4.8 Article

Selective Elimination of Membrane-Damaged Chloroplasts via Microautophagy

Journal

PLANT PHYSIOLOGY
Volume 177, Issue 3, Pages 1007-1026

Publisher

AMER SOC PLANT BIOLOGISTS
DOI: 10.1104/pp.18.00444

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Funding

  1. Japan Society for Promotion of Science KAKENHI [17H05050, 18H04852, 16J03408, 15H05945, 17H01872]
  2. Japan Society for Promotion of Science Research Fellowship for Young Scientists
  3. Japan Science and Technology Agency Building of Consortia for the Development of Human Resources in Science and Technology
  4. Japan Science and Technology Agency PRESTO [JPMJPR16Q1]
  5. Frontier Research Institute for Interdisciplinary Sciences, Tohoku University, Japan, through the Program for Creation of Interdisciplinary Research
  6. Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research [15H05945, 18H04852, 17H05050, 17H01872, 16J03408] Funding Source: KAKEN

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Plant chloroplasts constantly accumulate damage caused by visible wavelengths of light during photosynthesis. Our previous study revealed that entire photodamaged chloroplasts are subjected to vacuolar digestion through an autophagy process termed chlorophagy; however, how this process is induced and executed remained poorly understood. In this study, we monitored intracellular induction of chlorophagy in Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) leaves and found that mesophyll cells damaged by high visible light displayed abnormal chloroplasts with a swollen shape and 2.5 times the volume of normal chloroplasts. In wild-type plants, the activation of chlorophagy decreased the number of swollen chloroplasts. In the autophagy-deficient autophagy mutants, the swollen chloroplasts persisted, and dysfunctional chloroplasts that had lost chlorophyll fluorescence accumulated in the cytoplasm. Chloroplast swelling and subsequent induction of chlorophagy were suppressed by the application of exogenous mannitol to increase the osmotic pressure outside chloroplasts or by overexpression of VESICLE INDUCING PROTEIN IN PLASTID1, which maintains chloroplast envelope integrity. Microscopic observations of autophagy-related membranes showed that swollen chloroplasts were partly surrounded by autophagosomal structures and were engulfed directly by the tonoplast, as in microautophagy. Our results indicate that an elevation in osmotic potential inside the chloroplast due to high visible light-derived envelope damage results in chloroplast swelling and serves as an induction factor for chlorophagy, and this process mobilizes entire chloroplasts via tonoplast-mediated sequestering to avoid the cytosolic accumulation of dysfunctional chloroplasts.

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