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Successful Fertilization Requires the Presence of at Least One Major O-Acetylserine(thiol)lyase for Cysteine Synthesis in Pollen of Arabidopsis
Authors:Hannah Birke  Corinna Heeg  Markus Wirtz  Rüdiger Hell
Institution:Centre for Organismal Studies Heidelberg, Department of Plant Molecular Biology (H.B., C.H., M.W., R.H.), and Hartmut Hoffmann-Berling International Graduate School of Molecular and Cellular Biology (H.B.), University of Heidelberg, 69120 Heidelberg, Germany
Abstract:The synthesis of cysteine (Cys) is a master control switch of plant primary metabolism that coordinates the flux of sulfur with carbon and nitrogen metabolism. In Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana), nine genes encode for O-acetylserine(thiol)lyase (OAS-TL)-like proteins, of which the major isoforms, OAS-TL A, OAS-TL B, and OAS-TL C, catalyze the formation of Cys by combining O-acetylserine and sulfide in the cytosol, the plastids, and the mitochondria, respectively. So far, the significance of individual OAS-TL-like enzymes is unresolved. Generation of all major OAS-TL double loss-of-function mutants in combination with radiolabeled tracer studies revealed that subcellular localization of OAS-TL proteins is more important for efficient Cys synthesis than total cellular OAS-TL activity in leaves. The absence of oastl triple embryos after targeted crosses indicated the exclusiveness of Cys synthesis by the three major OAS-TLs and ruled out alternative sulfur fixation by other OAS-TL-like proteins. Analyses of oastlABC pollen demonstrated that the presence of at least one functional OAS-TL isoform is essential for the proper function of the male gametophyte, although the synthesis of histidine, lysine, and tryptophan is dispensable in pollen. Comparisons of oastlABC pollen derived from genetically different parent plant combinations allowed us to separate distinct functions of Cys and glutathione in pollen and revealed an additional role of glutathione for pollen germination. In contrast, female gametogenesis was not affected by the absence of major OAS-TLs, indicating significant transport of Cys into the developing ovule from the mother plant.Sulfur assimilation in plants is hallmarked by two reaction sequences, namely sulfate reduction and Cys synthesis. The sulfate reduction pathway consists of three steps and produces sulfide from sulfate, which is available in the soil and transported into the roots by specific transporters (Takahashi et al., 2011). Sulfide is subsequently incorporated into the amino acid O-acetylserine (OAS) by O-acetylserine(thiol)lyase (OAS-TL; EC 2.5.1.47) to produce Cys (Hell and Wirtz, 2011). Cys then serves as the sulfur source for all organic metabolites containing reduced sulfur in plants, including proteins, cofactors, and secondary metabolites. The tripeptide glutathione (GSH) is one of the most important Cys-derived metabolites, since it has an important function in redox homeostasis and the control of development (Meyer and Rausch, 2008). Impaired GSH synthesis negatively affects growth of the shoot and root system of Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana; Vernoux et al., 2000; Xiang et al., 2001), and loss-of-function mutants for the first enzyme (GSH1, Glu-Cys ligase; EC 6.3.2.2) or the second enzyme (GSH2, glutathione synthase; EC 6.3.2.3) of the two-step pathway leading to GSH formation show an embryo- and seedling-lethal phenotype, respectively (Cairns et al., 2006; Pasternak et al., 2008).Cys synthesis by OAS-TL constitutes the direct link between carbon and nitrogen (OAS) as well as sulfur (sulfide) metabolism and, therefore, can be designated as one of the central reactions in plant primary metabolism. The genome of the model plant Arabidopsis encodes nine OAS-TL-like enzymes: OAS-TL A1 (At4g14880), OAS-TL B (At2g43750), and OAS-TL C (At3g59760) are the major isoforms and are localized in the cytosol, plastids, and mitochondria, respectively (Jost et al., 2000). OAS-TL A2 (At3g22460) encodes a truncated and nonfunctional protein (Jost et al., 2000). In the following, therefore, OAS-TL A1 is referred to as OAS-TL A. CYS D1 (At3g04940) and CYS D2 (At5g28020) show OAS-TL activity in vitro (Yamaguchi et al., 2000). Whether they contribute to net Cys synthesis