The chloroplast proteome is a dynamic mosaic of plastid- and nuclear-encoded proteins. Plastid protein homeostasis is maintained through the balance between de novo synthesis and proteolysis. Intracellular communication pathways, including the plastid-to-nucleus signalling and the protein homeostasis machinery, made of stromal chaperones and proteases, shape chloroplast proteome based on developmental and physiological needs. However, the maintenance of fully functional chloroplasts is costly and under specific stress conditions the degradation of damaged chloroplasts is essential to the maintenance of a healthy population of photosynthesising organelles while promoting nutrient redistribution to sink tissues. In this work, we have addressed this complex regulatory chloroplast-quality-control pathway by modulating the expression of two nuclear genes encoding plastid ribosomal proteins PRPS1 and PRPL4. By transcriptomics, proteomics and transmission electron microscopy analyses, we show that the increased expression of PRPS1 gene leads to chloroplast degradation and early flowering, as an escape strategy from stress. On the contrary, the overaccumulation of PRPL4 protein is kept under control by increasing the amount of plastid chaperones and components of the unfolded protein response (cpUPR) regulatory mechanism. This study advances our understanding of molecular mechanisms underlying chloroplast retrograde communication and provides new insights into cellular responses to impaired plastid protein homeostasis.

Perturbation of protein homeostasis brings plastids at the crossroad between repair and dismantling / L. Tadini, N. Jeran, G. Domingo, F. Zambelli, S. Masiero, A. Calabritto, E. Costantini, S. Forlani, M. Marsoni, F. Briani, C. Vannini, P. Pesaresi. - In: PLOS GENETICS. - ISSN 1553-7404. - 19:7(2023 Jul 07), pp. e1010344.1-e1010344.41. [10.1371/journal.pgen.1010344]

Perturbation of protein homeostasis brings plastids at the crossroad between repair and dismantling

L. Tadini
Co-primo
Writing – Original Draft Preparation
;
N. Jeran
Co-primo
Methodology
;
F. Zambelli
Methodology
;
S. Masiero
Membro del Collaboration Group
;
E. Costantini
Methodology
;
S. Forlani
Methodology
;
F. Briani
Methodology
;
P. Pesaresi
Ultimo
2023

Abstract

The chloroplast proteome is a dynamic mosaic of plastid- and nuclear-encoded proteins. Plastid protein homeostasis is maintained through the balance between de novo synthesis and proteolysis. Intracellular communication pathways, including the plastid-to-nucleus signalling and the protein homeostasis machinery, made of stromal chaperones and proteases, shape chloroplast proteome based on developmental and physiological needs. However, the maintenance of fully functional chloroplasts is costly and under specific stress conditions the degradation of damaged chloroplasts is essential to the maintenance of a healthy population of photosynthesising organelles while promoting nutrient redistribution to sink tissues. In this work, we have addressed this complex regulatory chloroplast-quality-control pathway by modulating the expression of two nuclear genes encoding plastid ribosomal proteins PRPS1 and PRPL4. By transcriptomics, proteomics and transmission electron microscopy analyses, we show that the increased expression of PRPS1 gene leads to chloroplast degradation and early flowering, as an escape strategy from stress. On the contrary, the overaccumulation of PRPL4 protein is kept under control by increasing the amount of plastid chaperones and components of the unfolded protein response (cpUPR) regulatory mechanism. This study advances our understanding of molecular mechanisms underlying chloroplast retrograde communication and provides new insights into cellular responses to impaired plastid protein homeostasis.
Chloroplast; retrograde communication; repair; dismantling
Settore BIO/18 - Genetica
Settore BIO/19 - Microbiologia Generale
Settore BIO/04 - Fisiologia Vegetale
   SOUP: Signalingg the Organelle Unfolded Protein response
   MINISTERO DELL'ISTRUZIONE E DEL MERITO
   2017FBS8YN_001
7-lug-2023
Article (author)
File in questo prodotto:
File Dimensione Formato  
journal.pgen.1010344-1_reduced.pdf

accesso aperto

Descrizione: Research Article
Tipologia: Publisher's version/PDF
Dimensione 4 MB
Formato Adobe PDF
4 MB Adobe PDF Visualizza/Apri
Pubblicazioni consigliate

I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.

Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2434/987368
Citazioni
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.pmc??? 0
  • Scopus 0
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.isi??? 0
social impact