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FIBRILLIN4 Is Required for Plastoglobule Development and Stress Resistance in Apple and Arabidopsis
Authors:Dharmendra K Singh  Siela N Maximova  Philip J Jensen  Brian L Lehman  Henry K Ngugi  Timothy W McNellis
Institution:Intercollege Graduate Degree Program in Plant Biology (D.K.S.), Department of Plant Pathology (D.K.S., P.J.J., H.K.N., T.W.M.), and Department of Horticulture (S.N.M.), The Pennsylvania State University, University Park, Pennsylvania 16802; The Pennsylvania State University Fruit Research and Extension Center, Biglerville, Pennsylvania 17307 (B.L.L., H.K.N.)
Abstract: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.
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