type in retarded growth and a lower rate of photosynthesis as calculated per plant. On a leaf dry weight basis, photosynthesis of transformed plants was higher than in control plants. Under hypothermia (5°C), dark respiration and especially photosynthesis of transformed plants turned out to be more intense than in control material. After a prolonged exposure to low temperature (6 days at 5°C), in the plants of both genotypes, the ultrastructure of chloroplasts changed. Absolute areas of sections of chloroplasts and starch grains rose, and the area of plastoglobules decreased; in transformed plants, these changes were more pronounced. By some ultrastructural characteristics: a reduction in the cold of relative total area of sections of starch grains and plastoglobules (in percents of the chloroplast section area) and in the number of granal thylakoids (per a chloroplast section area), transformed plants turned out to be more cold resistant than wild-type plants. The obtained results are discussed in connection with changes in source-sink relations in transformed potato plants. These changes modify the balance between photosynthesis and retarded efflux of assimilates, causing an increase in the intracellular level of sugars and a rise in the tolerance to chilling.  相似文献   

16.
Plastoglobules are lipid droplets present in all plastid types. In chloroplasts, they are connected to the thylakoid membrane by the outer lipid half-bilayer. The plastoglobule core is composed of neutral lipids most prominently the prenylquinones, triacylglycerols, fatty acid phytyl esters but likely also unknown compounds. During stress and various developmental stages such as senescence, plastoglobule size and number increase due to the accumulation of lipids. However, their role is not limited to lipid storage. Indeed, the characterization of the plastoglobule proteome revealed the presence of enzymes. Importantly it has been demonstrated that these participate in isoprenoid lipid metabolic pathways at the plastoglobule, notably in the metabolism of prenylquinones. Recently, the characterization of two phytyl ester synthases has established a firm metabolic link between PG enzymatic activity and thylakoid disassembly during chloroplast senescence and nitrogen starvation.  相似文献   

17.
In various cellular subfractions of Calendula officinalis leaves a study was made of the distribution of polyprenyl quinones and α-tocopherol and the dynamics of their labelling with 14CO2 and acetate-[1-14C] and incorporation of mevalonate-[2-14C] after 3 hr. It was confirmed that plastoquinone occurs only in the chloroplasts, ubiquinone only in the mitochondria and α-tocopherol in both these subfractions. Phylloquinone was found in the chloroplast and mitochondrial fractions as well as in the post-mitochondrial supernatant. Studies of the dynamics of radioactive precursor incorporation indicated that α-tocopherol is metabolized more rapidly than the polyprenyl quinones studied; the incorporation of mevalonate-[2-14C] suggests that the side chain of plastoquinone can be synthesized in the cytoplasm and transported to the chloroplasts.  相似文献   

18.
19.
We recently reported that autophagy plays a role in chloroplasts degradation in individually-darkened senescing leaves. Chloroplasts contain approximately 80% of total leaf nitrogen, mainly as photosynthetic proteins, predominantly ribulose 1, 5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (Rubisco). During leaf senescence, chloroplast proteins are degraded as a major source of nitrogen for new growth. Concomitantly, while decreasing in size, chloroplasts undergo transformation to non-photosynthetic gerontoplasts. Likewise, over time the population of chloroplasts (gerontoplasts) in mesophyll cells also decreases. While bulk degradation of the cytosol and organelles is mediated by autophagy, the role of chloroplast degradation is still unclear. In our latest study, we darkened individual leaves to observe chloroplast autophagy during accelerated senescence. At the end of the treatment period chloroplasts were much smaller in wild-type than in the autophagy defective mutant, atg4a4b-1, with the number of chloroplasts decreasing only in wild-type. Visualizing the chloroplast fractions accumulated in the vacuole, we concluded that chloroplasts were degraded by two different pathways, one was partial degradation by small vesicles containing only stromal-component (Rubisco containing bodies; RCBs) and the other was whole chloroplast degradation. Together, these pathways may explain the morphological attenuation of chloroplasts during leaf senescence and describe the fate of chloroplasts.Key words: Arabidopsis, autophagy, chloroplast, dark treatment, leaf senescence, nutrients recyclingThe most abundant