AI Article Synopsis

  • Caspases are unique to animals, while metacaspases (MCAs) in plants are older and biochemically different molecules, with most research focusing on Arabidopsis and its nine MCAs.
  • Researchers studied CrMCA-II, a type-II MCA from the chlorophyte Chlamydomonas, finding that it surprisingly dimerizes like caspases, and its activation corresponds with this dimerization.
  • The deletion of CrMCA-II resulted in decreased heat tolerance and increased cell death in Chlamydomonas, but restoring CrMCA-II—either active or inactive—helped regain thermotolerance, linking its function to modulating plasma membrane fluidity rather than its proteolytic

Article Abstract

Caspases are restricted to animals, while other organisms, including plants, possess metacaspases (MCAs), a more ancient and broader class of structurally related yet biochemically distinct proteases. Our current understanding of plant MCAs is derived from studies in streptophytes, and mostly in Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) with 9 MCAs with partially redundant activities. In contrast to streptophytes, most chlorophytes contain only 1 or 2 uncharacterized MCAs, providing an excellent platform for MCA research. Here we investigated CrMCA-II, the single type-II MCA from the model chlorophyte Chlamydomonas (Chlamydomonas reinhardtii). Surprisingly, unlike other studied MCAs and similar to caspases, CrMCA-II dimerizes both in vitro and in vivo. Furthermore, activation of CrMCA-II in vivo correlated with its dimerization. Most of CrMCA-II in the cell was present as a proenzyme (zymogen) attached to the plasma membrane (PM). Deletion of CrMCA-II by genome editing compromised thermotolerance, leading to increased cell death under heat stress. Adding back either wild-type or catalytically dead CrMCA-II restored thermoprotection, suggesting that its proteolytic activity is dispensable for this effect. Finally, we connected the non-proteolytic role of CrMCA-II in thermotolerance to the ability to modulate PM fluidity. Our study reveals an ancient, MCA-dependent thermotolerance mechanism retained by Chlamydomonas and probably lost during the evolution of multicellularity.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10896300PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/plcell/koad289DOI Listing

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