4.6 Article

Chloroplast-localized BICAT proteins shape stromal calcium signals and are required for efficient photosynthesis

Journal

NEW PHYTOLOGIST
Volume 221, Issue 2, Pages 866-880

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/nph.15407

Keywords

Arabidopsis thaliana; calcium signal; calcium transport; chloroplast; photosynthesis

Categories

Funding

  1. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) within the Collaborative Research Centre 648
  2. Ministry of Agriculture and the Environment of Sachsen-Anhalt [A05/2010, A03/2011, A02/2012]
  3. European Social Fund (ESF) within the programme AGRIPOLY [ZS/2016/08/80644]
  4. Jiangsu Government Scholarship for Overseas Studies [JS-2012-012]

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The photosynthetic machinery of plants must be regulated to maximize the efficiency of light reactions and CO2 fixation. Changes in free Ca2+ in the stroma of chloroplasts have been observed at the transition between light and darkness, and also in response to stress stimuli. Such Ca2+ dynamics have been proposed to regulate photosynthetic capacity. However, the molecular mechanisms of Ca2+ fluxes in the chloroplasts have been unknown. By employing a Ca2+ reporter-based approach, we identified two chloroplast-localized Ca2+ transporters in Arabidopsis thaliana, BICAT1 and BICAT2, that determine the amplitude of the darkness-induced Ca2+ signal in the chloroplast stroma. BICAT2 mediated Ca2+ uptake across the chloroplast envelope, and its knockout mutation strongly dampened the dark-induced [Ca2+](stroma) signal. Conversely, this Ca2+ transient was increased in knockout mutants of BICAT1, which transports Ca2+ into the thylakoid lumen. Knockout mutation of BICAT2 caused severe defects in chloroplast morphology, pigmentation and photosynthetic light reactions, rendering bicat2 mutants barely viable under autotrophic growth conditions, while bicat1 mutants were less affected. These results show that BICAT transporters play a role in chloroplast Ca2+ homeostasis. They are also involved in the regulation of photosynthesis and plant productivity. Further work will be required to reveal whether the effect on photosynthesis is a direct result of their role as Ca2+ transporters.

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