Abstract

BackgroundPlastome mutants are ideal resources for elucidating the functions of plastid genes. Numerous studies have been conducted for the function of plastid genes in barley and tobacco; however, related information is limited in Chinese cabbage.ResultsA chlorophyll-deficient mutant of Chinese cabbage that was derived by ethyl methanesulfonate treatment on isolated microspores showed uniformly pale green inner leaves and slow growth compared with that shown by the wild type “Fukuda 50′ (‘FT’). Genetic analysis revealed that cdm was cytoplasmically inherited. Physiological and ultrastructural analyses of cdm showed impaired photosynthesis and abnormal chloroplast development. Utilizing next generation sequencing, the complete plastomes of cdm and ‘FT’ were respectively re-mapped to the reference genome of Chinese cabbage, and an A-to-C base substitution with a mutation ratio higher than 99% was detected. The missense mutation of plastid ribosomal protein S4 led to valine substitution for glycine at residue 193. The expression level of rps4 was analyzed using quantitative real-time PCR and found lower in than in ‘FT’. RNA gel-blot assays showed that the abundance of mature 23S rRNA, 16S rRNA, 5S rRNA, and 4.5S rRNA significantly decreased and that the processing of 23S, 16S rRNA, and 4.5S rRNA was seriously impaired, affecting the ribosomal function in cdm.ConclusionsThese findings indicated that cdm was a plastome mutant and that chlorophyll deficiency might be due to an A-to-C base substitution of the plastome-encoded rps4 that impaired the rRNA processing and affected the ribosomal function.

Highlights

  • Plastome mutants are ideal resources for elucidating the functions of plastid genes

  • Our results suggested that ribosomal protein S4 (RPS4) is associated with chloroplast rRNA processing and chlorophyll deficiency in cdm

  • The plastomes genomes of cdm and ‘FT’ were re-mapped to the reference genome of Chinese cabbage, revealing an A-to-C base substitution at nucleotide 44,398 of rps4 with a mutation ratio higher than 99% that led to Val substitution for Gly in RPS4, which altered its secondary structure

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Summary

Introduction

Plastome mutants are ideal resources for elucidating the functions of plastid genes. Mutant lines are ideal resources for discovering novel gene functions and deciphering unknown mechanisms [1, 2]. Chlorophyll-deficient mutants are considered important for gaining a better insight into the mechanism of photosynthesis, chlorophyll synthesis, development and differentiation of chloroplast structure, gene functional identification, and nucleo-cytoplasmic interactions [3, 4]. Most chlorophyll-deficient mutants in different species, such as Arabidopsis thaliana [6], rice [7], barley [8], soybean [9], carrot [10], and cabbage [11], are controlled by nuclear genes involved in plastid development and pigment biosynthesis that transferred from the plastids to the nucleus during evolution [12]. Chlorophyll-deficient mutants have been used as a genetic tool for the initial study of cytoplasmic inheritance [14, 15]

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