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2-Cysteine Peroxiredoxins and Thylakoid Ascorbate Peroxidase Create a Water-Water Cycle That Is Essential to Protect the Photosynthetic Apparatus under High Light Stress Conditions
Authors:Jasmin Awad  Henrik U Stotz  Agnes Fekete  Markus Krischke  Cornelia Engert  Michel Havaux  Susanne Berger  Martin J Mueller
Institution:Julius-von-Sachs-Institute of Biosciences, Biocenter, Pharmaceutical Biology, University of Wuerzburg, D–97082 Wuerzburg, Germany (J.A., H.U.S., A.F., M.K., C.E., S.B., M.J.M.); and;Biologie Végétale et Microbiologie Environnementales, Unité Mixte de Recherche 7265 Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique-Commissariat à l’Energie Atomique-Aix Marseille University, 13108 Saint-Paul-lez-Durance, France (M.H.)
Abstract:Different peroxidases, including 2-cysteine (2-Cys) peroxiredoxins (PRXs) and thylakoid ascorbate peroxidase (tAPX), have been proposed to be involved in the water-water cycle (WWC) and hydrogen peroxide (H2O2)-mediated signaling in plastids. We generated an Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) double-mutant line deficient in the two plastid 2-Cys PRXs (2-Cys PRX A and B, 2cpa 2cpb) and a triple mutant deficient in 2-Cys PRXs and tAPX (2cpa 2cpb tapx). In contrast to wild-type and tapx single-knockout plants, 2cpa 2cpb double-knockout plants showed an impairment of photosynthetic efficiency and became photobleached under high light (HL) growth conditions. In addition, double-mutant plants also generated elevated levels of superoxide anion radicals, H2O2, and carbonylated proteins but lacked anthocyanin accumulation under HL stress conditions. Under HL conditions, 2-Cys PRXs seem to be essential in maintaining the WWC, whereas tAPX is dispensable. By comparison, this HL-sensitive phenotype was more severe in 2cpa 2cpb tapx triple-mutant plants, indicating that tAPX partially compensates for the loss of functional 2-Cys PRXs by mutation or inactivation by overoxidation. In response to HL, H2O2- and photooxidative stress-responsive marker genes were found to be dramatically up-regulated in 2cpa 2cpb tapx but not 2cpa 2cpb mutant plants, suggesting that HL-induced plastid to nucleus retrograde photooxidative stress signaling takes place after loss or inactivation of the WWC enzymes 2-Cys PRX A, 2-Cys PRX B, and tAPX.Plants are frequently exposed to different abiotic stresses, including high light (HL), UV irradiation, heat, cold, and drought. A component common to these stresses is the rapid formation of reactive oxygen species (ROS) as the result of metabolic dysbalances. A major ROS produced under moderate light (ML) and, in particular, HL photooxidative stress conditions was shown to be singlet oxygen, 1O2, that is produced in illuminated chloroplasts predominantly at the PSII (Triantaphylidès et al., 2008). Most of the singlet oxygen is quenched by carotenoids and tocopherols or reacts with galactolipids in thylakoid membranes, yielding galactolipid hydroperoxides (Zoeller et al., 2012; Farmer and Mueller, 2013). In addition, superoxide radicals, O2·, are produced predominantly at the PSI and rapidly dismutate to hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) either spontaneously or because of being catalyzed by superoxide dismutase. Hence, lipid peroxides and H2O2 are produced close to the photosystems and may damage thylakoid proteins. In this context, 2-Cys peroxiredoxin (PRX) enzymes have been implicated in the reductive detoxification of lipid peroxides and H2O2 (König et al., 2002).During photosynthesis, light energy absorbed by PSII is used to split water molecules, and the electrons are channeled from PSII through PSI to ferredoxin (Fd). As a result, electrons flow from water to Fd. The main electron sink reaction is the Fd NADP oxidoreductase-catalyzed production of NADPH that functions as an electron donor to reduce carbon dioxide to sugars. Under HL conditions, excessive excitation energy is dissipated into heat, which was indicated by nonphotochemical quenching of chlorophyll fluorescence. In addition, excessive photosynthetic electrons can be donated from PSI to O2, yielding O2· (Miyake, 2010). This process, the Mehler reaction, creates an alternative electron sink and electron flow. Superoxide anion radicals, O2·, can be dismutated to O2 and H2O2 by a thylakoid-attached copper/zinc superoxide dismutase (Cu/ZnSOD; Rizhsky et al., 2003). H2O2 can then be reduced to water by peroxidases. As a result, O2 molecules originating from the water-splitting process at PSII are reduced to water by electrons originating from PSI. This process is termed the water-water cycle (WWC) that is thought