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Mitochondrial Fission Complex is Required for Long-Term Heat Tolerance of Arabidopsis.

Ryo TsukimotoKazuho IsonoTakuma KajinoSatoshi IuchiAkihisa ShinozawaIzumi YotsuiYoichi SakataTeruaki Taji
Published in: Plant & cell physiology (2021)
Plants are often exposed not only to short-term (S) heat stress but also to long-term (L) heat stress over several consecutive days. A few Arabidopsis mutants defective in L-heat tolerance have been identified, but the molecular mechanisms involved are less well understood than those involved in S-heat tolerance. To elucidate the mechanisms, we isolated the new sensitive to long-term heat5 (sloh5) mutant from EMS-mutagenized seeds of L-heat-tolerant Col-0. The sloh5 mutant was hypersensitive to L-heat but not to S-heat, osmo-shock, salt-shock, or oxidative stress. The causal gene, SLOH5, is identical to ELONGATED MITOCHONDRIA1 (ELM1), which plays an important role in mitochondrial fission in conjunction with dynamin-related proteins DRP3A and DRP3B. Transcript levels of ELM1, DRP3A, and DRP3B were time-dependently increased by L-heat stress, and drp3a drp3b double mutants were hypersensitive to L-heat stress. The sloh5 mutant contained massively elongated mitochondria. L-heat stress caused mitochondrial dysfunction and cell death in sloh5. Furthermore, WT plants treated with a mitochondrial myosin ATPase inhibitor were hypersensitive to L-heat stress. These findings suggest that mitochondrial fission and function are important in L-heat tolerance of Arabidopsis.
Keyphrases
  • heat stress
  • oxidative stress
  • heat shock
  • cell death
  • transcription factor
  • dna methylation
  • genome wide
  • cell proliferation
  • diabetic rats
  • copy number
  • induced apoptosis
  • endoplasmic reticulum stress
  • drug induced