| Literature DB >> 23543921 |
K Manandhar-Shrestha1, B Tamot, E P S Pratt, S Saitie, A Bräutigam, A P M Weber, Susanne Hoffmann-Benning.
Abstract
As the world population grows, our need for food increases drastically. Limited amounts of arable land lead to a competition between food and fuel crops, while changes in the global climate may impact future crop yields. Thus, a second "green revolution" will need a better understanding of the processes essential for plant growth and development. One approach toward the solution of this problem is to better understand regulatory and transport processes in C4 plants. C4 plants display an up to 10-fold higher apparent CO2 assimilation and higher yields while maintaining high water use efficiency. This requires differential regulation of mesophyll (M) and bundle sheath (BS) chloroplast development as well as higher metabolic fluxes of photosynthetic intermediates between cells and particularly across chloroplast envelopes. While previous analyses of overall chloroplast membranes have yielded significant insight, our comparative proteomics approach using enriched BS and M chloroplast envelopes of Zea mays allowed us to identify 37 proteins of unknown function that have not been seen in these earlier studies. We identified 280 proteins, 84% of which are known/predicted to be present in chloroplasts. Seventy-four percent have a known or predicted membrane association. Twenty-one membrane proteins were 2-15 times more abundant in BS cells, while 36 of the proteins were more abundant in M chloroplast envelopes. These proteins could represent additional candidates of proteins essential for development or metabolite transport processes in C4 plants. RT-PCR confirmed differential expression of 13 candidate genes. Chloroplast association for seven proteins was confirmed using YFP/GFP labeling. Gene expression of four putative transporters was examined throughout the leaf and during the greening of leaves. Genes for a PIC-like protein and an ER-AP-like protein show an early transient increase in gene expression during the transition to light. In addition, PIC gene expression is increased in the immature part of the leaf and was lower in the fully developed parts of the leaf, suggesting a need for/incorporation of the protein during chloroplast development.Entities:
Keywords: C4 plant; bundle sheath cells; chloroplast envelope proteins; mesophyll cells; photosynthesis
Year: 2013 PMID: 23543921 PMCID: PMC3610082 DOI: 10.3389/fpls.2013.00065
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Plant Sci ISSN: 1664-462X Impact factor: 5.753
Figure 1Distribution of envelope proteins throughout different cell compartments (A) and by membrane association (B).
Figure 2Differences in the relative abundance of proteins based on the bundle sheath: mesophyll ratio of their spectral ion counts. Data are based on values shown in Tables S3 and S4 in Supplementary Material. Except for known controls, only membrane-associated proteins are integrated. Due to space constrains only ca. 33% of the bars are labeled. The complete protein list and figure are shown in Table S4 in Supplementary Material. Values are the averages from two mesophyll and three BS data sets. Red bars indicate proteins used for further studies.
List of proteins used for further study and their predicted function.
