AI Article Synopsis

  • High salinity stress negatively affects plant growth, and trehalose metabolism may help improve stress tolerance, but the specific molecular mechanisms are still not fully understood.
  • Researchers found that AtTPPD, a key enzyme in trehalose metabolism in Arabidopsis thaliana, is localized in chloroplasts, and plants either lacking or overexpressing this enzyme show differing levels of salt stress tolerance, which is linked to sugar metabolism.
  • The study reveals that AtTPPD activity is regulated by redox status through certain cysteine residues, suggesting that similar regulatory mechanisms could exist across various plant types for adjusting to environmental challenges.

Article Abstract

Aims: High salinity stress impairs plant growth and development. Trehalose metabolism has been implicated in sugar signaling, and enhanced trehalose metabolism can positively regulate abiotic stress tolerance. However, the molecular mechanism(s) of the stress-related trehalose pathway and the role of individual trehalose biosynthetic enzymes for stress tolerance remain unclear.

Results: Trehalose-6-phosphate phosphatase (TPP) catalyzes the final step of trehalose metabolism. Investigating the subcellular localization of the Arabidopsis thaliana TPP family members, we identified AtTPPD as a chloroplast-localized enzyme. Plants deficient in AtTPPD were hypersensitive, whereas plants overexpressing AtTPPD were more tolerant to high salinity stress. Elevated stress tolerance of AtTPPD overexpressors correlated with high starch levels and increased accumulation of soluble sugars, suggesting a role for AtTPPD in regulating sugar metabolism under salinity conditions. Biochemical analyses indicate that AtTPPD is a target of post-translational redox regulation and can be reversibly inactivated by oxidizing conditions. Two cysteine residues were identified as the redox-sensitive sites. Structural and mutation analyses suggest that the formation of an intramolecular disulfide bridge regulates AtTPPD activity.

Innovation: The activity of different AtTPP isoforms, located in the cytosol, nucleus, and chloroplasts, can be redox regulated, suggesting that the trehalose metabolism might relay the redox status of different cellular compartments to regulate diverse biological processes such as stress responses.

Conclusion: The evolutionary conservation of the two redox regulatory cysteine residues of TPPs in spermatophytes indicates that redox regulation of TPPs might be a common mechanism enabling plants to rapidly adjust trehalose metabolism to the prevailing environmental and developmental conditions.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4158992PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1089/ars.2013.5693DOI Listing

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