Literature DB >> 34713507

Acetylation of conserved lysines fine-tunes mitochondrial malate dehydrogenase activity in land plants.

Manuel Balparda1, Marlene Elsässer2,3, Mariana B Badia4,5, Jonas Giese6, Anastasiia Bovdilova4, Meike Hüdig1,4, Lisa Reinmuth2, Jürgen Eirich6, Markus Schwarzländer3, Iris Finkemeier6, Mareike Schallenberg-Rüdinger2, Veronica G Maurino1,4.   

Abstract

Plants need to rapidly and flexibly adjust their metabolism to changes of their immediate environment. Since this necessity results from the sessile lifestyle of land plants, key mechanisms for orchestrating central metabolic acclimation are likely to have evolved early. Here, we explore the role of lysine acetylation as a post-translational modification to directly modulate metabolic function. We generated a lysine acetylome of the moss Physcomitrium patens and identified 638 lysine acetylation sites, mostly found in mitochondrial and plastidial proteins. A comparison with available angiosperm data pinpointed lysine acetylation as a conserved regulatory strategy in land plants. Focusing on mitochondrial central metabolism, we functionally analyzed acetylation of mitochondrial malate dehydrogenase (mMDH), which acts as a hub of plant metabolic flexibility. In P. patens mMDH1, we detected a single acetylated lysine located next to one of the four acetylation sites detected in Arabidopsis thaliana mMDH1. We assessed the kinetic behavior of recombinant A. thaliana and P. patens mMDH1 with site-specifically incorporated acetyl-lysines. Acetylation of A. thaliana mMDH1 at K169, K170, and K334 decreases its oxaloacetate reduction activity, while acetylation of P. patens mMDH1 at K172 increases this activity. We found modulation of the malate oxidation activity only in A. thaliana mMDH1, where acetylation of K334 strongly activated it. Comparative homology modeling of MDH proteins revealed that evolutionarily conserved lysines serve as hotspots of acetylation. Our combined analyses indicate lysine acetylation as a common strategy to fine-tune the activity of central metabolic enzymes with likely impact on plant acclimation capacity.
© 2021 The Authors. The Plant Journal published by Society for Experimental Biology and John Wiley & Sons Ltd.

Entities:  

Keywords:  malate dehydrogenase; metabolism; mitochondria; post-transcriptional; protein acetylation; regulation

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Year:  2021        PMID: 34713507     DOI: 10.1111/tpj.15556

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Plant J        ISSN: 0960-7412            Impact factor:   6.417


  2 in total

1.  Global analysis of lysine 2-hydroxyisobutyrylation during Fusarium graminearum infection in maize.

Authors:  Kang Zhang; Hongzhe Cao; Yuxin Ma; Helong Si; Jinping Zang; Hua Bai; Lu Yu; Xi Pang; Fan Zhou; Jihong Xing; Jingao Dong
Journal:  Front Plant Sci       Date:  2022-09-15       Impact factor: 6.627

Review 2.  Advances in proteome-wide analysis of plant lysine acetylation.

Authors:  Linchao Xia; Xiangge Kong; Haifeng Song; Qingquan Han; Sheng Zhang
Journal:  Plant Commun       Date:  2021-11-24
  2 in total

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