Journal
PLANT AND CELL PHYSIOLOGY
Volume 57, Issue 7, Pages 1377-1386Publisher
OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/pcp/pcv203
Keywords
Chloroplastic ascorbate peroxidase isoforms; Evolution; Photooxidative stress; Redox; ROS signaling
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Funding
- Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science, and Technology of Japan [23880018, 24380186]
- Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research [25450129, 23880018] Funding Source: KAKEN
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Reactive oxygen species (ROS) have dual functions in plant cells as cytotoxic molecules and emergency signals. The balance between the production and scavenging of these molecules in chloroplasts, major sites for the production of ROS, is one of the key determinants for plant acclimation to stress conditions. The water-water cycle is a crucial regulator of ROS levels in chloroplasts. In this cycle, the stromal and thylakoid membrane-attached isoforms of ascorbate peroxidase (sAPX and tAPX, respectively) are involved in the metabolism of H2O2. Current genome and phylogenetic analyses suggest that the first monofunctional APX was generated as sAPX in unicellular green algae, and that tAPX occurred in multicellular charophytes during plant evolution. Chloroplastic APXs, especially tAPX, have been considered to be the source of a bottleneck in the waterwater cycle, at least in higher plants, because of their high susceptibility to H2O2. A number of studies have succeeded in improving plant stress resistance by reinforcing the fragile characteristics of the enzymes. However, researchers have unexpectedly failed to find a 'stress-sensitive phenotype' among loss-of-function mutants, at least in laboratory conditions. Interestingly, the susceptibility of enzymes to H2O2 may have been acquired during plant evolution, thereby allowing for the flexible use of H2O2 as a signaling molecule in plants, and this is supported by growing lines of evidence for the physiological significance of chloroplastic H2O2 as a retrograde signal in plant stress responses. By overviewing historical, biochemical, physiological and genetic studies, we herein discuss the diverse functions of chloroplastic APXs as antioxidant enzymes and signaling modulators.
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