chloroplast protein is Rubisco, comprising approximately 50% of the soluble protein.1 The amount of Rubisco decreases rapidly in the early phase of leaf senescence, and more slowly in the later phase. During senescence, chloroplasts gradually shrink and their numbers gradually decrease in mesophyll cells.2,3 During leaf senescence, leaves lose approximately 75% of their Rubisco, while chloroplast numbers decrease by only about 15%.4 Previous studies showed chloroplasts localized within the central vacuole by electron microscopy, indicating chloroplast degradation in the highly hydrolytic vacuole.5 However, there was no direct evidence showing translocation of chloroplasts from the cytosol to the vacuole, and the mechanism of transportation was also unclear.Recent reverse genetic approaches are helping to elucidate the autophagy system in plants, which has a similar molecular mechanism as in yeast.611 In Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana), atg mutants have phenotypically accelerated leaf senescence, insufficient root elongation in nutrient starvation condition and reduced seeds yields, therefore, autophagy is considered to be important for nutrient recycling especially nutrient starvation and senescence in plants.12In Arabidopsis, individually darkened rosette leaves (IDLs) exhibit enhanced senescence.13 Appling IDLs treatment as an experimental model of leaf senescence, we recently demonstrated that chloroplasts are degraded in two different pathways by autophagy, one for RCBs,14,15 and one for whole chloroplast.16 Darkened leaves became pale in 3 to 5 days treatment, while illuminated parts normally grow in both wild-type and autophagy defective mutant, atg4a4b-1. Furthermore, genes specifically expressed during senescence, SAG12 and SEN1, were rapidly upregulated, meanwhile, photosynthetic genes, such as RBCS2B and CAB2B, were gradually downregulated. All analyzed ATG genes were also upregulated under IDL treatment, which suggests that autophagy is important in IDL senescence. It has been reported that approximately three quarter genes of upregulated in IDL were also upregulated in naturally senescing leaves, including the ATG genes.17 This suggests that the autophagy pathways used in IDLs are also used in naturally senescing leaves.Over the 5 day treatment period, chloroplasts of wild-type IDL shrink to approximately one third their original size. In atg4a4b-1, by contrast, chloroplasts shrinkage occurred immediately after the start of IDL treatment after which no further shrinkage was noted. While the shrunk chloroplasts in fixed cells of wild-type were still smooth and round, while wrinkly chloroplasts were observed in atg4a4b-1. At same time, in the living mesophyll cells of wild-type IDL, RCBs accumulated in the vacuole (Fig 1B). The shrinkage of chloroplasts may be due to the consumption of the chloroplast envelope by RCB formation. Immunological quantification of inner and outer envelope proteins might confirm this hypothesis. The chloroplast number was also gradually decreased in IDL of wild-type plants, but no decline in chloroplast number was noted in atg4a4b-1. Chloroplasts exhibiting chlorophyll auto-fluorescence were found in the vacuole of wild-type IDLs, but not in atg4a4b-1 IDLs. These results show that whole chloroplast degradation is also performed by autophagy. However, the transport pathway of whole chloroplasts into the vacuole remains unclear. The chloroplast, even in its shrunken state, is a large organelle, and the autophagosome, the carrier bodies of autophagy, which usually target small spherical organelles like mitochondria and peroxisomes, may be incapable of isolating large organelles. In the yeast autophagy system, specific cellular organelles and fractions are also transported via vacuolar membrane invagination using the microautophagy system.18 RCB uptake into the vacuole is termed macroautophagy, while larger organelles, such as chloroplasts, are engulfed in a process known as microautophagy. Whether there exists a molecular difference between these processes, or whether this is an arbitrary division based solely on the size of the consumed body is unclear.Open in a separate windowFigure 1Visualization of stroma-targeted DsRed and chlorophyll autofluorescence in living mesophyll cells of wild-type plants by laser-scanning confocal microscopy. A excised control leaf (A, Light) and an individually darkened leaf (B, IDL) from plants grown under 14 h-photoperiod condition and a leaf from whole-plant darkened condition (WD, C) for 5days were incubated with 1 µM concanamycin A in 10 mM MES-NaOH (pH 5.5) at 23C° for 20 h in darkness. Stroma-targeted DsRed appears green and chlorophyll fluorescence appears red. In merged images, overlap of DsRed and chlorophyll fluorescence