| Literature DB >> 30945737 |
Francisco Colombatti1, Regina Mencia1, Lucila Garcia1,2, Natanael Mansilla1, Sergio Alemano3, Andrea M Andrade3,4, Daniel H Gonzalez1, Elina Welchen1.
Abstract
This study demonstrates the existence of the oxidation resistance (OXR) protein family in plants. There are six OXR members in Arabidopsis that contain the highly conserved TLDc domain that is characteristic of this eukaryotic protein family. AtOXR2 is a mitochondrial protein able to alleviate the stress sensitivity of a yeast oxr1 mutant. It was induced by oxidative stress and its overexpression in Arabidopsis (oeOXR2) increased leaf ascorbate, photosynthesis, biomass, and seed production, as well as conferring tolerance to methyl viologen, antimycin A, and high light intensities. The oeOXR2 plants also showed higher ABA content, changes in ABA sensitivity, and modified expression of ABA- and stress-regulated genes. While the oxr2 mutants had a similar shoot phenotype to the wild-type, they exhibited increased sensitivity to stress. We propose that by influencing the levels of reactive oxygen species (ROS), AtOXR2 improves the efficiency of photosynthesis and elicits basal tolerance to environmental challenges that increase oxidative stress, allowing improved plant growth and biomass production.Entities:
Keywords: ABA; Arabidopsis; OXR family; ROS; TLDc domain; mitochondria; oxidative stress; plant biomass
Year: 2019 PMID: 30945737 DOI: 10.1093/jxb/erz147
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Exp Bot ISSN: 0022-0957 Impact factor: 6.992