| Literature DB >> 27170143 |
Lara Donaldson1,2, Stuart Meier3, Christoph Gehring3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Cyclic nucleotides have been shown to play important signaling roles in many physiological processes in plants including photosynthesis and defence. Despite this, little is known about cyclic nucleotide-dependent signaling mechanisms in plants since the downstream target proteins remain unknown. This is largely due to the fact that bioinformatics searches fail to identify plant homologs of protein kinases and phosphodiesterases that are the main targets of cyclic nucleotides in animals.Entities:
Keywords: Cross-talk; Cyclic nucleotide; Defence response; H2O2; Hypersensitive response; Nitric oxide; Reactive oxygen species; Second messenger; cAMP; cGMP
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27170143 PMCID: PMC4865018 DOI: 10.1186/s12964-016-0133-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell Commun Signal ISSN: 1478-811X Impact factor: 5.712
Expression correlation matrix of cyclic nucleotide binding protein candidates
| EIF4A | PGK1 | GAPB | RABE1b | TKL | CLPC1 | SHMT1 | GOX1 | ATPD | CSP41B | PORB | CA1 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | X | X | X | X | X | X | X | X | X | X | X | EIF4A |
| 1 | 0.956 | 0.876 | 0.877 | 0.834 | 0.893 | 0.897 | 0.910 | 0.958 | X | 0.947 | PGK1 | |
| 1 | 0.900 | 0.886 | 0.783 | 0.851 | 0.923 | 0.922 | 0.973 | X | 0.940 | GAPB | ||
| 1 | 0.813 | 0.736 | 0.770 | 0.856 | 0.881 | 0.881 | X | 0.867 | RABE1b | |||
| 1 | 0.77 | 0.763 | 0.818 | 0.826 | 0.859 | X | 0.858 | TKL | ||||
| 1 | 0.784 | 0.756 | 0.718 | 0.785 | X | 0.751 | CLPC1 | |||||
| 1 | 0.803 | 0.756 | 0.817 | X | 0.839 | SHMT1 | ||||||
| 1 | 0.881 | 0.920 | X | 0.898 | GOX1 | |||||||
| 1 | 0.942 | X | 0.900 | ATPD | ||||||||
| 1 | X | 0.946 | CSP41B | |||||||||
| 1 | X | PORB | ||||||||||
| 1 | CA1 |
Expression correlation matrix detailing the level of co-expression (expression correlation r-value) that the identified CNBP candidates share with each other. X denotes that the shared r-value was below 0.7
Arabidopsis cyclic nucleotide binding protein candidates
| LEAF cAMP | LEAF cGMP | CALLUS cAMP | CALLUS cGMP | ||||||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Accession | Description | 2-AHA-cAMP-agarose | 8-AEA-cAMP-agarose | 2-[Biotin]-AHA-cAMP | cAMP antibody | 2-AH-cGMP-agarose | 8-AET-cGMP-agarose | 2-[Biotin]-AH-cGMP | cGMP antibody | 2-AHA-cAMP-agarose | 8-AEA-cAMP-agarose | 2-[Biotin]-AHA-cAMP | cAMP antibody | 2-AH-cGMP-agarose | 8-AET-cGMP-agarose | 2-[Biotin]-AH-cGMP | cGMP antibody |
| AT3G13920 | eukaryotic translation initiation factor 4A1 | B | B | B | B | B | B | B | B | B | B | B | |||||
| AT3G12780 | phosphoglycerate kinase 1 | B | B | B | B | B | B | B | B | ||||||||
| AT1G42970 | glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase B subunit | B | B | B | 2, 3, B | B | B | B | B | ||||||||
| AT4G20360 | RAB GTPase homolog E1B | B | B | B | 2, 3, B | B | B | B | B | ||||||||
| AT3G60750 | Transketolase | B | B | B | B | B | B | B | |||||||||
| AT5G50920 | CLPC homologue 1 | B | B | B | B | B | B | B | |||||||||
| AT4G37930 | serine transhydroxymethyltransferase 1 | 2, B | B | 1, B | B | B | B | 2, 3, B | |||||||||
| AT3G14420 | Glycolate oxidase 1 | B | B | B | B | ||||||||||||
| AT4G09650 | ATP synthase delta subunit | B | B | B | B | ||||||||||||
| AT1G09340 | chloroplast stem-loop binding protein of 41 kDA | 1 | B | B | 2, B | ||||||||||||
| AT1G56330 AT3G62560 AT4G02080 | secretion-associated RAS 1B | B | B | B | |||||||||||||