appears yellow. Small vesicles with stromal-targeted DsRed, i.e. RCBs, can be found in the vacuole (A, B). In IDL (B), massive accumulation of stroma-targeted DsRed is entirely seen in the vacuolar lumen and chloroplasts losing DsRed fluorescence are found in some cells. Bars = 50 µm.Whole darkened plants exhibit retarded leaf aging, in contrast to the accelerated senescence in IDLs.13 Whole darkened plants suppress leaf senescence with the leaves retaining green color. After 5 days, in the mesophyll cells of whole darkened plants, any translocation of chloroplast components, stroma-targeted DsRed, RCBs, and whole chloroplasts, into the vacuole could hardly be detected (Fig. 1C). This suggests that autophagy is not induced by darkness alone, and is associated closely with senescence. ATG genes were downregulated in the whole darkened wild-type plants less than control plants during the treatment. Previous studies have shown that following about 5 day period of whole plant darkening, atg mutants lose their ability to protect themselves against photo-damage.7 Upon return to the light, these plant quickly undergo terminal photo-bleaching.Concentrations of chlorophyll, soluble protein, leaf nitrogen and Rubisco rapidly declined under IDL condition of both wild-type and atg4a4b-1. Considering the accumulated fluorescence of stroma-targeted Ds-Red in the vacuole and autophagy dependent size shrinkage of chloroplasts in IDL, in wild-type plants RCB autophagy appear to be responsible for a sizable proportion of chloroplast protein degradation. In atg4a4b-1 which cannot form RCBs, alternative degradation pathways must be upregulated, with chloroplast proteases the most likely candidates. Intriguingly, the decrease in Rubisco concentration proceeds at the almost identical rates in both wild-type and atg4a4b-1 plants, despite the different degradation pathways. It seems likely that the rate of Rubisco degradation may be regulated at an early step in the degradation pathway, by some, as yet unknown, factors.Chloroplasts appear to have the ability to control their volume during cell division, dividing and increasing their density up to the certain level,19 and transferring their cellular components between them via stromules.20 How chloroplasts are able to regulate their volume remains unclear, but it seems likely that chloroplasts grow and divide, like any other bacteria, as long as sufficient resources remain in the environment, in this case the cell. Total chloroplast volume, therefore, may be limited by the availability of carbon, nitrogen, or other nutrients in the cell during leaf emergence. Chloroplasts may be also able to reduce and control their volumes during leaf senescence via multiple degradation pathways. Our next goal is to estimate the contribution of both RCBs and whole chloroplasts autophagy in chloroplast protein degradation during natural leaf senescence. Further investigations are required for understanding the specific molecular mechanisms of RCB production and whole chloroplast degradation.  相似文献   

20.
The fibrillins are a large family of chloroplast proteins that have been linked with stress tolerance and disease resistance. FIBRILLIN4 (FIB4) is found associated with the photosystem II light-harvesting complex, thylakoids, and plastoglobules, which are chloroplast compartments rich in lipophilic antioxidants. For this study, FIB4 expression was knocked down in apple (Malus 3 domestica) using RNA interference. Plastoglobule osmiophilicity was decreased in fib4 knockdown (fib4 KD) tree chloroplasts compared with the wild type, while total plastoglobule number was unchanged. Compared with the wild type, net photosynthetic CO2 fixation in fib4 KD trees was decreased at high light intensity but was increased at low light intensity. Furthermore, fib4 KD trees produced more anthocyanins than the wild type when transferred from low to high light intensity, indicating greater sensitivity to high light stress. Relative to the wild type, fib4 KD apples were more sensitive to methyl viologen and had higher superoxide levels during methyl viologen treatment. Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) fib4 mutants and fib4 KD apples were more susceptible than their wild-type counterparts to the bacterial pathogens Pseudomonas syringae pathovar tomato and Erwinia amylovora, respectively, and were more sensitive to ozone-induced tissue damage. Following ozone stress, plastoglobule osmiophilicity decreased in wild-type apple and remained low in fib4 KD trees; total plastoglobule number increased in fib4 KD apples but not in the wild type. These results indicate that FIB4 is required for plastoglobule development and resistance to multiple stresses. This study suggests that FIB4 is involved in regulating plastoglobule content and that defective regulation of plastoglobule content leads to broad stress sensitivity and altered photosynthetic activity.Increased production of reactive oxygen species (ROS) is among the first biochemical responses of plants when challenged by pathogens and harsh environmental conditions (Mehdy, 1994; Lamb and Dixon, 1997; Joo et al., 2005). ROS are implicated in tissue damage during environmental stress and in the promotion of disease development by necrotrophic and hemibiotrophic pathogens (Venisse et al., 2001; Apel and Hirt, 2004; Shetty et al., 2008). For example, ROS production is critical for host colonization and pathogenesis by the bacterium Erwinia amylovora, which causes fire blight disease in rosaceous plants such as apple (Malus 3 domestica) and pear (Pyrus communis; Venisse et al., 2001).The chloroplast is a site of ROS production during biotic and abiotic stress (Joo et al., 2005; Liu et al., 2007). The chloroplast has a battery of enzymes such as superoxide dismutase and ascorbate peroxidase, and antioxidants such as ascorbate, glutathione, and tocopherols, for protection against ROS (Noctor and Foyer, 1998; Asada, 2006). Plastoglobules are lipoprotein bodies attached to the thylakoids (Austin et al., 2006) that store lipids, including antioxidants such as tocopherols, carotenes, and plastoquinones (Steinmüller and Tevini, 1985; Tevini and Steinmüller, 1985). In addition to antioxidants, plastoglobules contain tocopherol cyclase, which is involved in γ-tocopherol synthesis (Austin et al., 2006; Vidi et al., 2006). The antioxidant content of plastoglobules and their apparent involvement in tocopherol biosynthesis imply that they could play a role in plant responses to oxidative stress.Plastoglobules contain fibrillins, which were initially described as protein components of chromoplast fibrils with a molecular mass of approximately 30 kD (Winkenbach et al., 1976; Knoth et al., 1986; Emter et al., 1990; Deruère et al., 1994). Fibrillins are ubiquitous proteins present from cyanobacteria to plants (Laizet et al., 2004). Fibrillins maintain plastoglobule structural integrity (Deruère et al., 1994; Pozueta-Romero et al., 1997; Langenkämper et al., 2001; Vidi et al., 2006; Bréhélin et al., 2007) and stabilize the photosynthetic apparatus during photooxidative stress (Gillet et al., 1998; Yang et al., 2006; Youssef et al., 2010), osmotic stress (Gillet et al., 1998), drought (Pruvot et al., 1996; Rey et al., 2000), and low temperature (Rorat et al., 2001). Fibrillins are involved in abscisic acid-mediated protection from photoinhibition (Yang et al., 2006), and a subfamily of Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) fibrillins (FIB1a, -1b, and -2) conditions jasmonate production during low-temperature, photooxidative stress (Youssef et al., 2010). Arabidopsis plants lacking one fibrillin (At4g22240) and tomato (Solanum lycopersicum) plants with suppressed expression of a fibrillin (LeCHRC) are susceptible to Pseudomonas syringae and Botrytis cinerea, respectively (Cooper et al., 2003; Leitner-Dagan et al., 2006), indicating that fibrillins play a role in disease resistance.The Arabidopsis fibrillin encoded by At3g23400 has received various appellations, including FIBRILLIN4 (FIB4; Laizet et al., 2004), Harpin-Binding Protein1 (Song et al., 2002), AtPGL 30.4 (Vidi et al., 2006), and Fibrillin6 (Galetskiy et al., 2008); here, it will be referred to by its earliest published name, FIB4. FIB4 is found associated with the PSII light-harvesting complex (Galetskiy et al., 2008). FIB4 has also been detected in plastoglobules (Vidi et al., 2006; Ytterberg et al., 2006) and thylakoids (Friso et al., 2004; Peltier et al., 2004). However, the specific function of FIB4 is unknown. Several lines of evidence suggest that FIB4 may be involved in plant disease resistance responses: pathogen-associated molecular patterns trigger its phosphorylation (Jones et al., 2006); pathogen-associated molecular patterns stimulate the expression of its ortholog in tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum; Jones et al., 2006; Sanabria and Dubery, 2006); and it can physically interact with the HrpN (harpin) virulence protein of the fire blight pathogen E. amylovora in a yeast two-hybrid assay, suggesting that it could be a receptor or target of HrpN (Song et al., 2002). In addition, it is thought that FIB4 may be involved in the transport of small, hydrophobic molecules because it contains a conserved lipocalin signature (Jones et al., 2006). Here, we report a genetic analysis of FIB4 function in apple and Arabidopsis in terms of its role in plastoglobule development and plant resistance to biotic and abiotic stresses.  相似文献   

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