DAY-LENGTH-DEPENDENT DELAYED-GREENING1, the Arabidopsis Homolog of the Cyanobacterial H+-Extrusion Protein, Is Essential for Chloroplast pH Regulation and Optimization of Non-Photochemical Quenching

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Standard

DAY-LENGTH-DEPENDENT DELAYED-GREENING1, the Arabidopsis Homolog of the Cyanobacterial H+-Extrusion Protein, Is Essential for Chloroplast pH Regulation and Optimization of Non-Photochemical Quenching. / Harada, Kyohei; Arizono, Takatoshi; Sato, Ryoichi; Trinh, Mai Duy Luu; Hashimoto, Akira ; Kono, Masaru; Tsujii, Masaru; Uozumi, Nobuyuki; Takaichi, Shinichi; Masuda, Shinji.

In: Plant and Cell Physiology, 30.10.2019.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Harada, K, Arizono, T, Sato, R, Trinh, MDL, Hashimoto, A, Kono, M, Tsujii, M, Uozumi, N, Takaichi, S & Masuda, S 2019, 'DAY-LENGTH-DEPENDENT DELAYED-GREENING1, the Arabidopsis Homolog of the Cyanobacterial H+-Extrusion Protein, Is Essential for Chloroplast pH Regulation and Optimization of Non-Photochemical Quenching', Plant and Cell Physiology. https://doi.org/10.1093/pcp/pcz203

APA

Harada, K., Arizono, T., Sato, R., Trinh, M. D. L., Hashimoto, A., Kono, M., Tsujii, M., Uozumi, N., Takaichi, S., & Masuda, S. (2019). DAY-LENGTH-DEPENDENT DELAYED-GREENING1, the Arabidopsis Homolog of the Cyanobacterial H+-Extrusion Protein, Is Essential for Chloroplast pH Regulation and Optimization of Non-Photochemical Quenching. Plant and Cell Physiology. https://doi.org/10.1093/pcp/pcz203

Vancouver

Harada K, Arizono T, Sato R, Trinh MDL, Hashimoto A, Kono M et al. DAY-LENGTH-DEPENDENT DELAYED-GREENING1, the Arabidopsis Homolog of the Cyanobacterial H+-Extrusion Protein, Is Essential for Chloroplast pH Regulation and Optimization of Non-Photochemical Quenching. Plant and Cell Physiology. 2019 Oct 30. https://doi.org/10.1093/pcp/pcz203

Author

Harada, Kyohei ; Arizono, Takatoshi ; Sato, Ryoichi ; Trinh, Mai Duy Luu ; Hashimoto, Akira ; Kono, Masaru ; Tsujii, Masaru ; Uozumi, Nobuyuki ; Takaichi, Shinichi ; Masuda, Shinji. / DAY-LENGTH-DEPENDENT DELAYED-GREENING1, the Arabidopsis Homolog of the Cyanobacterial H+-Extrusion Protein, Is Essential for Chloroplast pH Regulation and Optimization of Non-Photochemical Quenching. In: Plant and Cell Physiology. 2019.

Bibtex

@article{23508c4c55ba4aea966ff337becb433d,
title = "DAY-LENGTH-DEPENDENT DELAYED-GREENING1, the Arabidopsis Homolog of the Cyanobacterial H+-Extrusion Protein, Is Essential for Chloroplast pH Regulation and Optimization of Non-Photochemical Quenching",
abstract = "Plants convert solar energy into chemical energy through photosynthesis, which supports almost all life activities on earth. Because the intensity and quality of sunlight can change dramatically throughout the day, various regulatory mechanisms help plants adjust their photosynthetic output accordingly, including the regulation of light energy accumulation to prevent the generation of damaging reactive oxygen species. Non-photochemical quenching (NPQ) is a regulatory mechanism that dissipates excess light energy, but how it is regulated is not fully elucidated. In this study, we report a new NPQ-regulatory protein named Day-Length-dependent Delayed-Greening1 (DLDG1). The Arabidopsis DLDG1 associates with the chloroplast envelope membrane, and the dldg1 mutant had a large NPQ value compared with wild type. The mutant also had a pale-green phenotype in developing leaves but only under continuous light; this phenotype was not observed when dldg1 was cultured in the dark for ≥8 h/d. DLDG1 is a homolog of the plasma membrane-localizing cyanobacterial proton-extrusion-protein A that is required for light-induced H+ extrusion and also shows similarity in its amino-acid sequence to that of Ycf10 encoded in the plastid genome. Arabidopsis DLDG1 enhances the growth-retardation phenotype of the Escherichia coli K+/H+ antiporter mutant, and the everted membrane vesicles of the E. coli expressing DLDG1 show the K+/H+ antiport activity. Our findings suggest that DLDG1 functionally interacts with Ycf10 to control H+ homeostasis in chloroplasts, which is important for the light-acclimation response, by optimizing the extent of NPQ.",
author = "Kyohei Harada and Takatoshi Arizono and Ryoichi Sato and Trinh, {Mai Duy Luu} and Akira Hashimoto and Masaru Kono and Masaru Tsujii and Nobuyuki Uozumi and Shinichi Takaichi and Shinji Masuda",
year = "2019",
month = oct,
day = "30",
doi = "10.1093/pcp/pcz203",
language = "English",
journal = "Plant and Cell Physiology",
issn = "0032-0781",
publisher = "Oxford University Press",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - DAY-LENGTH-DEPENDENT DELAYED-GREENING1, the Arabidopsis Homolog of the Cyanobacterial H+-Extrusion Protein, Is Essential for Chloroplast pH Regulation and Optimization of Non-Photochemical Quenching

