| Literature DB >> 34260941 |
Yong Zhuang1, Ming Wei2, Chengcheng Ling3, Yangxuan Liu2, Abdul Karim Amin3, Penghui Li2, Pengwei Li3, Xufan Hu3, Huaxu Bao3, Heqiang Huo4, Jan Smalle5, Songhu Wang6.
Abstract
The chloroplast is the main organelle for stress-induced production of reactive oxygen species (ROS). However, how chloroplastic ROS homeostasis is maintained under salt stress is largely unknown. We show that EGY3, a gene encoding a chloroplast-localized protein, is induced by salt and oxidative stresses. The loss of EGY3 function causes stress hypersensitivity while EGY3 overexpression increases the tolerance to both salt and chloroplastic oxidative stresses. EGY3 interacts with chloroplastic Cu/Zn-SOD2 (CSD2) and promotes CSD2 stability under stress conditions. In egy3-1 mutant plants, the stress-induced CSD2 degradation limits H2O2 production in chloroplasts and impairs H2O2-mediated retrograde signaling, as indicated by the decreased expression of retrograde-signal-responsive genes required for stress tolerance. Both exogenous application of H2O2 (or APX inhibitor) and CSD2 overexpression can rescue the salt-stress hypersensitivity of egy3-1 mutants. Our findings reveal that EGY3 enhances the tolerance to salt stress by promoting the CSD2 stability and H2O2-mediated chloroplastic retrograde signaling.Entities:
Keywords: Cu/Zn-SOD2; H(2)O(2)-mediated retrograde signal; chloroplastic ROS; salt stress
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34260941 DOI: 10.1016/j.celrep.2021.109384
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell Rep Impact factor: 9.423