4.7 Article

Expression of Flavodiiron Proteins Flv2-Flv4 in Chloroplasts of Arabidopsis and Tobacco Plants Provides Multiple Stress Tolerance

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms22031178

Keywords

flavodiiron 2-4; high light; drought; stress tolerance; Nicotiana tabacum; Arabidopsis thaliana; Synechocystis

Funding

  1. Deutscher Akademischer Austauschdienst (DAAD, Germany)
  2. European Molecular Biology Organization (EMBO)
  3. Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF) [FKZ 031A280]
  4. National Agency for the Promotion of Science and Technology (ANPCyT, Argentina) [PICT 2015-3828]
  5. ANPCyT, Argentina [PICT 2017-3080]
  6. Santa Fe Agency for Science, Technology and Innovation [IO 212-2017]

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Flavodiiron proteins have stress protection activities in plants, and when expressed in chloroplasts, they can increase tolerance to high irradiation, salinity, oxidants, and drought. This could be a novel biotechnological tool for generating stress-tolerant plants.
With the notable exception of angiosperms, all phototrophs contain different sets of flavodiiron proteins that help to relieve the excess of excitation energy on the photosynthetic electron transport chain during adverse environmental conditions, presumably by reducing oxygen directly to water. Among them, the Flv2-Flv4 dimer is only found in beta-cyanobacteria and induced by high light, supporting a role in stress protection. The possibility of a similar protective function in plants was assayed by expressing Synechocystis Flv2-Flv4 in chloroplasts of tobacco and Arabidopsis. Flv-expressing plants exhibited increased tolerance toward high irradiation, salinity, oxidants, and drought. Stress tolerance was reflected by better growth, preservation of photosynthetic activity, and membrane integrity. Metabolic profiling under drought showed enhanced accumulation of soluble sugars and amino acids in transgenic Arabidopsis and a remarkable shift of sucrose into starch, in line with metabolic responses of drought-tolerant genotypes. Our results indicate that the Flv2-Flv4 complex retains its stress protection activities when expressed in chloroplasts of angiosperm species by acting as an additional electron sink. The flv2-flv4 genes constitute a novel biotechnological tool to generate plants with increased tolerance to agronomically relevant stress conditions that represent a significant productivity constraint.

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