AU - Harada, Kyohei

AU - Arizono, Takatoshi

AU - Sato, Ryoichi

AU - Trinh, Mai Duy Luu

AU - Hashimoto, Akira

AU - Kono, Masaru

AU - Tsujii, Masaru

AU - Uozumi, Nobuyuki

AU - Takaichi, Shinichi

AU - Masuda, Shinji

PY - 2019/10/30

Y1 - 2019/10/30

N2 - Plants convert solar energy into chemical energy through photosynthesis, which supports almost all life activities on earth. Because the intensity and quality of sunlight can change dramatically throughout the day, various regulatory mechanisms help plants adjust their photosynthetic output accordingly, including the regulation of light energy accumulation to prevent the generation of damaging reactive oxygen species. Non-photochemical quenching (NPQ) is a regulatory mechanism that dissipates excess light energy, but how it is regulated is not fully elucidated. In this study, we report a new NPQ-regulatory protein named Day-Length-dependent Delayed-Greening1 (DLDG1). The Arabidopsis DLDG1 associates with the chloroplast envelope membrane, and the dldg1 mutant had a large NPQ value compared with wild type. The mutant also had a pale-green phenotype in developing leaves but only under continuous light; this phenotype was not observed when dldg1 was cultured in the dark for ≥8 h/d. DLDG1 is a homolog of the plasma membrane-localizing cyanobacterial proton-extrusion-protein A that is required for light-induced H+ extrusion and also shows similarity in its amino-acid sequence to that of Ycf10 encoded in the plastid genome. Arabidopsis DLDG1 enhances the growth-retardation phenotype of the Escherichia coli K+/H+ antiporter mutant, and the everted membrane vesicles of the E. coli expressing DLDG1 show the K+/H+ antiport activity. Our findings suggest that DLDG1 functionally interacts with Ycf10 to control H+ homeostasis in chloroplasts, which is important for the light-acclimation response, by optimizing the extent of NPQ.

AB - Plants convert solar energy into chemical energy through photosynthesis, which supports almost all life activities on earth. Because the intensity and quality of sunlight can change dramatically throughout the day, various regulatory mechanisms help plants adjust their photosynthetic output accordingly, including the regulation of light energy accumulation to prevent the generation of damaging reactive oxygen species. Non-photochemical quenching (NPQ) is a regulatory mechanism that dissipates excess light energy, but how it is regulated is not fully elucidated. In this study, we report a new NPQ-regulatory protein named Day-Length-dependent Delayed-Greening1 (DLDG1). The Arabidopsis DLDG1 associates with the chloroplast envelope membrane, and the dldg1 mutant had a large NPQ value compared with wild type. The mutant also had a pale-green phenotype in developing leaves but only under continuous light; this phenotype was not observed when dldg1 was cultured in the dark for ≥8 h/d. DLDG1 is a homolog of the plasma membrane-localizing cyanobacterial proton-extrusion-protein A that is required for light-induced H+ extrusion and also shows similarity in its amino-acid sequence to that of Ycf10 encoded in the plastid genome. Arabidopsis DLDG1 enhances the growth-retardation phenotype of the Escherichia coli K+/H+ antiporter mutant, and the everted membrane vesicles of the E. coli expressing DLDG1 show the K+/H+ antiport activity. Our findings suggest that DLDG1 functionally interacts with Ycf10 to control H+ homeostasis in chloroplasts, which is important for the light-acclimation response, by optimizing the extent of NPQ.

UR - http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/pcp/pcz203

U2 - 10.1093/pcp/pcz203

DO - 10.1093/pcp/pcz203

M3 - Journal article

JO - Plant and Cell Physiology

JF - Plant and Cell Physiology

SN - 0032-0781

ER -

ID: 311339710