Hydrogen sulfide is a signaling molecule in plants that regulates essential biological processes through protein persulfidation. However, little is known about sulfide-mediated regulation in relation to photorespiration. Here, we performed label-free quantitative proteomic analysis and observed a high impact on protein persulfidation levels when plants grown under nonphotorespiratory conditions were transferred to air, with 98.7% of the identified proteins being more persulfidated under suppressed photorespiration. Interestingly, a higher level of reactive oxygen species (ROS) was detected under nonphotorespiratory conditions. Analysis of the effect of sulfide on aspects associated with non- or photorespiratory growth conditions has demonstrated that it protects plants grown under suppressed photorespiration. Thus, sulfide amends the imbalance of carbon/nitrogen and restores ATP levels to concentrations like those of air-grown plants; balances the high level of ROS in plants under nonphotorespiratory conditions to reach a cellular redox state similar to that in air-grown plants; and regulates stomatal closure, to decrease the high guard cell ROS levels and induce stomatal aperture. In this way, sulfide signals the CO -dependent stomata movement, in the opposite direction of the established abscisic acid-dependent movement. Our findings suggest that the high persulfidation level under suppressed photorespiration reveals an essential role of sulfide signaling under these conditions.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/nph.18838 | DOI Listing |
Plant Cell Environ
June 2024
Institut de recherche en horticulture et semences, INRAe, Université d'Angers, Beaucouzé, France.
Day respiration (R) is the metabolic, nonphotorespiratory process by which illuminated leaves liberate CO during photosynthesis. R is used routinely in photosynthetic models and is thus critical for calculations. However, metabolic details associated with R are poorly known, and this can be problematic to predict how R changes with environmental conditions and relates to night respiration.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNew Phytol
May 2023
Departamento de Bioquímica Vegetal y Biología Molecular, Universidad de Sevilla, Prof. García González 1, 41012, Sevilla, Spain.
Hydrogen sulfide is a signaling molecule in plants that regulates essential biological processes through protein persulfidation. However, little is known about sulfide-mediated regulation in relation to photorespiration. Here, we performed label-free quantitative proteomic analysis and observed a high impact on protein persulfidation levels when plants grown under nonphotorespiratory conditions were transferred to air, with 98.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPlant Cell Environ
July 2022
Department of Plant Sciences, Centre for Crop Systems Analysis, Wageningen University & Research, Wageningen, The Netherlands.
We assessed how the temperature response of leaf day respiration (R ) in wheat responded to contrasting water regimes and growth temperatures. In Experiment 1, well-watered and drought-stressed conditions were imposed on two genotypes; in Experiment 2, the two water regimes combined with high (HT), medium (MT) and low (LT) growth temperatures were imposed on one of the genotypes. R was estimated from simultaneous gas exchange and chlorophyll fluorescence measurements at six leaf temperatures (T ) for each treatment, using the Yin method for nonphotorespiratory conditions and the nonrectangular hyperbolic fitting method for photorespiratory conditions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Plant Physiol
May 2021
C4Rice Centre, International Rice Research Institute (IRRI), Los Baños, Philippines. Electronic address:
We generated antisense constructs targeting two of the five Rubisco small subunit genes (OsRBCS2 and 4) which account for between 30-40 % of the RBCS transcript abundance in leaf blades. The constructs were driven by a maize phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase (PEPC) promoter known to have enriched expression in mesophyll cells (MCs). In the resulting lines leaf, Rubisco protein content was reduced by between 30-50 % and CO assimilation rate was limited under photorespiratory and non-photorespiratory conditions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPlant J
October 2020
State Key Lab of Crop Biology, College of Life Sciences, Shandong Agricultural University, Tai'an, Shandong Province, China.
The mitochondrial alternative pathway (AP) represents an important photoprotective mechanism for the chloroplast, but the temperature sensitivity of its photoprotective role is unknown. In this study, using the aox1a Arabidopsis mutant, the photoprotective role of the AP was verified under various temperatures, and the mechanism underlying the temperature sensitivity of the AP's photoprotective role was clarified. It was observed that the photoprotective role of the AP increased with rising temperature but was absent at low temperature.
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