Abstract

Alternative oxidase (AOX) is a non-energy conserving terminal oxidase in the plant mitochondrial electron transport chain (ETC) that has a lower affinity for oxygen than does cytochrome (cyt) oxidase. To investigate the role(s) of AOX under different oxygen conditions, wild-type (WT) Nicotiana tabacum plants were compared with AOX knockdown and overexpression plants under normoxia, hypoxia (near-anoxia), and during a reoxygenation period following hypoxia. Paradoxically, under all the conditions tested, the AOX amount across plant lines correlated positively with leaf energy status (ATP/ADP ratio). Under normoxia, AOX was important to maintain respiratory carbon flow, to prevent the mitochondrial generation of superoxide and nitric oxide (NO), to control lipid peroxidation and protein S-nitrosylation, and possibly to reduce the inhibition of cyt oxidase by NO. Under hypoxia, AOX was again important in preventing superoxide generation and lipid peroxidation, but now contributed positively to NO amount. This may indicate an ability of AOX to generate NO under hypoxia, similar to the nitrite reductase activity of cyt oxidase under hypoxia. Alternatively, it may indicate that AOX activity simply reduces the amount of superoxide scavenging of NO, by reducing the availability of superoxide. The amount of inactivation of mitochondrial aconitase during hypoxia was also dependent upon AOX amount, perhaps through its effects on NO amount, and this influenced carbon flow under hypoxia. Finally, AOX was particularly important in preventing nitro-oxidative stress during the reoxygenation period, thereby contributing positively to the recovery of energy status following hypoxia. Overall, the results suggest that AOX plays a beneficial role in low oxygen metabolism, despite its lower affinity for oxygen than cytochrome oxidase.

Highlights

  • The plant mitochondrial electron transport chain (ETC) is branched so that electrons in the ubiquinone pool can pass to oxygen via the usual cytochrome pathway [involving Complex III, cyt c and cyt oxidase (EC 1.9.3.1)] or via alternative oxidase (AOX; EC 1.10.3.11) (Vanlerberghe, 2013; Del-Saz et al, 2018; Selinski et al, 2018)

  • Wild-type, AOX knockdown (RI9, RI29) and AOX overexpression (B7, B8) tobacco plants were compared in an experiment in which potted plants were subjected to either a 4 h normoxia treatment, a 4 h hypoxia (0.001% oxygen, i.e., near anoxia) treatment, or a 4 h hypoxia treatment followed by a reoxygenation treatment for 15 min or 120 min

  • These differences across plant lines were evident during the reoxygenation period (Figure 1A)

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Summary

Introduction

The plant mitochondrial electron transport chain (ETC) is branched so that electrons in the ubiquinone pool can pass to oxygen via the usual cytochrome (cyt) pathway [involving Complex III, cyt c and cyt oxidase (EC 1.9.3.1)] or via alternative oxidase (AOX; EC 1.10.3.11) (Vanlerberghe, 2013; Del-Saz et al, 2018; Selinski et al, 2018). Electron flow from ubiquinol to oxygen via the cyt Alternative Oxidase Under Normoxia and Hypoxia pathway is coupled to proton translocation and contributes to the synthesis of ATP. Electron flow from ubiquinol to oxygen via AOX is not coupled to proton translocation, not contributing to ATP synthesis. Studies have shown that chemical inhibition or genetic knockdown/knockout of AOX can increase mitochondrial amounts of such species, including superoxide (O2−) and nitric oxide (NO) (Purvis, 1997; Maxwell et al, 1999; Parsons et al, 1999; Giraud et al, 2008; Smith et al, 2009; Cvetkovska and Vanlerberghe, 2012a; Alber et al, 2017)

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