AI Article Synopsis

  • Chloride channel (CLC) proteins are key anion transporters found in various organisms and some plant CLCs may work as Cl/H antiporters rather than Cl channels, although their role in pH regulation hasn't been confirmed.
  • Researchers identified the tobacco CLC-Nt1 protein interacting with the Potato virus Y (PVY) protein and used CRISPR/Cas9 to knock out its homologous genes in Nicotiana benthamiana to study its function.
  • Findings show that CLC-Nt1 is located in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) and is essential for maintaining ER pH, protein secretion, and facilitating PVY replication; loss of CLC-N

Article Abstract

Chloride channel (CLC) proteins are important anion transporters conserved in organisms ranging from bacteria and yeast to plants and animals. According to sequence comparison, some plant CLCs are predicted to function as Cl /H antiporters, but not Cl channels. However, no direct evidence was provided to verify the role of these plant CLCs in regulating the pH of the intracellular compartment. We identified tobacco CLC-Nt1 interacting with the Potato virus Y (PVY) 6K2 protein. To investigate its physiological function, homologous genes of CLC-Nt1 in Nicotiana benthamiana were knocked out using the CRISPR/Cas9 system. Complementation experiments were subsequently performed by expression of wild-type or point-mutated CLC-Nt1 in knockout mutants. The data presented herein demonstrate that CLC-Nt1 is localized at endoplasmic reticulum (ER). Using a pH-sensitive fluorescent protein (pHluorin), we found that loss of CLC-Nt1 function resulted in a decreased ER luminal pH. Secreted GFP (secGFP) was retained mostly in ER in knockout mutants, indicating that CLC-Nt1 is also involved in protein secretion. PVY infection induced a rise in ER luminal pH, which was dependent on functional CLC-Nt1. By contrast, loss of CLC-Nt1 function inhibited PVY intracellular replication and systemic infection. We propose that PVY alters ER luminal pH for infection in a CLC-Nt1-dependent manner.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/nph.15310DOI Listing

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Article Synopsis
  • Chloride channel (CLC) proteins are key anion transporters found in various organisms and some plant CLCs may work as Cl/H antiporters rather than Cl channels, although their role in pH regulation hasn't been confirmed.
  • Researchers identified the tobacco CLC-Nt1 protein interacting with the Potato virus Y (PVY) protein and used CRISPR/Cas9 to knock out its homologous genes in Nicotiana benthamiana to study its function.
  • Findings show that CLC-Nt1 is located in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) and is essential for maintaining ER pH, protein secretion, and facilitating PVY replication; loss of CLC-N
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We isolated two cDNA clones (OsCLC-1 and OsCLC-2) homologous to tobacco CLC-Nt1, which encodes a voltage-gated chloride channel, from rice (Oryza sativa L. ssp. japonica, cv.

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CLC-Nt1, a putative chloride channel protein of tobacco, co-localizes with mitochondrial membrane markers.

Biochem J

June 2000

Institut des Sciences Végétales, UPR 40, CNRS, Avenue de la Terrasse, F-91198 Gif-sur-Yvette Cedex, France.

The voltage-dependent chloride channel (CLC) family of membrane proteins has cognates in animals, yeast, bacteria and plants, and chloride-channel activity has been assigned to most of the animal homologues. Lack of evidence of CLC functions in plants prompted us to characterize the cellular localization of the tobacco CLC-Nt1 protein. Specific polyclonal antibodies were raised against an N-terminal polypeptide of CLC-Nt1.

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We have cloned four novel members of the CLC family of chloride channels from Arabidopsis thaliana. The four plant genes are homologous to a recently isolated chloride channel gene from tobacco (CLC-Nt1; Lurin, C., Geelen, D.

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