4.7 Article

The dual-targeted prolyl aminopeptidase PAP1 is involved in proline accumulation in response to stress and during pollen development

Journal

JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL BOTANY
Volume 73, Issue 1, Pages 78-93

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/jxb/erab397

Keywords

Amino acid recovery; Arabidopsis; organelles; peptide processing; prolyl aminopeptidase; proline; protein import; proteolysis

Categories

Funding

  1. Australian Government International Research Training Program
  2. University Postgraduate Award at the University of Western Australia
  3. Australian Research Council (ARC) Future Fellowship [FT130100112]

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In this study, the researchers identified a prolyl aminopeptidase homologue, PAP1, which has two isoforms targeting different subcellular locations. They found that PAP1 may play a role in proline homeostasis and pollen development in plants. The results suggest that PAP1 is involved in the chloroplastic peptide processing pathway and could be important for maintaining cellular stability and activity.
Plant endosymbiotic organelles such as mitochondria and chloroplasts harbour a wide array of biochemical reactions. As a part of protein homeostasis to maintain organellar activity and stability, unwanted proteins and peptides need to be completely degraded in a stepwise mechanism termed the processing pathway, where at the last stage single amino acids are released by aminopeptidases. Here, we determined the molecular and physiological functions of a prolyl aminopeptidase homologue PAP1 (At2g14260) that is able to release N-terminal proline. Transcript analyses demonstrate that an alternative transcription start site gives rise to two alternative transcripts, generating two in-frame proteins PAP1.1 and PAP1.2. Subcellular localization studies revealed that the longer isoform PAP1.1, which contains a 51 residue N-terminal extension, is exclusively targeted to chloroplasts, while the truncated isoform PAP1.2 is located in the cytosol. Distinct expression patterns in different tissues and developmental stages were observed. Investigations into the physiological role of PAP1 using loss-of-function mutants revealed that PAP1 activity may be involved in proline homeostasis and accumulation, required for pollen development and tolerance to osmotic stress. Enzymatic activity, subcellular location, and expression patterns of PAP1 suggest a role in the chloroplastic peptide processing pathway and proline homeostasis.

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