4.8 Article

Dehydroascorbate Reductases and Glutathione Set a Threshold for High-Light-Induced Ascorbate Accumulation1[OPEN]

Journal

PLANT PHYSIOLOGY
Volume 183, Issue 1, Pages 112-122

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC
DOI: 10.1104/pp.19.01556

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Funding

  1. Japan Society for the Promotion of Science (KAKENHI) [18K19179, 17H03807, 19K22284]
  2. Japan Science Society (Sasakawa Scientific Research Grant)
  3. Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research [19K22284, 17H03807, 18K19179] Funding Source: KAKEN

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Cooperation of dehydroascorbate reductases and glutathione sets a threshold for ascorbate accumulation under high-light stress in Arabidopsis. Plants require a high concentration of ascorbate as a redox buffer for survival under stress conditions, such as high light. Dehydroascorbate reductases (DHARs) are enzymes that catalyze the reduction of DHA to ascorbate using reduced glutathione (GSH) as an electron donor, allowing rapid ascorbate recycling. However, a recent study using an Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) triple mutant lacking all three DHAR genes (herein called increment dhar) did not find evidence for their role in ascorbate recycling under oxidative stress. To further study the function of DHARs, we generated increment dhar Arabidopsis plants as well as a quadruple mutant line combining increment dhar with an additional vtc2 mutation that causes ascorbate deficiency. Measurements of ascorbate in these mutants under low- or high-light conditions indicated that DHARs have a nonnegligible impact on full ascorbate accumulation under high light, but that they are dispensable when ascorbate concentrations are low to moderate. Because GSH itself can reduce DHA nonenzymatically, we used the pad2 mutant that contains similar to 30% of the wild-type GSH level. The pad2 mutant accumulated ascorbate at a wild-type level under high light; however, when the pad2 mutation was combined with increment dhar, there was near-complete inhibition of high-light-dependent ascorbate accumulation. The lack of ascorbate accumulation was consistent with a marked increase in the ascorbate degradation product threonate. These findings indicate that ascorbate recycling capacity is limited in increment dhar pad2 plants, and that both DHAR activity and GSH content set a threshold for high-light-induced ascorbate accumulation.

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