INVESTIGADORES
LODEYRO Anabella Fernanda
artículos
Título:
Introduction of a terminal electron sink in chloroplasts decreases leaf cell expansion associated with higher proteasome activity and lower endoreduplication
Autor/es:
ARCE, ROCÍO C; MAYTA, MARTÍN L; MELZER, MICHAEL; HAJIREZAEI, MOHAMMAD-REZA; LODEYRO, ANABELLA F; CARRILLO, NÉSTOR
Revista:
JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL BOTANY
Editorial:
OXFORD UNIV PRESS
Referencias:
Año: 2024
ISSN:
0022-0957
Resumen:
Foliar development involves successive phases of cell proliferation and expansion that determine the final leaf size, and is characterized by an early burst of reactive oxygen species generated in the photosynthetic electron transport chain (PETC). Introduction of the alternative PETC acceptor flavodoxin in tobacco chloroplasts led to a reduction in leaf size associated to lower cell expansion, without affecting cell numbers per leaf. Proteomic analysis showed that components of the light-harvesting systems accumulated before electron-transport proteins, suggesting a mechanism for the early oxidative event. Flavodoxin expression did not affect biogenesis of the PETC but prevented hydroperoxide build-up through its function as electron sink. Mature leaves from flavodoxin-expressing plants were shown to contain higher levels of transcripts encoding components of the proteasome, a key negative modulator of organ size. Proteome profiling revealed that this differential accumulation initiated during expansion and led to increased proteasomal activity, whereas a proteasome inhibitor reverted the flavodoxin-dependent size phenotype. Cells expressing plastid-targeted flavodoxin displayed lower endoreduplication, also associated to decreased organ size. These results provide novel insights into the regulation of leaf growth by chloroplast-generated redox signals, and highlight the potential of alternative electron shuttles to investigate the link(s) between photosynthesis and plant development.