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The Functions of Chloroplast Glutamyl-tRNA in Translation and Tetrapyrrole Biosynthesis
Author(s) -
Shreya Agrawal,
Daniel Karcher,
Stephanie Ruf,
Ralph Bock
Publication year - 2020
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.20.00009
Subject(s) - tetrapyrrole , biology , biosynthesis , transfer rna , biochemistry , protein biosynthesis , translation (biology) , chloroplast , gene , enzyme , rna , messenger rna
The chloroplast glutamyl-tRNA (tRNA Glu ) is unique in that it has two entirely different functions. In addition to acting in translation, it serves as the substrate of glutamyl-tRNA reductase (GluTR), the enzyme catalyzing the committed step in the tetrapyrrole biosynthetic pathway. How the tRNA Glu pool is distributed between the two pathways and whether tRNA Glu allocation limits tetrapyrrole biosynthesis and/or protein biosynthesis remains poorly understood. We generated a series of transplastomic tobacco ( Nicotiana tabacum ) plants to alter tRNA Glu expression levels and introduced a point mutation into the plastid trnE gene, which has been reported to uncouple protein biosynthesis from tetrapyrrole biosynthesis in chloroplasts of the protist Euglena gracilis We show that, rather than comparable uncoupling of the two pathways, the trnE mutation is lethal in tobacco because it inhibits tRNA processing, thus preventing translation of Glu codons. Ectopic expression of the mutated trnE gene uncovered an unexpected inhibition of glutamyl-tRNA reductase by immature tRNA Glu We further demonstrate that whereas overexpression of tRNA Glu does not affect tetrapyrrole biosynthesis, reduction of GluTR activity through inhibition by tRNA Glu precursors causes tetrapyrrole synthesis to become limiting in early plant development when active photosystem biogenesis provokes a high demand for de novo chlorophyll biosynthesis. Taken together, our findings provide insight into the roles of tRNA Glu at the intersection of protein biosynthesis and tetrapyrrole biosynthesis.

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