AI Article Synopsis

  • * Doubled mutants lacking both pathways show reduced plant growth and photosynthesis, as seen in the pgr5-1 mutant, which has a missense allele leading to low PGR5 levels.
  • * New knockout alleles (pgr5-5 and pgr5-6) created using CRISPR-Cas9 technology revealed that while they both severely reduce P700 levels like pgr5-1, they maintain some functionality in NPQ induction, indicating a complex interaction in maintaining PSI activity.

Article Abstract

In angiosperms, cyclic electron transport around photosystem I (PSI) is mediated by two pathways that depend on the PROTON GRADIENT REGULATION 5 (PGR5) protein and the chloroplast NADH dehydrogenase-like (NDH) complex, respectively. In the Arabidopsis double mutants defective in both pathways, plant growth and photosynthesis are impaired. The pgr5-1 mutant used in the original study is a missense allele and accumulates low levels of PGR5 protein. In this study, we generated two knockout (KO) alleles, designated as pgr5-5 and pgr5-6, using the CRISPR-Cas9 technology. Although both KO alleles showed a severe reduction in P700 similar to the pgr5-1 allele, NPQ induction was less severely impaired in the KO alleles than in the pgr5-1 allele. In the pgr5-1 allele, the second mutation affecting NPQ size was mapped to ~21 cM south of the pgr5-1 locus. Overexpression of the pgr5-1 allele, encoding the glycine130-to-serine change, complemented the pgr5-5 phenotype, suggesting that the pgr5-1 mutation destabilizes PGR5 but that the mutant protein retains partial functionality. Using two KO alleles, we created the double mutants with two chlororespiratory reduction (crr) mutants defective in the NDH complex. The growth of the double mutants was notably impaired. In the double mutant seedlings that survived on the medium containing sucrose, PSI activity evaluated by the P700 oxidation was severely impaired, whereas PSII activity was only mildly impaired. Cyclic electron transport around PSI is required to maintain PSI activity.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/tpj.16735DOI Listing

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Article Synopsis
  • * Doubled mutants lacking both pathways show reduced plant growth and photosynthesis, as seen in the pgr5-1 mutant, which has a missense allele leading to low PGR5 levels.
  • * New knockout alleles (pgr5-5 and pgr5-6) created using CRISPR-Cas9 technology revealed that while they both severely reduce P700 levels like pgr5-1, they maintain some functionality in NPQ induction, indicating a complex interaction in maintaining PSI activity.
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The PROTON GRADIENT REGULATION5 (PGR5) protein is required for trans-thylakoid proton gradient formation and acclimation to fluctuating light (FL). PGR5 functionally interacts with two other thylakoid proteins, PGR5-like 1 (PGRL1) and 2 (PGRL2); however, the molecular details of these interactions are largely unknown. In the Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) pgr5-1 mutant, the PGR5G130S protein accumulates in only small amounts.

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