NADP(H) is an essential cofactor of multiple metabolic processes in all living organisms, and in plants, NADP(H) is required as the substrate of Ca-dependent NADPH oxidases, which catalyze a reactive oxygen species burst in response to various stimuli. While NADP production in plants has long been known to involve a calmodulin (CaM)/Ca-dependent NAD kinase, the nature of the enzyme catalyzing this activity has remained enigmatic, as has its role in plant physiology. Here, we used proteomic, biochemical, molecular, and in vivo analyses to identify an Arabidopsis () protein that catalyzes NADP production exclusively in the presence of CaM/Ca This enzyme, which we named NAD kinase-CaM dependent (NADKc), has a CaM-binding peptide located in its N-terminal region and displays peculiar biochemical properties as well as different domain organization compared with known plant NAD kinases. In response to a pathogen elicitor, the activity of NADKc, which is associated with the mitochondrial periphery, contributes to an increase in the cellular NADP concentration and to the amplification of the elicitor-induced oxidative burst. Based on a phylogenetic analysis and enzymatic assays, we propose that the CaM/Ca-dependent NAD kinase activity found in photosynthetic organisms is carried out by NADKc-related proteins. Thus, NADKc represents the missing link between Ca signaling, metabolism, and the oxidative burst.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6878019 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1104/pp.19.00912 | DOI Listing |
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