4.8 Article

Cooperation of chloroplast ascorbate peroxidases and proton gradient regulation 5 is critical for protecting Arabidopsis plants from photo-oxidative stress

Journal

PLANT JOURNAL
Volume 107, Issue 3, Pages 876-892

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/tpj.15352

Keywords

ascorbate peroxidase; proton gradient regulation 5; increment pH; non-photochemical quenching; cyclic electron flow; oxidative stress; high light; Arabidopsis

Categories

Funding

  1. JSPS KAKENHI [18K19179, 17H03807, 20K21276]
  2. JSPS
  3. FWO
  4. FY2020 Shimane University Internal Competitive Grants
  5. Sasakawa Scientific Research Grant from the Japan Science Society
  6. Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research [17H03807, 18K19179, 20K21276] Funding Source: KAKEN

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Under high-light stress, chloroplast APXs and pH-dependent mechanisms interact to maintain plants' stability against oxidative stress. The PGR5-dependent mechanisms compensate for the lack of APXs, and the cyclic electron flow dependent on the NADH dehydrogenase-like complex may play a role in regulating this process.
High-light (HL) stress enhances the production of H2O2 from the photosynthetic electron transport chain in chloroplasts, potentially causing photo-oxidative damage. Although stromal and thylakoid membrane-bound ascorbate peroxidases (sAPX and tAPX, respectively) are major H2O2-scavenging enzymes in chloroplasts, their knockout mutants do not exhibit a visible phenotype under HL stress. Trans-thylakoid proton gradient ( increment pH)-dependent mechanisms exist for controlling H2O2 production from photosynthesis, such as thermal dissipation of light energy and downregulation of electron transfer between photosystems II and I, and these may compensate for the lack of APXs. To test this hypothesis, we focused on a proton gradient regulation 5 (pgr5) mutant, wherein both increment pH-dependent mechanisms are impaired, and an Arabidopsis sapx tapx double mutant was crossed with the pgr5 single mutant. The sapx tapx pgr5 triple mutant exhibited extreme sensitivity to HL compared with its parental lines. This phenotype was consistent with cellular redox perturbations and enhanced expression of many oxidative stress-responsive genes. These findings demonstrate that the PGR5-dependent mechanisms compensate for chloroplast APXs, and vice versa. An intriguing finding was that the failure of induction of non-photochemical quenching in pgr5 (because of the limitation in increment pH formation) was partially recovered in sapx tapx pgr5. Further genetic studies suggested that this recovery was dependent on the NADH dehydrogenase-like complex-dependent pathway for cyclic electron flow around photosystem I. Together with data from the sapx tapx npq4 mutant, we discuss the interrelationship between APXs and increment pH-dependent mechanisms under HL stress.

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