4.5 Article

Chloroplast translation factor EF-Tu of Arabidopsis thaliana can be inactivated via oxidation of a specific cysteine residue

Journal

BIOCHEMICAL JOURNAL
Volume 480, Issue 5, Pages 307-318

Publisher

PORTLAND PRESS LTD
DOI: 10.1042/BCJ20220609

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Through studying the sensitivity of chloroplast-localized EF-Tu protein in Arabidopsis to oxidative stress, it was found that nucleotide-free cpEF-Tu can be oxidized by oxidative agents, leading to a decrease in translational activity. Addition of thioredoxin f1 can reduce the oxidized cpEF-Tu and reactivate its translational activity, indicating that the oxidation-reduction dependent mechanism plays a reversible regulatory role in chloroplast translation.
Translational elongation factor EF-Tu, which delivers aminoacyl-tRNA to the ribosome, is susceptible to inactivation by reactive oxygen species (ROS) in the cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803. However, the sensitivity to ROS of chloroplast-localized EF-Tu (cpEF-Tu) of plants remains to be elucidated. In the present study, we generated a recombinant cpEF-Tu protein of Arabidopsis thaliana and examined its sensitivity to ROS in vitro. In cpEF-Tu that lacked a bound nucleotide, one of the two cysteine residues, Cys149 and Cys451, in the mature protein was sensitive to oxidation by H2O2, with the resultant formation of sulfenic acid. The translational activity of cpEF-Tu, as determined with an in vitro translation system, derived from Escherichia coli, that had been reconstituted without EF-Tu, decreased with the oxidation of a cysteine residue. Replacement of Cys149 with an alanine residue rendered cpEF-Tu insensitive to inactivation by H2O2, indicating that Cys149 might be the target of oxidation. In contrast, cpEF-Tu that had bound either GDP or GTP was less sensitive to oxidation by H2O2 than nucleotide-free cpEF-Tu. The addition of thioredoxin f1, a major thioredoxin in the Arabidopsis chloroplast, to oxidized cpEF-Tu allowed the reduction of Cys149 and the reactivation of cpEFTu, suggesting that the oxidation of cpEF-Tu might be a reversible regulatory mechanism that suppresses the chloroplast translation system in a redox-dependent manner.

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