Back to Search
Start Over
Autophagy promotes photomorphogenesis during seedling development in Arabidopsis in carbon limiting conditions
- Publication Year :
- 2021
- Publisher :
- Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2021.
-
Abstract
- Autophagy is a conserved catabolic process that plays an essential role under nutrient starvation condition and influences different developmental processes. We observed that seedlings of autophagy mutants (atg2, atg5, atg7, and atg9) germinated in the dark showed delayed chloroplast development following illumination. The delayed chloroplast development was characterized by a decrease in photosynthetic and chlorophyll biosynthetic proteins, lower chlorophyll content, reduced chloroplast size, and increased levels of proteins involved in lipid biosynthesis. Confirming the biological impact of these differences, photosynthetic performance was impaired in autophagy mutants 12h post illumination. We investigated if the delayed chloroplast development could be explained by lower lipid import to the chloroplast or lower triglyceride (TAG) turnover. We observed that the limitations in the chloroplast lipid import imposed by trigalactosyldiacylglycerol1 are unlikely to explain the delay in photomorphogenesis. However, we found that lower TAG mobility in the triacylglycerol lipase mutant sugardependent1 significantly affected photomorphogenesis. Moreover, we showed that lower levels of carbon resources exacerbated the delay in photomorphogenesis whereas higher levels of carbon resources had an opposite effect. This work provides evidence that autophagic process operate during de-etiolation in a manner that contributes to photomorphogenesis through increasing lipid turnover to physically or energetically sustain photomorphogenesis.
Details
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi...........3f10a4aaee091ad68e93f5a824f6c914