4.7 Article

Riboflavin integrates cellular energetics and cell cycle to regulate maize seed development

Journal

PLANT BIOTECHNOLOGY JOURNAL
Volume 20, Issue 8, Pages 1487-1501

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/pbi.13826

Keywords

cell cycle; mitochondrion; opaque; riboflavin; seed development

Funding

  1. National Natural Sciences Foundation of China [U1804235]
  2. Ministry of Science and Technology of China [2021YFF1000304, 32001562]
  3. Natural Science Foundation of Shanghai [17ZR1409400]

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In this research, a novel maize mutant o18 was identified, which exhibited impaired endosperm filling and embryo development. The loss of function of enzyme ZmRIBA1 in o18 disrupted cellular energy metabolism and cell cycle progression. Unexpectedly, the up-regulation of cell cycle genes in o18 correlated with the increase of H3K4me3 levels, suggesting a possible epigenetic backup mechanism. Riboflavin was found to play a crucial role in coordinating cellular energy and cell cycle during maize endosperm development.
Riboflavin is the precursor of essential cofactors for diverse metabolic processes. Unlike animals, plants can de novo produce riboflavin through an ancestrally conserved pathway, like bacteria and fungi. However, the mechanism by which riboflavin regulates seed development is poorly understood. Here, we report a novel maize (Zea mays L.) opaque mutant o18, which displays an increase in lysine accumulation, but impaired endosperm filling and embryo development. O18 encodes a rate-limiting bifunctional enzyme ZmRIBA1, targeted to plastid where to initiate riboflavin biosynthesis. Loss of function of O18 specifically disrupts respiratory complexes I and II, but also decreases SDH1 flavinylation, and in turn shifts the mitochondrial tricarboxylic acid (TCA) cycle to glycolysis. The deprivation of cellular energy leads to cell-cycle arrest at G1 and S phases in both mitosis and endoreduplication during endosperm development. The unexpected up-regulation of cell-cycle genes in o18 correlates with the increase of H3K4me3 levels, revealing a possible H3K4me-mediated epigenetic back-up mechanism for cell-cycle progression under unfavourable circumstances. Overexpression of O18 increases riboflavin production and confers osmotic tolerance. Altogether, our results substantiate a key role of riboflavin in coordinating cellular energy and cell cycle to modulate maize endosperm development.

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