AI Article Synopsis

  • Higher plants possess a small group of Rieske non-heme oxygenases, including proteins involved in chlorophyll biosynthesis and degradation, with PTC52 being the least understood.
  • Biochemical studies indicate that PTC52 functions as a Pchlide oxygenase, crucial for linking Pchlide synthesis to the import of pPORA, which is essential for plant survival during greening.
  • Genetic analysis revealed that the absence of PTC52 causes lethal Pchlide accumulation, implying its vital role in plant embryo development and suggesting its evolutionary importance alongside similar genes found in photosynthetic bacteria.

Article Abstract

Higher plants contain a small, 5-member family of Rieske non-heme oxygenases that comprise the inner plastid envelope protein TIC55, phaeophorbide oxygenasee (PAO), chlorophyllide oxygenase (CAO), choline monooxygenase, and a 52 kDa protein (PTC52) associated with the precursor NADPH:protochlorophyllide (Pchlide) oxidoreductase A (pPORA) A translocon (PTC). Some of these chloroplast proteins have documented roles in chlorophyll biosynthesis (CAO) and degradation (PAO and TIC55), whereas the function of PTC52 remains unresolved. Biochemical evidence provided here identifies PTC52 as Pchlide oxygenase of the inner plastid envelope linking Pchlide synthesis to pPORA import. Protochlorophyllide is the preferred substrate of PORA and its lack no longer allows pPORA import. The Pchlide -dependent import pathway of pPORA thus operates in etiolated seedlings and is switched off during greening. Using dexamethasone-induced RNA interference (RNAi) we tested if PTC52 is involved in controlling both, pPORA import and Pchlide homeostasis . As shown here, plants deprived of transcript and PTC52 protein were unable to import pPORA and died as a result of excess Pchlide accumulation causing singlet oxygen formation during greening. In genetic studies, no homozygous knock-out mutants could be obtained presumably as a result of embryo lethality, suggesting a role for PTC52 in the initial greening of plant embryos. Phylogenetic studies identified PTC52-like genes amongst unicellular photosynthetic bacteria and higher plants, suggesting that the biochemical function associated with PTC52 may have an ancient evolutionary origin. PTC52 also harbors conserved motifs with bacterial oxygenases such as the terminal oxygenase component of 3-ketosteroid 9-alpha-hydroxylase (KshA) from . 3D-modeling of PTC52 structure permitted the prediction of amino acid residues that contribute to the substrate specificity of this enzyme. -mutagenesis was used to test the predicted PTC52 model and provide insights into the reaction mechanism of this Rieske non-heme oxygenase.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6530659PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpls.2019.00593DOI Listing

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