Abstract

BackgroundPlant mitochondrial transcription termination factor (mTERF) family members play important roles in development and stress tolerance through regulation of organellar gene expression. However, their molecular functions have yet to be clearly defined.ResultsHere an mTERF gene V14 was identified by fine mapping using a conditional albino mutant v14 that displayed albinism only in the first two true leaves, which was confirmed by transgenic complementation tests. Subcellular localization and real-time PCR analyses indicated that V14 encodes a chloroplastic protein ubiquitously expressed in leaves while spiking in the second true leaf. Chloroplastic gene expression profiling in the pale leaves of v14 through real-time PCR and Northern blotting analyses showed abnormal accumulation of the unprocessed transcripts covering the rpoB-rpoC1 and/or rpoC1-rpoC2 intercistronic regions accompanied by reduced abundance of the mature rpoC1 and rpoC2 transcripts, which encode two core subunits of the plastid-encoded plastid RNA polymerase (PEP). Subsequent immunoblotting analyses confirmed the reduced accumulation of RpoC1 and RpoC2. A light-inducible photosynthetic gene psbD was also found down-regulated at both the mRNA and protein levels. Interestingly, such stage-specific aberrant posttranscriptional regulation and psbD expression can be reversed by high temperatures (30 ~ 35 °C), although V14 expression lacks thermo-sensitivity. Meanwhile, three V14 homologous genes were found heat-inducible with similar temporal expression patterns, implicating their possible functional redundancy to V14.ConclusionsThese data revealed a critical role of V14 in chloroplast development, which impacts, in a stage-specific and thermo-sensitive way, the appropriate processing of rpoB-rpoC1-rpoC2 precursors and the expression of certain photosynthetic proteins. Our findings thus expand the knowledge of the molecular functions of rice mTERFs and suggest the contributions of plant mTERFs to photosynthesis establishment and temperature acclimation.

Highlights

  • Plant mitochondrial transcription termination factor family members play important roles in development and stress tolerance through regulation of organellar gene expression

  • SOLDAT10, the first mitochondrial transcription termination factor (mTERF) characterized in higher plants, participates in stress acclimation response and affects the abundance of 16S and 23S rRNA and ClpP protease mRNA [16] in chloroplasts

  • Two comparative analyses of two other chloroplastic mTERFs, mTERF5 (MDA1) and mTERF9 (TWIRT1), indicated a functional relationship between them, that they share some common targets in gene expression regulation, both respond to salt and osmotic stresses, and both are functionally related to the plastid-encoded plastid RNA polymerase (PEP) [18]

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Summary

Introduction

Plant mitochondrial transcription termination factor (mTERF) family members play important roles in development and stress tolerance through regulation of organellar gene expression. Their molecular functions have yet to be clearly defined. Mitochondrial ZmSmk was found involved in the splicing of nad intron 1 and nad intron 4 in maize [28], and Arabidopsis mTERF9 was shown to promote chloroplast ribosome assembly and translation by interacting with 16S and 23S rRNAs [29] Despite these advances, the molecular mechanism by which plant mTERFs regulate organellar gene expression is still far from full understanding, and it is not clear if mTERFs involve in processing organellar polycistronic transcripts. Little information has been provided so far for the impact of mTERFs on chloroplast and mitochondrion development in rice (O. sativa L.), a model crop species

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