| AT4G27440 | protochlorophyllide oxidoreductase B | B | B | B | |||||||||||||
| AT3G01500 | carbonic anhydrase 1 | B | B | ||||||||||||||
The fraction in which the protein was identified is indicated with numbers 1–6 being the elution fractions (1 denotes the first and least stringent elution and 6 the final and most stringent elution) while B indicates that the protein was found in the bead fraction. For the cAMP baits the elutions were 1) 100 mM GDP; 2) 100 mM AMP; 3) 10 mM cGMP; 4) 100 mM cGMP; 5) 10 mM cAMP and 6) 100 mM cAMP. For the cGMP baits the elutions were 1) 100 mM ADP; 2) 100 mM GMP; 3) 10 mM cAMP; 4) 100 mM cAMP; 5) 10 mM cGMP and 6) 100 mM cGMP
Binding properties of the cyclic nucleotide binding protein candidates
| Accession | Description | Nucleotide binding | Nucleotide binding domain | Nucleotide binding site | Alignment with CNBD | Putative CNBD | NO PTM | Site of NO PTM |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| AT3G13920 | eukaryotic translation initiation factor 4A1 | ATP | 58–255 | 83–90 | GAF | 174–399 | S-nitrosylation | |
| AT3G12780 | phosphoglycerate kinase 1 | ATP | 432–435 | CNB GAF | 87–286 171–335 | S-nitrosylation S-nitrosylationHR | ||
| AT1G42970 | glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase B subunit | NAD (P) | 80–243 | 91–92 | CNB GAF | 173–323 83–288 | S-nitrosylation Y-nitration | |
| AT4G20360 | RAB GTPase homolog E1B | GTP | 77–278 | 86–93 148–152 203–206 | S-nitrosylation S-nitrosylationHR Y-nitration | |||
| AT3G60750 | Transketolase | CNB GAF | 213–408 40–232 | S-nitrosylation Y-nitration | Y337 | |||
| AT5G50920 | CLPC homologue 1 | ATP | 294–434 637–818 | 302–309 645–652 | ||||
| AT4G37930 | serine transhydroxymethyltransferase 1 | CNB GAF | 369–492 262–458 | Y-nitration | ||||
| AT3G14420 | Glycolate oxidase 1 | FMN | 13–355 | 285–309 | GAF | 93–276 | Y-nitration | |
| AT4G09650 | ATP synthase delta-subunit | |||||||
| AT1G09340 | chloroplast stem-loop binding protein of 41 kDA | NAD (P) | 54–235 | S-nitrosylation S-nitrosylationHR Y-nitration | ||||
| AT4G27440 | protochlorophyllide oxidoreductase B | NAD (P) | 84–234 270–366 | CNB | 77–279 | Y-nitration | ||
| AT3G01500 | carbonic anhydrase 1 | GAF | 141–345 | S-nitrosylation S-nitrosylationHR Y-nitration | C280 |
Annotated nucleotide binding domains and nucleotide binding sites of the candidate CNBPs were extracted from the Uniprot and Interpro databases. The alignment of the candidate CNBPs with known CNBDs was extrapolated from Figs. 1 and 2. Evidence of NO-induced PTM and the PTM site was obtained from the literature [79–82]
Fig. 1Alignment of candidate cyclic nucleotide binding proteins with known CNB domains. Representative CNB domains were obtained from Interpro (IPR000595) including those from human (Hs) protein kinases PKA1α, PKG1; channels HCN1, CNGCα1, CNGCβ1; and guanine nucleotide exchange factors EPAC1, EPAC2 and E. coli (Ec) transcription factor CAP. Where the protein has tandem CNB domains these are indicated by the letters “a” and “b”. The number in parenthesis indicates the number of amino acids that have been omitted. The * indicates conserved amino acids across species. Tyrosine residues that have been circled are sites of Y-nitration. The Arabidopsis CNBP candidates PGK1, GAPB, TKL, SHMT1 and PORB align with the CNB domain. The site of Y-nitration in the CNBP candidate, TKL is found within the CNB domain although it is distant from the Y-nitration site in human PKG
