Pheophorbide a May Regulate Jasmonate Signaling during Dark-Induced Senescence
Author(s) -
Sylvain Aubry,
Niklaus Fankhauser,
Serguei Ovinnikov,
Adriana Pružinská,
Marina Stirnemann,
Krzysztof Zienkiewicz,
Cornelia Herrfurth,
Ivo Feußner,
Stefan Hörtensteiner
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
plant physiology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.554
H-Index - 312
eISSN - 1532-2548
pISSN - 0032-0889
DOI - 10.1104/pp.19.01115
Subject(s) - pheophorbide a , jasmonic acid , arabidopsis , transcriptome , retrograde signaling , senescence , microbiology and biotechnology , chlorophyll , biology , arabidopsis thaliana , biochemistry , chloroplast , mutant , chemistry , signal transduction , botany , salicylic acid , gene expression , gene
Chlorophyll degradation is one of the most visible signs of leaf senescence. During senescence, chlorophyll is degraded in the multistep pheophorbide a oxygenase (PAO)/phyllobilin pathway. This pathway is tightly regulated at the transcriptional level, allowing coordinated and efficient remobilization of nitrogen toward sink organs. Using a combination of transcriptome and metabolite analyses during dark-induced senescence of Arabidopsis ( Arabidopsis thaliana ) mutants deficient in key steps of the PAO/phyllobilin pathway, we show an unanticipated role for one of the pathway intermediates, i.e. pheophorbide a Both jasmonic acid-related gene expression and jasmonic acid precursors specifically accumulated in pao1 , a mutant deficient in PAO. We propose that pheophorbide a , the last intact porphyrin intermediate of chlorophyll degradation and a unique pathway "bottleneck," has been recruited as a signaling molecule of chloroplast metabolic status. Our work challenges the assumption that chlorophyll breakdown is merely a result of senescence, and proposes that the flux of pheophorbide a through the pathway acts in a feed-forward loop that remodels the nuclear transcriptome and controls the pace of chlorophyll degradation in senescing leaves.
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