to protect the photosynthetic apparatus from excessive light and alleviate photoinhibition.In the classical WWC, the Mehler-ascorbate peroxidase (MAP) pathway, ascorbate peroxidases (APXs) have been considered as key enzymes in the reductive detoxification of H2O2 in chloroplasts (Kangasjärvi et al., 2008). APXs reduce H2O2 to water and oxidize ascorbate to monodehydroascorbate radicals. NADPH functions as an electron donor to regenerate ascorbate by monodehydroascorbate radical reductase. There are two functional APX homologs in plastids: a 33-kD stromal ascorbate peroxidase (sAPX) and a 38-kD thylakoid ascorbate peroxidase (tAPX). The latter tAPX is thought to reside close to the site of H2O2 generation at PSI. Surprisingly, knockout-tAPX mutants as well as double mutants lacking both the tAPX and the sAPX exhibited no visible symptoms of stress after long-term (1–14 d) HL (1.000 µmol photons m−2 s−1) exposure (Giacomelli et al., 2007; Kangasjärvi et al., 2008; Maruta et al., 2010). Moreover, the photosynthetic efficiency of PSII (as judged by the maximum photochemical efficiency of PSII in the dark-adapted state Fv/Fm]), H2O2 production, antioxidant levels (ascorbate, glutathione, and tocopherols), protein oxidation, and anthocyanin accumulation were similar between light-stressed mutant and wild-type plants. Hence, other H2O2 detoxification mechanisms can efficiently compensate for the lack of the sAPX and tAPX detoxification system.In addition to APX, glutathione peroxidases and PRXs may reduce H2O2 to water. It has been postulated that, in the chloroplast, two highly homologous thylakoid-associated 2-Cys peroxiredoxins (2CPs), 2CPA and 2CPB, can create an alternative ascorbate-independent WWC (Dietz et al., 2006). In support of this concept, HL stress-acclimated tapx sapx double-mutant plants showed increased levels of 2-Cys PRX compared with wild-type plants (Kangasjärvi et al., 2008). Because the two plastidial 2CPA and 2CPB dynamically interact with the stromal side of thylakoid membranes and are capable of reducing peroxides, 2-Cys PRX enzymes may be involved in both H2O2 detoxification and reduction of lipid peroxides in thylakoids (König et al., 2002).The reaction mechanism of 2-Cys PRX is highly conserved and involves a Cys residue, which becomes transiently oxidized to sulphenic acid (termed the peroxidatic Cys residue), thereby reducing H2O2 to water. The sulphenic acid is subsequently attacked by a second Cys residue, termed resolving Cys residue, yielding an intermolecular disulfide bridge and water (Dietz, 2011).At high peroxide concentrations, the peroxidase function of 2-Cys PRX becomes inactivated through overoxidation, and excess H2O2 may function as a redox signal (Puerto-Galán et al., 2013). It has been postulated that 2-Cys PRXs function as a floodgate that allows H2O2 signaling only under oxidative stress conditions (Wood et al., 2003; Dietz, 2011; Puerto-Galán et al., 2013). In addition to its function as peroxidase, 2-Cys PRX may also serve as proximity-based thiol oxidases and chaperones (König et al., 2013).The genome of Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) contains two 2CP genes. To study 2-Cys PRX function, transgenic plants with reduced 2-Cys PRX levels were generated by antisense suppression (Baier et al., 2000) as well as crossing of transfer DNA (T-DNA) insertion mutants (Pulido et al., 2010). The T-DNA insertion double mutant was shown to contain less than 5% of the wild-type content of 2CPA and no 2CPB. Hence, full knockout lines lacking both 2-Cys PRXs have not yet been established. Under standard growth conditions, 2-Cys PRX double mutants (similar to plastid APX-deficient plants) also did not show a photooxidative stress phenotype that might be because of compensation by alternative H2O2 reduction systems (Pulido et al., 2010). Because of the lack of a clear phenotype of the 2-Cys PRX double-knockdown mutant under ML conditions, the physiological functions of 2CPA and 2CPB remain to be elucidated.The main aim of this study was to identify the physiological function of 2CPA and 2CPB under HL stress conditions, when the WWC is of particular importance in protecting the photosynthetic apparatus from photooxidative damage. We investigated mutants completely deficient in 2-Cys PRX (2cpa 2cpb) or tAPX (tapx) and in addition, 2cpa 2cpb tapx triple knockout plants to study the extent of the functional overlap between these enzymes. Results suggest that 2-Cys PRXs are involved in a 2-Cys PRX-dependent WWC that seems to be more important in protecting the photosynthetic apparatus than the tAPX-dependent WWC, the MAP cycle.
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