| Literature DB >> 31386759 |
Stephan Wagner1,2,3, Janina Steinbeck1, Philippe Fuchs1,2, Sophie Lichtenauer1, Marlene Elsässer1,2,4, Jos H M Schippers5,6, Thomas Nietzel1,2, Cristina Ruberti1, Olivier Van Aken7, Andreas J Meyer2, Joost T Van Dongen5, Romy R Schmidt5, Markus Schwarzländer1.
Abstract
Hypoxia regularly occurs during plant development and can be induced by the environment through, for example, flooding. To understand how plant tissue physiology responds to progressing oxygen restriction, we aimed to monitor subcellular physiology in real time and in vivo. We establish a fluorescent protein sensor-based system for multiparametric monitoring of dynamic changes in subcellular physiology of living Arabidopsis thaliana leaves and exemplify its applicability for hypoxia stress. By monitoring cytosolic dynamics of magnesium adenosine 5'-triphosphate, free calcium ion concentration, pH, NAD redox status, and glutathione redox status in parallel, linked to transcriptional and metabolic responses, we generate an integrated picture of the physiological response to progressing hypoxia. We show that the physiological changes are surprisingly robust, even when plant carbon status is modified, as achieved by sucrose feeding or extended night. Inhibition of the mitochondrial respiratory chain causes dynamics of cytosolic physiology that are remarkably similar to those under oxygen depletion, highlighting mitochondrial electron transport as a key determinant of the cellular consequences of hypoxia beyond the organelle. A broadly applicable system for parallel in vivo sensing of plant stress physiology is established to map out the physiological context under which both mitochondrial retrograde signalling and low oxygen signalling occur, indicating shared upstream stimuli.Entities:
Keywords: cytosol; genetically encoded fluorescent protein sensors; hypoxia stress; in vivo sensing; mitochondrial electron transport chain; retrograde signalling
Year: 2019 PMID: 31386759 DOI: 10.1111/nph.16093
Source DB: PubMed Journal: New Phytol ISSN: 0028-646X Impact factor: 10.151