S-nitrosylation of the histone deacetylase HDA19 stimulates its activity to enhance plant stress tolerance in Arabidopsis.
Yu ZhengZhenting LiXiaoyun CuiZheng YangChun BaoLei PanXiaoyun LiuGilles Chatel-InnocentiHélène VanackerGraham NoctorAvilien DardJean-Philippe ReichheldEmmanuelle Issakidis-BourguetDao-Xiu ZhouPublished in: The Plant journal : for cell and molecular biology (2023)
Arabidopsis histone deacetylase HDA19 is required for gene expression programs of a large spectrum of plant developmental and stress-responsive pathways. How this enzyme senses cellular environment to control its activity remains unclear. In this work, we show that HDA19 is post-translationally modified by S-nitrosylation at 4 Cysteine (Cys) residues. HDA19 S-nitrosylation depends on the cellular nitric oxide (NO) level which is enhanced under oxidative stress. We find that HDA19 is required for cellular redox homeostasis and plant tolerance to oxidative stress which in turn stimulates its nuclear enrichment, S-nitrosylation and epigenetic functions including binding to genomic targets, histone deacetylation, and gene repression. The Cys137 of the protein is involved in basal and stress-induced S-nitrosylation and is required for HDA19 functions in developmental, stress-responsive, and epigenetic controls. Together, these results indicate that S-nitrosylation regulates HDA19 activity and is a mechanism of redox-sensing for chromatin regulation of plant tolerance to stress.
Keyphrases
- histone deacetylase
- stress induced
- gene expression
- oxidative stress
- dna methylation
- nitric oxide
- transcription factor
- cell wall
- dna damage
- genome wide
- public health
- ischemia reperfusion injury
- heat stress
- induced apoptosis
- fluorescent probe
- drug delivery
- hydrogen peroxide
- sensitive detection
- small molecule
- quantum dots
- nitric oxide synthase
- protein protein