| Literature DB >> 32397140 |
Corinne Best1, Ron Mizrahi1, Oren Ostersetzer-Biran1.
Abstract
Mitochondria play key roles in cellular-energy metabolism and are vital for plant-life, such as for successful germination and early-seedling establishment. Most mitochondria contain their own genetic system (mtDNA, mitogenome), with an intrinsic protein-synthesis machinery. Although the challenges of maintaining prokaryotic-type structures and functions are common to Eukarya, land plants possess some of the most complex organelle composition of all known organisms. Angiosperms mtDNAs are characteristically the largest and least gene-dense among the eukaryotes. They often contain highly-variable intergenic regions of endogenous or foreign origins and undergo frequent recombination events, which result in different mtDNA configurations, even between closely-related species. The expression of the mitogenome in angiosperms involves extensive mtRNA processing steps, including numerous editing and splicing events. Why do land-plant's mitochondria have to be so complex? The answer to this remains a matter of speculation. We propose that this complexity may have arisen throughout the terrestrialization of plants, as a means to control embryonic mitochondrial functions -a critical adaptive trait to optimize seed germination. The unique characteristics of plant mtDNA may play pivotal roles in the nuclear-regulation of organellar biogenesis and metabolism, possibly to control embryos quiescence or dormancy, essential determinants for the establishment of viable plantlets that can survive post-germination.Entities:
Keywords: RNA-metabolism; editing; mitochondria; plant; posttranscription; splicing
Year: 2020 PMID: 32397140 PMCID: PMC7284508 DOI: 10.3390/plants9050598
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Plants (Basel) ISSN: 2223-7747
Mitochondria genome structures in different classes.
| Phylogeny | Organism | mtDNA Size (Kb) | Accession No. | C→U Editing | Group I Introns*1 | Group II Introns | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bacteria | Rickettsia*2 |
| (1109.3) | NC_020993 | - | - | - |
| Plantae | Green Alga |
| 197.4 | NC-045849 | - | - | - |
|
| 67.7 | NC-005255 | - | 13 | 14 | ||
|
| 15.8 | NC-001638 | - | - | - | ||
|
| 49.7 | NC-042603 | (?)*3 | 2 | - | ||
| Land Plants*4 |
| 367.8 | NC-037304 | + | - | 23 | |
|
| 105.1 | NC_024515 | + | 2 | 23 | ||
| 360.2 | NC-016118 | + | - | 23 | |||
|
| 346.5 | NC_027976 | + | - | 20 | ||
| 491.5 | NC_007886 | + | - | 25 | |||
|
| 253.4 | NC_014487 | + | - | 13 | ||
| 452.5 | NC-036024 | + | - | 23 | |||
|
| 978.9 | NC_029130 | + | - | 17 | ||
|
| 569.6 | NC-007982 | + | - | 22 | ||
| Fungi |
| 27.7 | NC-001762 | - | 2 | - | |
|
| 78.9 | NC-027264 | - | 3 | 9 | ||
|
| 19.4 | NC-001326 | - | 2 | 1 | ||
| Animalia | Insects |
| 15.4 | NC-002084 | - | - | - |
|
| 16.3 | NC-001566 | - | - | - | ||
|
| 19.5 | NC-024511 | - | - | - | ||
|
| 16.6 | NC-026132 | - | - | - | ||
| Chnidarians |
| 16.9 | NC-008446 | - | - | - | |
|
| 18.4 | NC-008411 | - | 1 | - | ||
|
| 16.3 | NC-010214 | - | - | - | ||
|
| 17.4 | NC-000933 | - | 2 | - | ||
| Mammals |
| 16.3 | NC-005089 | - | - | - | |
|
| 16.6 | NC-001643 | - | - | - | ||
|
| 16.6 | NC-012920 | - | - | - | ||
|
| 16.6 | NC-011137 | - | - | - | ||
| Protista |
| 55.6 | NC-000895 | - | 6 | - | |
|
| 76.6 | NC-004309 | - | 4 | - | ||
*1 A group I intron is found in the cox1 gene in the mtDNA of some angiosperms [69]; *2 Genome sequencing suggests that an intracellular parasitic α-proteobacterial, like Rickettsia, share a common ancestor with modern mitochondria [70]; *3 A Putative editing site in trnI-CAU [71]; *4 A, Angiosperms; B, Bryophyta; G, gymnosperms.
Figure 1Mitochondrial gene expression in angiosperms. The mitogenome harbors tRNAs, rRNAs, and various protein-coding genes. The flow of information from the mtDNA in flowering plants to the translation of the mRNAs involves numerous posttranscriptional steps. These include endonucleolytic processing of polycistronic transcripts, maturation of 5’ and 3’ termini, extensive RNA editing (red boxes) and group II intron splicing (marked in blue). Translation is initiated by the ribosomes assembled on the mRNAs, with organellar-encoded and imported tRNAs participating in the elongation of the polypeptide. The structure of Arabidopsis mitochondria ribosomes was modified from [97].