Abstract
The xylulose 5-phosphate/phosphate translocator (PTs) (XPT) represents a link between the plastidial and extraplastidial branches of the oxidative pentose phosphate pathway. Its role is to retrieve pentose phosphates from the extraplastidial space and to make them available to the plastids. However, the XPT transports also triose phosphates and to a lesser extent phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP). Thus, it might support both the triose phosphate/PT (TPT) in the export of photoassimilates from illuminated chloroplasts and the PEP/PT (PPT) in the import of PEP into green or non-green plastids. In mutants defective in the day- and night-path of photoassimilate export from the chloroplasts (i.e., knockout of the TPT [tpt-2] in a starch-free background [adg1-1])the XPT provides a bypass for triose phosphate export and thereby guarantees survival of the adg1-1/tpt-2 double mutant. Here we show that the additional knockout of the XPT in adg1-1/tpt-2/xpt-1 triple mutants results in lethality when the plants were grown in soil. Thus the XPT can functionally support the TPT. The PEP transport capacity of the XPT has been revisited here with a protein heterologously expressed in yeast. PEP transport rates in the proteoliposome system were increased with decreasing pH-values below 7.0. Moreover, PEP transport determined in leaf extracts from wild-type plants showed a similar pH-response, suggesting that in both cases PEP2- is the transported charge-species. Hence, PEP import into illuminated chloroplasts might be unidirectional because of the alkaline pH of the stroma. Here the consequence of a block in PEP transport across the envelope was analyzed in triple mutants defective in both PPTs and the XPT. PPT1 is knocked out in the cue1 mutant. For PPT2 two new mutant alleles were isolated and established as homozygous lines. In contrast to the strong phenotype of cue1, both ppt2 alleles showed only slight growth retardation. As plastidial PEP is required e.g., for the shikimate pathway of aromatic amino acid synthesis, a block in PEP import should result in a lethal phenotype. However, the cue1-6/ppt2-1/ppt2-1 triple mutant was viable and even exhibited residual PEP transport capacity. Hence, alternative ways of PEP transport must exist and are discussed.
Highlights
In Arabidopsis thaliana the family of phosphate translocators (PTs) of the plastidial inner envelope membrane consists of four functional classes with a total of six members
The loss of both functions, i.e., triose phosphate (TP) export by the TPT and starch biosynthesis, resulted only in a severe growth retardation and impaired photosynthesis in the adg1-1/tpt-2 double mutant (Schmitz et al, 2012 and Supplementary Figure S1C), suggesting that additional ways must exist that allow a basic level of carbon export from the chloroplast
GPT2 expression can be induced in leaves in the presence of high sugar levels and GPT2 might become involved in carbon export from the chloroplasts
Summary
In Arabidopsis thaliana the family of phosphate translocators (PTs) of the plastidial inner envelope membrane consists of four functional classes with a total of six members. The TPT is highly abundant in photosynthetic tissues and mediates the export of TPs from the chloroplast stroma in the light to support sucrose biosynthesis in the cytosol. Thereby it provides the whole plant with carbohydrates during the day (‘day path of carbon’). The XPT is ubiquitously expressed in A. thaliana and is proposed to serve as a link between the plastidial and extraplastidial branches of the oxidative pentose phosphate pathway (OPPP; Eicks et al, 2002; Kruger and von Schaewen, 2003; Meyer et al, 2011; Hölscher et al, 2016). The PPTs are expressed in both green and non-green tissues and are proposed to supply plastids lacking a complete glycolysis with PEP as a substrate for the shikimate pathway, which is entirely localized in the plastid stroma and from which aromatic amino acids and a plethora of primary and secondary plant products derive (Tzin and Galili, 2010)
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