SEED LIPID DROPLET PROTEIN1, SEED LIPID DROPLET PROTEIN2, and LIPID DROPLET PLASMA MEMBRANE ADAPTOR mediate lipid droplet-plasma membrane tethering.
Hannah Elisa KrawczykSiqi SunNathan M DonerQiqi YanMagdiel Sheng Satha LimPatricia ScholzPhilipp William NiemeyerKerstin SchmittOliver ValeriusRoman PleskotStefan HillmerGerhard H BrausMarcel WiermerRobert T MullenTill IschebeckPublished in: The Plant cell (2022)
Membrane contact sites (MCSs) are interorganellar connections that allow for the direct exchange of molecules, such as lipids or Ca2+ between organelles, but can also serve to tether organelles at specific locations within cells. Here, we identified and characterized three proteins of Arabidopsis thaliana that form a lipid droplet (LD)-plasma membrane (PM) tethering complex in plant cells, namely LD-localized SEED LD PROTEIN (SLDP) 1 and SLDP2 and PM-localized LD-PLASMA MEMBRANE ADAPTOR (LIPA). Using proteomics and different protein-protein interaction assays, we show that both SLDPs associate with LIPA. Disruption of either SLDP1 and SLDP2 expression, or that of LIPA, leads to an aberrant clustering of LDs in Arabidopsis seedlings. Ectopic co-expression of one of the SLDPs with LIPA is sufficient to reconstitute LD-PM tethering in Nicotiana tabacum pollen tubes, a cell type characterized by dynamically moving LDs in the cytosolic streaming. Furthermore, confocal laser scanning microscopy revealed both SLDP2.1 and LIPA to be enriched at LD-PM contact sites in seedlings. These and other results suggest that SLDP and LIPA interact to form a tethering complex that anchors a subset of LDs to the PM during post-germinative seedling growth in Arabidopsis.
Keyphrases
- protein protein
- arabidopsis thaliana
- single cell
- particulate matter
- high throughput
- air pollution
- fatty acid
- polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons
- small molecule
- induced apoptosis
- heavy metals
- binding protein
- poor prognosis
- rna seq
- cell cycle arrest
- water soluble
- transcription factor
- high resolution
- amino acid
- optical coherence tomography
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- high speed
- mass spectrometry
- risk assessment
- plant growth