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Redox regulation of PEP activity during seedling establishment in Arabidopsis thaliana

Authors :
Åsa Strand
Tim S. Crawford
Manuel Guinea Diaz
Tamara Hernández-Verdeja
Dmitry Kremnev
Carole Dubreuil
Source :
Nature Communications, Vol 9, Iss 1, Pp 1-12 (2018), Nature Communications
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
Umeå universitet, Umeå Plant Science Centre (UPSC), 2018.

Abstract

Activation of the plastid-encoded RNA polymerase is tightly controlled and involves a network of phosphorylation and, as yet unidentified, thiol-mediated events. Here, we characterize PLASTID REDOX INSENSITIVE2, a redox-regulated protein required for full PEP-driven transcription. PRIN2 dimers can be reduced into the active monomeric form by thioredoxins through reduction of a disulfide bond. Exposure to light increases the ratio between the monomeric and dimeric forms of PRIN2. Complementation of prin2-2 with different PRIN2 protein variants demonstrates that the monomer is required for light-activated PEP-dependent transcription and that expression of the nuclear-encoded photosynthesis genes is linked to the activity of PEP. Activation of PEP during chloroplast development likely is the source of a retrograde signal that promotes nuclear LHCB expression. Thus, regulation of PRIN2 is the thiol-mediated mechanism required for full PEP activity, with PRIN2 monomerization via reduction by TRXs providing a mechanistic link between photosynthetic electron transport and activation of photosynthetic gene expression.<br />The plastid-encoded RNA polymerase PEP is regulated according to plastid redox state. Here, the authors show that the redox-regulated PRIN2 protein is reduced to monomeric form in a thiol-dependent manner in response to light and that PRIN2 monomers are required for PEP activity and retrograde signaling.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature Communications, Vol 9, Iss 1, Pp 1-12 (2018), Nature Communications
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....f224054cae2e0a4da97e6f16c2c96860