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In vivo protein kinase activity of SnRK1 fluctuates in Arabidopsis rosettes during light-dark cycles

Authors :
Omri Avidan
Thiago A Moraes
Virginie Mengin
Regina Feil
Filip Rolland
Mark Stitt
John E Lunn
Source :
Plant Physiology. 192:387-408
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
Oxford University Press (OUP), 2023.

Abstract

Sucrose-nonfermenting 1 (SNF1)-related kinase 1 (SnRK1) is a central hub in carbon and energy signaling in plants, and is orthologous with SNF1 in yeast and the AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK) in animals. Previous studies of SnRK1 relied on in vitro activity assays or monitoring of putative marker gene expression. Neither approach gives unambiguous information about in vivo SnRK1 activity. We have monitored in vivo SnRK1 activity using Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) reporter lines that express a chimeric polypeptide with an SNF1/SnRK1/AMPK-specific phosphorylation site. We investigated responses during an equinoctial diel cycle and after perturbing this cycle. As expected, in vivo SnRK1 activity rose toward the end of the night and rose even further when the night was extended. Unexpectedly, although sugars rose after dawn, SnRK1 activity did not decline until about 12 h into the light period. The sucrose signal metabolite, trehalose 6-phosphate (Tre6P), has been shown to inhibit SnRK1 in vitro. We introduced the SnRK1 reporter into lines that harbored an inducible trehalose-6-phosphate synthase construct. Elevated Tre6P decreased in vivo SnRK1 activity in the light period, but not at the end of the night. Reporter polypeptide phosphorylation was sometimes negatively correlated with Tre6P, but a stronger and more widespread negative correlation was observed with glucose-6-phosphate. We propose that SnRK1 operates within a network that controls carbon utilization and maintains diel sugar homeostasis, that SnRK1 activity is regulated in a context-dependent manner by Tre6P, probably interacting with further inputs including hexose phosphates and the circadian clock, and that SnRK1 signaling is modulated by factors that act downstream of SnRK1. ispartof: Plant Physiology vol:192 issue:1 pages:387-408 ispartof: location:United States status: Published online

Subjects

Subjects :
Physiology
Genetics
Plant Science

Details

ISSN :
15322548 and 00320889
Volume :
192
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Plant Physiology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....68e75747cb1f8b47136078f7d560ae55
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/plphys/kiad066