4.7 Article

The occurrence and control of nitric oxide generation by the plant mitochondrial electron transport chain

Journal

PLANT CELL AND ENVIRONMENT
Volume 40, Issue 7, Pages 1074-1085

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/pce.12884

Keywords

Nicotiana tabacum; alternative oxidase; antimycin A; Complex III; mitochondrial electron transport chain; myxothiazol; nitric oxide; nitrite; oligomycin; respiration

Categories

Funding

  1. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada

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The plant mitochondrial electron transport chain (ETC) is bifurcated such that electrons from ubiquinol are passed to oxygen via the usual cytochrome path or through alternative oxidase (AOX). We previously showed that knockdown of AOX in transgenic tobacco increased leaf concentrations of nitric oxide (NO), implying that an activity capable of generating NO had been effected. Here, we identify the potential source of this NO. Treatment of leaves with antimycin A (AA, Qi-site inhibitor of Complex III) increased NO amount more than treatment with myxothiazol (Myxo, Qo-site inhibitor) despite both being equally effective at inhibiting respiration. Comparison of nitrate-grown wild-type with AOX knockdown and overexpression plants showed a negative correlation between AOX amount and NO amount following AA. Further, Myxo fully negated the ability of AA to increase NO amount. With ammonium-grown plants, neither AA nor Myxo strongly increased NO amount in any plant line. When these leaves were supplied with nitrite alongside the AA or Myxo, then the inhibitor effects across lines mirrored that of nitrate-grown plants. Hence the ETC, likely the Q-cycle of Complex III generates NO from nitrite, and AOX reduces this activity by acting as a non-energy-conserving electron sink upstream of Complex III.

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