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First published online January 23, 2009; 10.1105/tpc.108.065243 The Plant Cell 21:18-23 (2009) © 2009 American Society of Plant Biologists
Hunting for Plant Nitric Oxide Synthase Provides New Evidence of a Central Role for Plastids in Nitric Oxide Metabolism
a Departament de Genètica Molecular de Plantes, Centre for Research on Agricultural Genomics, 08034 Barcelona, Spain 1 Address correspondence to mrcgmp{at}ibmb.csic.es.
ABSTRACT Nitric oxide (NO) has emerged as a central signaling molecule in plants and animals. However, the long search for a plant NO synthase (NOS) enzyme has only encountered false leads. The first works describing a pathogen-induced NOS-like plant protein were soon retracted. New hope came from the identification of NOS1, an Arabidopsis thaliana protein with an atypical NOS activity that was found to be targeted to mitochondria in roots. Although concerns about the NO-producing activity of this protein were raised (causing the renaming of the protein to NO-associated 1), compelling data on its biological role were missing until recently. Strong evidence is now available that this protein functions as a GTPase that is actually targeted to plastids, where it might be required for ribosome function. These and other results support the argument that the defective NO production in loss-of-function mutants is an indirect effect of interfering with normal plastid functions and that plastids play an important role in regulating NO levels in plant cells.
A major revolution in biology took place by the early 1990s after the discovery that nitric oxide (NO), a free radical, was not a toxic by-product of oxidative metabolism but had a fundamental role as a signaling molecule regulating normal physiological processes in animal cells (Culotta and Koshland, 1992
The analysis of the Arabidopsis thaliana nia1 nia2 double mutant, which shows substantially reduced NR activity levels, has shown that such activity is required for NO synthesis during flowering (Seligman et al., 2008 First Leads in the Hunt for Plant NOS Enzymes
Two main sources of evidence for the presence of animal-like NOS-dependent synthesis of NO in plant cells were initially reported in the late 1990s. Initial evidence was based on the production of NO and L-citrulline from L-Arg by plant extracts and/or its inhibition by specific inhibitors, typically inactive substrate analogs (Cueto et al., 1996
A first clue came from the purification of a pathogen-inducible NOS-like activity from virus-infected tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum) leaves (Chandok et al., 2003
Consistent with the proposed role of NOS1 in NO synthesis, mutant nos1 plants showed decreased NO accumulation in response to ABA, salicylic acid, salt, and elicitor treatments (Guo et al., 2003 NOA1/RIF1 Is a Plastidial GTPase Not Directly Related to NO Synthesis
NOA1/RIF1 shows homology to members of the YlqF/YawG family of P-loop GTP binding proteins with a circularly permuted GTPase domain that play roles in ribosomal biogenesis and protein translation (Leipe et al., 2002
Consistent with a role for NOA1/RIF1 in ribosome assembly or stability similar to that described for YqeH, other homologs present in eukaryotic organisms, such as animals and yeast, have been shown to be associated with ribosomal proteins in mitochondria (Zemojtel et al., 2006a
A Role for Plastids in the Control of NO Levels
It remains unclear how altered levels of the NOA1/RIF1 protein in loss-of-function or overexpressing lines of eukaryotic algae, plants, and animals result in concomitant changes in NOS activity and NO accumulation (Guo et al., 2003
Interestingly, interference with other plastid mechanisms unrelated to NOA1/RIF1 function can also result in altered NO levels. For example, a genetic screen for NO hypersensitive Arabidopsis mutants led to the isolation of several lines with mutations in CUE1, a gene encoding a plastidial phosphoenolpyruvate/phosphate translocator of the plastid inner envelope membrane (He et al., 2004 Acknowledgments We thank Jaime F. Martínez-García and José León for critical reading of the manuscript. Research in our lab is supported by grants from the Spanish Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación (BIO2005-00367) and Generalitat de Catalunya (Distinció and 2005SGR-00914). Footnotes www.plantcell.org/cgi/doi/10.1105/tpc.108.065243 Received December 17, 2008; Revision received January 9, 2009. accepted January 14, 2009. REFERENCES
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