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Nitrogen Source Dependent Changes in Central Sugar Metabolism Maintain Cell Wall Assembly in Mitochondrial Complex I-Defective frostbite1 and Secondarily Affect Programmed Cell Death.

Anna PodgórskaMonika Ostaszewska-BugajskaAgata TarnowskaMaria BurianKlaudia BorysiukPer GardeströmBożena Szal
Published in: International journal of molecular sciences (2018)
For optimal plant growth, carbon and nitrogen availability needs to be tightly coordinated. Mitochondrial perturbations related to a defect in complex I in the Arabidopsis thalianafrostbite1 (fro1) mutant, carrying a point mutation in the 8-kD Fe-S subunit of NDUFS4 protein, alter aspects of fundamental carbon metabolism, which is manifested as stunted growth. During nitrate nutrition, fro1 plants showed a dominant sugar flux toward nitrogen assimilation and energy production, whereas cellulose integration in the cell wall was restricted. However, when cultured on NH₄⁺ as the sole nitrogen source, which typically induces developmental disorders in plants (i.e., the ammonium toxicity syndrome), fro1 showed improved growth as compared to NO₃- nourishing. Higher energy availability in fro1 plants was correlated with restored cell wall assembly during NH₄⁺ growth. To determine the relationship between mitochondrial complex I disassembly and cell wall-related processes, aspects of cell wall integrity and sugar and reactive oxygen species signaling were analyzed in fro1 plants. The responses of fro1 plants to NH₄⁺ treatment were consistent with the inhibition of a form of programmed cell death. Resistance of fro1 plants to NH₄⁺ toxicity coincided with an absence of necrotic lesion in plant leaves.
Keyphrases
  • cell wall
  • oxidative stress
  • room temperature
  • reactive oxygen species
  • ionic liquid
  • physical activity
  • nitric oxide
  • plant growth