| Literature DB >> 35922498 |
Yan Zhang1, Gengshou Xia2, Li Sheng2, Mingjue Chen2, Chenyang Hu2, Yule Ye2, Xiaoyan Yue2, Shaocong Chen2, Wenwu OuYang2, Zhenkai Xia3.
Abstract
KEY MESSAGE: Selective autophagy functions as a regulatory mechanism by targeting native and functional proteins to ensure their proper levels and activities in plant adaptive responses. Autophagy is a cellular degradation and recycling pathway with a key role in cellular homeostasis and metabolism. Autophagy is initiated with the biogenesis of autophagosomes, which fuse with the lysosomes or vacuoles to release their contents for degradation. Under nutrient starvation or other adverse environmental conditions, autophagy usually targets unwanted or damaged proteins, organelles and other cellular components for degradation and recycling to promote cell survival. Over the past decade, however, a substantial number of studies have reported that autophagy in plants also functions as a regulatory mechanism by targeting enzymes, structural and regulatory proteins that are not necessarily damaged or dysfunctional to ensure their proper abundance and function to facilitate cellular changes required for response to endogenous and environmental conditions. During plant-pathogen interactions in particular, selective autophagy targets specific pathogen components as a defense mechanism and pathogens also utilize autophagy to target functional host factors to suppress defense mechanisms. Autophagy also targets native and functional protein regulators of plant heat stress memory, hormone signaling, and vesicle trafficking associated with plant responses to abiotic and other conditions. In this review, we discuss advances in the regulatory roles of selective autophagy through targeting of native proteins in plant adaptive responses, what questions remain and how further progress in the analysis of these special regulatory roles of autophagy can help understand biological processes important to plants.Entities:
Keywords: Heat stress memory; Phytohormone signaling; Plant-pathogen interactions; Regulatory roles of autophagy; Selective autophagy; Vesicle trafficking
Year: 2022 PMID: 35922498 DOI: 10.1007/s00299-022-02910-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Plant Cell Rep ISSN: 0721-7714 Impact factor: 4.964