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A genetic module at one locus in rice protects chloroplasts to enhance thermotolerance.

Hai ZhangJi-Fu ZhouYi KanJun-Xiang ShanWang-Wei YeNai-Qian DongTao GuoYou-Huang XiangYi-Bing YangYa-Chao LiHuai-Yu ZhaoHong-Xiao YuZi-Qi LuShuang-Qin GuoJie-Jie LeiBen LiaoXiao-Rui MuYing-Jie CaoJia-Jun YuYoushun LinHong-Xuan Lin
Published in: Science (New York, N.Y.) (2022)
How the plasma membrane senses external heat-stress signals to communicate with chloroplasts to orchestrate thermotolerance remains elusive. We identified a quantitative trait locus, Thermo-tolerance 3 ( TT3 ), consisting of two genes, TT3.1 and TT3.2 , that interact together to enhance rice thermotolerance and reduce grain-yield losses caused by heat stress. Upon heat stress, plasma membrane-localized E3 ligase TT3.1 translocates to the endosomes, on which TT3.1 ubiquitinates chloroplast precursor protein TT3.2 for vacuolar degradation, implying that TT3.1 might serve as a potential thermosensor. Lesser accumulated, mature TT3.2 proteins in chloroplasts are essential for protecting thylakoids from heat stress. Our findings not only reveal a TT3.1-TT3.2 genetic module at one locus that transduces heat signals from plasma membrane to chloroplasts but also provide the strategy for breeding highly thermotolerant crops.
Keyphrases
  • heat stress
  • heat shock
  • genome wide
  • high resolution
  • gene expression
  • mass spectrometry
  • oxidative stress
  • dna methylation
  • single cell
  • transcription factor
  • small molecule
  • arabidopsis thaliana