4.6 Article

The plastoglobule-localized protein AtABC1K6 is a Mn2+-dependent kinase necessary for timely transition to reproductive growth

Journal

JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 298, Issue 4, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1101/2021.10.28.466314

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Funding

  1. USDA Umbrella Program [MICL02633]
  2. AgBioResearch startup funds
  3. Michigan State University

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Loss-of-function mutants in ABC1 genes are associated with respiratory defects in microbes and humans as well as compromised photosynthetic performance and stress tolerance in plants. We investigated AtABC1K6, a homolog from Arabidopsis thaliana, and demonstrated its in vitro autophosphorylation activity. The presence of kinase activity has significant implications for further studies on ABC1 proteins and plastoglobules.
The Absence of bc(1) Complex (ABC1) is an ancient, atypical protein kinase family that emerged prior to the archaeal-eubacterial divergence. Loss-of-function mutants in ABC1 genes are linked to respiratory defects in microbes and humans and to compromised photosynthetic performance and stress tolerance in plants. However, demonstration of protein kinase activity remains elusive, hampering their study. Here, we investigate a homolog from Arabidopsis thaliana, AtABC1K6, and demonstrate in vitro autophosphorylation activity, which we replicate with a human ABC1 ortholog. We also show that AtABC1K6 protein kinase activity requires an atypical buffer composition, including Mn2+ as a divalent cation cofactor and a low salt concentration. AtABC1K6 associates with plastoglobule lipid droplets of A. thaliana chloroplasts, along with five paralogs. We show that the protein kinase activity associated with isolated A. thaliana plastoglobules was inhibited at higher salt concentrations, but could accommodate Mg2+ as well as Mn2+, indicating salt sensitivity, but not the requirement for Mn2+, may be a general characteristic of ABC1 proteins. Finally, loss of functional AtABC1K6 impairs the developmental transition from vegetative to reproductive growth. This phenotype was complemented by the wild-type sequence of AtABC1K6, but not by a kinase-dead point mutant in the unique Ala-triad of the ATP-binding pocket, demonstrating the physiological relevance of the protein's kinase activity. We suggest that ABC1s are bona fide protein kinases with a unique regulatory mechanism. Our results open the door to detailed functional and mechanistic studies of ABC1 proteins and plastoglobules.

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