Fig. 2Alignment of candidate cyclic nucleotide binding proteins with known GAF domains. Representative GAF domains (IPR003018) include those from human (Hs) phosphodiesterases PDE2, PDE5; Anabaena sp. PCC 7120 (An) adenylyl cyclases CYAB1, CYAB2, CYAC1, CYAC2; and E. coli (Ec) FhlA. Where the protein has tandem GAF domains these are indicated by the letters “a” and “b”. The number in parenthesis indicates the number of amino acids that have been omitted. The * indicates conserved amino acids across species. The cysteine residues that have been circled are sites of S-nitrosylation. The Arabidopsis CNBP candidates EIF4A1, PGK1, GAPB, TKL, SHMT1, GOX1 and CA1 align with the GAF domain. The site of S-nitrosylation in the CNBP candidate CA1 is found within the GAF domain although it is distant from the S-nitrosylation site in human PDE5.
Fig. 3The Calvin cycle and photorespiration pathway. The CNBP candidates are depicted in red font. Additional photorespiratory enzymes that were pulled down during the affinity purification procedure but excluded during the stringent elimination process (Table S2) are shown in blue font, where SAGT is ALANINE: GLYOXYLATE AMINOTRANSFERASE and CAT2 is CATALASE 2. The Calvin cycle and photorespiration pathway are connected by the dual-functioning enzyme RUBISCO shown in green. The CNBP candidate CA1 interconverts soluble HCO3− to gaseous CO2 and controls the supply of CO2 to RUBISCO and regulates stomatal closure through HCO3− effects on anion channels thereby further affecting the supply of CO2 to the plant. The CNBP candidates PGK1, GAPB and TKL are enzymes in the Calvin cycle. PGK1 and GAPB convert Ribulose-1, 5-bisphosphate (RuBP) into the triose phosphate, D-glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate which can feed into sucrose and starch biosynthesis. TKL is involved in the regeneration of RuBP and significantly controls carbon flux through the Calvin cycle. The CNBP candidates GOX1 and SHMT1 are enzymes in the photorespiration pathway. GOX1 catalyses the conversion of glycolate to glyoxylate with the concomitant release of H2O2 as a by-product. SHMT1 converts two molecules of glycine to serine, CO2, NH3 and NADH. This CO2 can feedback into the Calvin cycle while NH3 can feed into nitrogen assimilation
Gene ontology biological process annotations of the expression correlated cyclic nucleotide binding protein candidates
| Accession | Description | Defence response | H2O2 signaling |
|---|---|---|---|
| AT3G12780 | phosphoglycerate kinase 1 | defence response to bacterium, defence response, incompatible interaction | hydrogen peroxide catabolic process |
| AT1G42970 | glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase B subunit | defence response to bacterium | hydrogen peroxide catabolic process |
| AT4G20360 | RAB GTPase homolog E1B | ||
| AT3G60750 | Transketolase | hydrogen peroxide catabolic process | |
| AT5G50920 | CLPC homologue 1 | hydrogen peroxide catabolic process | |
| AT4G37930 | serine transhydroxymethyl-transferase 1 | defence response to bacterium, defence response, incompatible interaction, plant-type hypersensitive response, salicylic acid biosynthetic process | |
| AT3G14420 | Glycolate oxidase 1 | defence response to bacterium | hydrogen peroxide biosynthetic process |
| AT4G09650 | ATP synthase delta-subunit | defence response to bacterium, defence response to fungus, defence response, incompatible interaction, detection of biotic stimulus, jasmonic acid mediated signaling pathway, negative regulation of defence response, regulation of plant-type hypersensitive response, regulation of response to biotic stimulus, response to chitin, salicylic acid biosynthetic process, systemic acquired resistance, salicylic acid mediated signaling pathway | regulation of hydrogen peroxide metabolic process |
