Literature DB >> 25871543

Expression of Malus xiaojinensis IRT1 (MxIRT1) protein in transgenic yeast cells leads to degradation through autophagy in the presence of excessive iron.

Shuang Li1, Xi Zhang1, Xiu-Yue Zhang1, Wei Xiao1,2, James O Berry3, Peng Li1, Si Jin1, Song Tan1, Peng Zhang1, Wei-Zhong Zhao4, Li-Ping Yin1.   

Abstract

Iron is essential for plants, but highly toxic when present in excess. Consequently, iron uptake by root transporters must be finely tuned to avoid excess uptake from soil under iron excess. The iron-regulated transporter of Malus xiaojinensis (MxIRT1), induced in roots under iron deficiency, is a highly effective iron(II) transporter. Here, we investigated how the presence of excessive iron leads to MxIRT1 degradation in yeast expressing this plant iron transporter protein. To determine the relationship between iron abundance and MxIRT1 degradation, relative levels of autophagy-related gene-8 (ATG8) mRNA and the active ATG8-phosphatidylethanolamine-conjugated (PE) protein were measured in wild-type yeast and the autophagic mutant strains atg1∆, atg5∆, atg7∆, ypt7∆ and tor1∆ under normal and excessive iron conditions. The data showed that the exposure of MxIRT1-eGFP-transformed wild-type and tor1∆ strains to excessive iron led to significantly increased levels of ATG8 transcript and ATG8-PE protein, which resulted in enhanced MxIRT1 degradation. Co-localization of mCherry-ATG8 and MxIRT1-eGFP provided evidence that these proteins interact during autophagy in yeast. While inhibition of autophagic initiation, autophagosome formation and vacuole fusion all decreased MxIRT1 degradation. PMSF inhibition of autophagy prevented degradation, leading to the accumulation of MxIRT1-containing vesicles in the vacuoles. MxIRT1-vesicles were sorted into autophagosomes for iron-induced degradation in yeast, whereas the endogenous iron(II) transporter Fet4 was degraded in an autophagy-independent manner. Moreover, immunoprecipitation showed that multimono-ubiquitins provided MxIRT1 with the ubiquitination signal. Together, three factors, iron excess, autophagy and mono-ubiquitination, affect the functional activity and stability of exogenous MxIRT1 in yeast, thereby preventing iron uptake via this root transporter.
Copyright © 2015 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Fet4; MxIRT1; autophagy; iron excess; mono-ubiquitination; transgenic yeast

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Year:  2015        PMID: 25871543     DOI: 10.1002/yea.3075

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Yeast        ISSN: 0749-503X            Impact factor:   3.239


  3 in total

Review 1.  Responses of Plant Proteins to Heavy Metal Stress-A Review.

Authors:  Md Kamrul Hasan; Yuan Cheng; Mukesh K Kanwar; Xian-Yao Chu; Golam J Ahammed; Zhen-Yu Qi
Journal:  Front Plant Sci       Date:  2017-09-05       Impact factor: 5.753

2.  HRM and CRAC in MxIRT1 act as iron sensors to determine MxIRT1 vesicle-PM fusion and metal transport.

Authors:  Song Tan; Xi Zhang; Qi Zhang; Yu-Meng Li; Peng Zhang; Li-Ping Yin
Journal:  Plant Signal Behav       Date:  2021-11-23

3.  Monoubiquitinated MxIRT1 acts as an iron receptor to determine MxIRT1 vacuole degradation or plasma membrane recycling via endocytosis.

Authors:  Song Tan; Shuang Li; Xiu-Yue Zhang; Yu-Meng Li; Peng Zhang; Li-Ping Yin
Journal:  Plant Signal Behav       Date:  2022-12-31
  3 in total

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