Abstract

Cotton is one of the most important textile fibers worldwide. As crucial agronomic traits, leaves play an essential role in the growth, disease resistance, fiber quality, and yield of cotton plants. Pentatricopeptide repeat (PPR) proteins are a large family of nuclear-encoded proteins involved in organellar or nuclear RNA metabolism. Using a virus-induced gene silencing assay, we found that cotton plants displayed variegated yellow leaf phenotypes with decreased chlorophyll content when expression of the PPR gene GhCTSF1 was silenced. GhCTSF1 encodes a chloroplast-localized protein that contains only two PPR motifs. Disruption of GhCTSF1 substantially reduces the splicing efficiency of rpoC1 intron 1 and ycf3 intron 2. Loss of function of the GhCTSF1 ortholog EMB1417 causes splicing defects in rpoC1 and ycf3-2, leading to impaired chloroplast structure and decreased photosynthetic rates in Arabidopsis. We also found that GhCTSF1 interacts with two splicing factors, GhCRS2 and GhWTF1. Defects in GhCRS2 and GhWTF1 severely affect intron splicing of rpoC1 and ycf3-2 in cotton, leading to defects in chloroplast development and a reduction in photosynthesis. Our results suggest that GhCTSF1 is specifically required for splicing rpoC1 and ycf3-2 in cooperation with GhCRS2 and GhWTF1.

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