in vivo is unknown (Heeg et al., 2008). CS26 (At3g03630) encodes a plastidic S-sulfocysteine synthase, which prefers thiosulfate instead of sulfide as substrate and produces S-sulfocysteine (Bermúdez et al., 2010). Whether thiosulfate is taken up from the soil or formed within the plant is unclear, but its presence in Arabidopsis was demonstrated (Tsakraklides et al., 2002). However, the synthesis of S-sulfocysteine from thiosulfate potentially constitutes an alternative sulfur fixation pathway. So far, CS26 was shown to be important for the regulation of redox homeostasis in plastids under certain stress conditions (Bermúdez et al., 2010). DES1 (At5g28030; formerly known as CS-LIKE) is a Cys desulfhydrase (EC 4.4.1.15) that releases sulfide in the cytosol (Alvarez et al., 2010). As a Cys-consuming enzyme, it contributes to Cys homeostasis, especially in late vegetative development and under certain stress conditions (Alvarez et al., 2010, 2012). CYS C1 (At3g61440), finally, encodes a mitochondrial β-cyanoalanine synthase (EC 4.4.1.9), which detoxifies cyanide by incorporation into Cys (Yamaguchi et al., 2000; Watanabe et al., 2008a; García et al., 2010). The major isoforms OAS-TL A, OAS-TL B, and OAS-TL C as well as CYS D1 and CYS D2 can interact with serine acetyltransferase (SAT; EC 2.3.1.30) in the cysteine synthase complex (CSC; Heeg et al., 2008). Although SAT acetylates Ser at the hydroxyl group to form OAS, the direct substrate of OAS-TL, formation of the CSC has no substrate-channeling function but contributes to the demand-driven regulation of Cys synthesis (Hell and Wirtz, 2011).The subcellular compartmentation of Cys precursor formation is a remarkable feature of Cys synthesis in higher plants that implies a high degree of regulation between the participating compartments: while sulfate is exclusively reduced to sulfide in plastids (Takahashi et al., 2011), the synthesis of OAS and the incorporation of sulfide take place in all three compartments where SAT and OAS-TL are present, namely in the cytosol, plastids, and mitochondria. Reverse genetics approaches proved a certain redundancy between the different SAT and OAS-TL isoforms, which demonstrates that sulfide, OAS, and Cys can be exchanged between these compartments (Haas et al., 2008; Heeg et al., 2008; Watanabe et al., 2008a, 2008b). Indeed, sulfide can easily diffuse through membranes (Mathai et al., 2009), but OAS and Cys need to be actively transported. However, the identity of these transporters is unknown. Although sulfide, OAS, and Cys can pass the mitochondrial membrane (Wirtz et al., 2012), the loss-of-function mutant for mitochondrial OAS-TL C is the only single oastl knockout mutant that displays a significant growth phenotype (Heeg et al., 2008). This result was astonishing, since OAS-TL C contributes only 5% to extractable foliar OAS-TL activity (Heeg et al., 2008). The retarded growth of the oastlC mutant, however, cannot be explained by the lack of sulfide detoxification in mitochondria by OAS-TL C, due to an alternative detoxification mechanism for sulfide in mitochondria (Birke et al., 2012). These data question the total redundancy between the different OAS-TL isoforms and suggest specific functions in the different subcellular compartments.Despite its central position in the primary metabolism of higher plants, fundamental questions about Cys synthesis are still unanswered. First, the contribution of OAS-TL-like proteins, especially CYS D1, CYS D2, and CS26, to the fixation of sulfur in planta is unknown. Second, the significance of Cys synthesis by the major OAS-TL proteins in the different subcellular compartments during sporophyte and gametophyte development is unclear. In this study, we addressed these questions using a reverse genetics approach. We were able to prove that fixation of sulfur is carried out exclusively by the major OAS-TL isoforms OAS-TL A, OAS-TL B, and OAS-TL C and elucidated specific functions for OAS-TL A in the cytosol and OAS-TL C in mitochondria of leaf cells. Furthermore, we demonstrate that Cys can be supplied by the mother plant for the development of female gametophytes lacking OAS-TL activity. In contrast, the presence of at least one functional OAS-TL isoform is essential in the male gametophyte.
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