Day and night isotope labelling reveal metabolic pathway specific regulation of protein synthesis rates in Arabidopsis.

Autor: Duncan O; ARC Centre of Excellence in Plant Energy Biology, Perth, WA, Australia.; Western Australian Proteomics, The University Western Australia, Perth, WA, Australia., Millar AH; ARC Centre of Excellence in Plant Energy Biology, Perth, WA, Australia.; Western Australian Proteomics, The University Western Australia, Perth, WA, Australia.; School of Molecular Sciences, The University of Western Australia, Perth, WA, Australia.
Jazyk: angličtina
Zdroj: The Plant journal : for cell and molecular biology [Plant J] 2022 Feb; Vol. 109 (4), pp. 745-763. Date of Electronic Publication: 2022 Feb 12.
DOI: 10.1111/tpj.15661
Abstrakt: Plants have a diurnal separation of metabolic fluxes and a need for differential maintenance of protein machinery in the day and night. To directly assess the output of the translation process and to estimate the ATP investment involved, the individual rates of protein synthesis and degradation of hundreds of different proteins need to be measured simultaneously. We quantified protein synthesis and degradation through pulse labelling with heavy hydrogen in Arabidopsis thaliana rosettes to allow such an assessment of ATP investment in leaf proteome homeostasis on a gene-by-gene basis. Light-harvesting complex proteins were synthesised and degraded much faster in the day (approximately 10:1), while carbon metabolism and vesicle trafficking components were translated at similar rates day or night. Few leaf proteins changed in abundance between the day and the night despite reduced protein synthesis rates at night, indicating that protein degradation rates are tightly coordinated. The data reveal how the pausing of photosystem synthesis and degradation at night allows the redirection of a decreased energy budget to a selective night-time maintenance schedule.
(© 2022 Society for Experimental Biology and John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
Databáze: MEDLINE