| Protein name | Accession no. | No. of TM regions (Octopus) | Predicted function |
|---|---|---|---|
| 5TM | LOC100283913 | 8 | |
| ER-AP | LOC100283096 | 3 | ER-associated protein but was also found in the chloroplast. Predicted to play a role in the formation of tubular ER in mammals and yeast (Nziengui et al., |
| Hyp2 | LOC100285177 | 11 | Contains a calcium-binding domain and may play a role in calcium modulation or signaling. Its pfam01699 domain suggests a possible role as a Sodium-Calcium exchange protein (NCBI). |
| Hyp3 | LOC100192917 | 4 | Protein of unknown function with a DUF3411 domain (NCBI). |
| HypE | LOC100275334 | 2 | Predicted to be a member of the NADH-ubiquinone oxidoreductase complex I (NCBI). |
| HypF | LOC100283211 | 0 | Similarity to chalcone isomerase (NCBI). |
| HypFD | LOC100282099 | 4 | Put. PRA1-family protein. This protein family contains the glutamate transporter (EAAC1) interacting protein GTRAP3-18. Could regulate metabolite transport (Lin et al., |
| Mep1 | LOC100383166 | 12 | LrgB-like protein (Bräutigam et al., |
| Mep3 | LOC100276525 | 4 | Protein of unknown function with DUF3411 domain (Bräutigam et al., |
| UP-a | LOC100285818 | 1 | Proline-rich protein with similarity to members of the alpha-amylase inhibitors (AAI), lipid transfer (LT), and seed storage (SS) protein family (Kader, |
| UP-d | LOC100192831 | 4 | Belongs to the uncharacterized protein family, UPF0114 (NCBI). |
| UP-f | LOC100277914 | 1 | Contains a MAEBL domain. MAEBL proteins were identified in |
| PIC/TIC | LOC100273175 | 4 | Contains a DUF3611. Similarity to the |
| PEPC | LOC100191762 | 0 | Phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase; initial carbon assimilation in the mesophyll cells of maize yielding oxaloacetate (Bräutigam et al., |
| NADP-ME | NP_001105313 | 2 | NADP-Malic enzyme; reduction of malate in the BS chloroplast yielding CO2, NADPH and pyruvate (Bräutigam et al., |
The abbreviations for proteins are identical to those used in other tables and in the figures. Number of transmembrane regions was determined as described in Section “Materials and Methods.”
Summary table showing membrane-associated proteins and their predicted or tested localization and bundle sheath (BS) or mesophyll (M) association.
| Protein name | Localization (GFP/YFP or pred.) | No. Of TM regions (Octopus) | Spectral count ratio (BS/M) | BS/M ratio determined by RT-PCR |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 5TM | YFP | 8 | 0.79 | 0.58 ± 0.11 |
| ER-AP | GFP | 3 | 0.70 | 0.65 ± 0.02 |
| Hyp2 | unknown | 11 | 0.57 | 0.70 ± 0.27 |
| Hyp3 | Cp-pred | 4 | BS | 0.87 ± 0.25 |
| HypE | Cp-pred | 2 | 0.80 | 0.78 ± 0.14 |
| HypF | Cp-pred | 0 | 0.57 | 0.65 ± 0.23 |
| HypFD | Cp-pred | 4 | 0.31 | 0.28 ± 0.15 |
| Mep1 | Cp-GFP | 12 | 1.09 | 1.12 ± 0.56 |
| Mep3 | Cp-YFP | 4 | 0.69 | 3.00 ± 1.56 |
| UP-a | Cp-YFP | 1 | 1.41 | 0.66 ± 0.11 |
| UP-d | Cp-YFP | 4 | 1.05 | 0.40 ± 0.05 |
| UP-f | CP-pred | 1 | 3.09 | 0.84 ± 0.09 |
| PIC/TIC | Cp-YFP | 4 | 1.20 | 0.99 ± 0.16 |
| PEPC | Cyt | 0 | 0.71 | 0.30 ± 0.20 |
| NADP-ME | Cp | 2 | 5.32 | 4.44 ± 1.57 |
Localization prediction was based on computer prediction or on actual GFP/YFP labeling (Figure .
Figure 3RT-PCR showing relative abundance of transcripts for several genes encoding chloroplast envelope proteins. Band intensities of three to five biological replicates were quantified and are displayed in Table 2. MS, mesophyll; BS, bundle sheath.
Figure 4Localization of chloroplast envelope proteins with C-terminal GFP or YFP tags that were transiently expressed in . The first column shows chlorophyll autofluorescence, the second column GFP or YFP fluorescence, column three shows the overlay. Protein names (as used in Table 1) are indicated on the right of each row.
Figure 5Quantification of semiquantitative RT-PCR showing tissue-specific expression of genes encoding the 5TM protein (green bars), ER-AP (yellow bars), PIC-like protein (blue bars), and UP-d (red bars). Representative gel pictures are shown in the lower half. Band intensities of three to five biological replicates were quantified and displayed in the bar graph.
Figure 6Change in the expression of genes encoding the PIC-like protein (A), ER-AP (B), 5TM protein (C), and UP-d (D). Values were obtained from five to six biological replicates.