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Singlet Oxygen Leads to Structural Changes to Chloroplasts During their Degradation in the Arabidopsis thaliana plastid ferrochelatase two Mutant.

Karen E FisherPraveen KrishnamoorthyMatthew S JoensJoanne ChoryJames A J FitzpatrickJesse D Woodson
Published in: Plant & cell physiology (2021)
During stress, chloroplasts produce large amounts of reactive oxygen species (ROS). Chloroplasts also contain many nutrients, including 80% of a leaf's nitrogen supply. Therefore, to protect cells from photo-oxidative damage and to redistribute nutrients to sink tissues, chloroplasts are prime targets for degradation. Multiple chloroplast degradation pathways are induced by photo-oxidative stress or nutrient starvation, but the mechanisms by which damaged or senescing chloroplasts are identified, transported to the central vacuole, and degraded are poorly defined. Here, we investigated the structures involved with degrading chloroplasts induced by the ROS singlet oxygen (1O2) in the Arabidopsis thaliana plastid ferrochelatase two (fc2) mutant. Under mild 1O2 stress, most fc2 chloroplasts appeared normal, but had reduced starch content. A subset of chloroplasts was degrading and some protruded into the central vacuole via "blebbing" structures. A three-dimensional electron microscopy analysis demonstrated up to 35% of degrading chloroplasts contained such structures. While the location of a chloroplast within a cell did not affect the likelihood of its degradation, chloroplasts in spongy mesophyll cells were degraded at a higher rate than those in palisade mesophyll cells. To determine if degrading chloroplasts have unique structural characteristics, allowing them to be distinguished from healthy chloroplasts, we analyzed fc2 seedlings grown under different levels of photo-oxidative stress. A correlation was observed between chloroplast swelling, 1O2-signaling, and the state of degradation. Finally, plastoglobule enzymes involved in chloroplast disassembly were upregulated while plastoglobules increased their association with the thylakoid grana, implicating an interaction between 1O2-induced chloroplast degradation and senescence pathways.
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