| AT1G09340 | chloroplast stem-loop binding protein of 41 kDA | defence response to bacterium, defence response to fungus, defence response, incompatible interaction, detection of biotic stimulus, jasmonic acid mediated signaling pathway, negative regulation of defence response, regulation of plant-type hypersensitive response, regulation of response to biotic stimulus, salicylic acid biosynthetic process, systemic acquired resistance, salicylic acid mediated signaling pathway | regulation of hydrogen peroxide metabolic process |
| AT3G01500 | carbonic anhydrase 1 | defence response to bacterium, defence response to fungus, defence response to fungus, incompatible interaction, defence response, incompatible interaction, detection of biotic stimulus, jasmonic acid mediated signaling pathway, negative regulation of defence response, regulation of plant-type hypersensitive response, regulation of response to biotic stimulus, response to chitin, salicylic acid biosynthetic process, systemic acquired resistance, salicylic acid mediated signaling pathway | regulation of hydrogen peroxide metabolic process |
The GO biological process terms related to the plant defence response against pathogens and H2O2 signaling were downloaded from TAIR for the ten expression correlated CNBPs extracted from Table 3
Fig. 4Gene expression profiling of the expression correlated cyclic nucleotide binding protein candidates. Heat map to show that the ten expression correlated CNBP candidates (extracted from Table 3) are co-expressed and differentially expressed in the selected microarray experiments. Experiments chosen were light vs. dark grown seven day old seedlings; seven day old seedlings that were shifted to nitrogen starved vs. replete media for a further 48 h; Col-0 infected with 105 cfu cm−2 virulent Psm ES4326 for 24 h vs. mock infected; Col-0 infected with 108 cfu cm−2 virulent Pst DC3000 or 108 cfu cm−2 Pst DC3000 hrpA mutant (lacks the type III protein secretion system that delivers virulence effector proteins into host cells) for 7 h vs. mock infected. The scale bar shows the intensity of the log2 transformed fold change values used to generate the heat map
Fig. 5Glycolate oxidase activity in plants inoculated with avirulent and virulent Pseudomonas. The leaves of four week old Col-0 plants were pressure inoculated with either 106 cfu ml−1 avirulent Pst DC3000 AvrRpm1 or virulent Pst DC3000 or 10 mM MgCl2 (control). The effect of NO and cGMP during infection was examined by including 50 μM 8-Br cGMP or 50 μM diethylamine NONOate either separately or in combination, in the bacterial suspension at the time of infection. The infected leaves were harvested at 24 h post infection and GOX activity measured. Leaf proteins were extracted and incubated with sodium glycolate, O-dianisidine and horseradish peroxidase. GOX activity catalyses the conversion of the sodium glycolate substrate to glyoxylate, releasing H2O2. The H2O2 reacts with O-dianisidine in the presence of horseradish peroxidase to produce the coloured O-dianisidine radical which can be quantified spectrophotometrically at 440 nm. GOX activity was found to be significantly induced (p = 0.0276) by ArvRpm1 relative to the MgCl2 control and this activity was significantly suppressed (p = 0.0400) by the combined treatment with NO and cGMP. Error bars represent standard error of the mean (n = 6) and statistical significance was determined using a student’s t-test with the asterisks denoting significant p values < 0.05