| Literature DB >> 33756108 |
Carolina Elejalde-Palmett1, Ignacio Martinez San Segundo2, Imène Garroum1, Laurence Charrier3, Damien De Bellis4, Antonio Mucciolo5, Aurore Guerault1, Jie Liu3, Viktoria Zeisler-Diehl6, Asaph Aharoni7, Lukas Schreiber6, Bénédicte Bakan8, Mads H Clausen2, Markus Geisler3, Christiane Nawrath9.
Abstract
The plant cuticle is deposited on the surface of primary plant organs, such as leaves, fruits, and floral organs, forming a diffusion barrier and protecting the plant against various abiotic and biotic stresses. Cutin, the structural polyester of the plant cuticle, is synthesized in the apoplast. Plasma-membrane-localized ATP-binding cassette (ABC) transporters of the G family have been hypothesized to export cutin precursors. Here, we characterize SlABCG42 of tomato representing an ortholog of AtABCG32 in Arabidopsis. SlABCG42 expression in Arabidopsis complements the cuticular deficiencies of the Arabidopsis pec1/abcg32 mutant. RNAi-dependent downregulation of both tomato genes encoding proteins highly homologous to AtABCG32 (SlABCG36 and SlABCG42) leads to reduced cutin deposition and formation of a thinner cuticle in tomato fruits. By using a tobacco (Nicotiana benthamiana) protoplast system, we show that AtABCG32 and SlABCG42 have an export activity for 10,16-dihydroxy hexadecanoyl-2-glycerol, a cutin precursor in vivo. Interestingly, also free ω-hydroxy hexadecanoic acid as well as hexadecanedioic acid were exported, furthering the research on the identification of cutin precursors in vivo and the respective mechanisms of their integration into the cutin polymer.Entities:
Keywords: ABC transporter; Arabidopsis; acyl lipid; cuticle; cutin; diffusion barrier; plasma membrane; tomato; transport; wax
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Year: 2021 PMID: 33756108 DOI: 10.1016/j.cub.2021.02.056
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Curr Biol ISSN: 0960-9822 Impact factor: 10.834