4.7 Article

Temperature-sensitive albino gene TCD5, encoding a monooxygenase, affects chloroplast development at low temperatures

Journal

JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL BOTANY
Volume 67, Issue 17, Pages 5187-5202

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/jxb/erw287

Keywords

Albino; chloroplast development; map-based cloning; monooxygenase; rice; temperature-sensitive

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Chloroplasts are essential for photosynthesis and play critical roles in plant development. In this study, we characterized the temperature-sensitive chlorophyll-deficient rice mutant tcd5, which develops albino leaves at low temperatures (20 degrees C) and normal green leaves at high temperatures (32 degrees C). The development of chloroplasts and etioplasts is impaired in tcd5 plants at 20 degrees C, and the temperature-sensitive period for the albino phenotype is the P4 stage of leaf development. The development of thylakoid membranes is arrested at the mid-P4 stage in tcd5 plants at 20 degrees C. We performed positional cloning of TCD5 and then complementation and knock-down experiments, and the results showed that the transcript LOC_Os05g34040.1 from the LOC_Os05g34040 gene corresponded to the tcd5 phenotype. TCD5 encodes a conserved plastid-targeted monooxygenase family protein which has not been previously reported associated with a temperature-sensitive albino phenotype in plants. TCD5 is abundantly expressed in young leaves and immature spikes, and low temperatures increased this expression. The transcription of some genes involved in plastid transcription/translation and photosynthesis varied in the tcd5 mutant. Although the phenotype and temperature dependence of the TCD5 orthologous mutant phenotype were different in rice and Arabidopsis, OsTCD5 could rescue the phenotype of the Arabidopsis mutant, suggesting that TCD5 function is conserved between monocots and dicots.

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