Effects of light on chloroplast translation in Marchantia polymorpha are similar to those in angiosperms and are not influenced by light-independent chlorophyll synthesis
Prakitchai Chotewutmontri, Rosalind Williams-Carrier, Susan Belcher, Alice Barkan
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Translation of the chloroplast psbA mRNA in angiosperms is activated by photodamage of its gene product, the D1 subunit of photosystem II (PSII), providing nascent D1 for PSII repair. The involvement of chlorophyll in the regulatory mechanism has been suggested due to the regulatory roles of proteins proposed to mediate chlorophyll/D1 transactions and the fact that chlorophyll is synthesized only in the light in angiosperms. We used ribosome profiling and RNA-seq to address whether the effects of light on chloroplast translation are conserved in the liverwort Marchantia (Marchantia polymorpha), which synthesizes chlorophyll in both the dark and the light. As in angiosperms, ribosome occupancy on psbA mRNA decreased rapidly upon shifting plants to the dark and was rapidly restored upon a transfer back to the light, whereas ribosome occupancy on other chloroplast mRNAs changed very little. The results were similar in a Marchantia mutant unable to synthesize chlorophyll in the dark. Those results, in conjunction with pulse-labeling data, suggest that light elicits a plastome-wide activation of translation elongation and a specific increase in psbA translation initiation in Marchantia, as in angiosperms. These findings show that light regulates chloroplast translation similarly in vascular and non-vascular plants, and that constitutive chlorophyll synthesis does not affect light-regulated psbA translation initiation. Additionally, the translational outputs of chloroplast genes are similar in Marchantia and angiosperms but result from differing contributions of mRNA abundance and translational efficiencies. This adds to the evidence that chloroplast mRNA abundance and translational efficiencies co-evolve under selection to maintain protein outputs.
期刊介绍:
Publishing the best original research papers in all key areas of modern plant biology from the world"s leading laboratories, The Plant Journal provides a dynamic forum for this ever growing international research community.
Plant science research is now at the forefront of research in the biological sciences, with breakthroughs in our understanding of fundamental processes in plants matching those in other organisms. The impact of molecular genetics and the availability of model and crop species can be seen in all aspects of plant biology. For publication in The Plant Journal the research must provide a highly significant new contribution to our understanding of plants and be of general interest to the plant science community.