An evolutionary view on thylakoid protein phosphorylation uncovers novel phosphorylation hotspots with potential functional implications

被引:33
|
作者
Grieco, Michele [1 ]
Jain, Arpit [2 ]
Ebersberger, Ingo [2 ,3 ]
Teige, Markus [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Vienna, Dept Ecogen & Syst Biol, Althanstr 14, A-1090 Vienna, Austria
[2] Goethe Univ Frankfurt, Inst Cell Biol & Neurosci, Dept Appl Bioinformat, Max von Laue Str 13, D-60438 Frankfurt, Germany
[3] Senckenberg Biodivers & Climate Res Ctr BiK F, Senckenberg Anlage 25, D-60325 Frankfurt, Germany
基金
奥地利科学基金会;
关键词
Acclimation to stress; calcium signal; chloroplast; evolution; light-harvesting; photosynthesis; protein phosphorylation; signalling; HARVESTING COMPLEX-II; CHLOROPLAST ATP SYNTHASE; CYCLIC ELECTRON FLOW; CASEIN KINASE-II; PHOSPHOPROTEOME PROFILING REVEALS; ARABIDOPSIS INFORMATION RESOURCE; ALGA CHLAMYDOMONAS-REINHARDTII; CALCIUM-DEPENDENT REGULATION; PHOTODAMAGED PHOTOSYSTEM-II; EXCITATION-ENERGY TRANSFER;
D O I
10.1093/jxb/erw164
中图分类号
Q94 [植物学];
学科分类号
071001 ;
摘要
A review of thylakoid protein phosphorylation sites involved in the regulation of photosynthesis in plants and green algae identifies novel phosphorylation hotspots and their evolutionary conservation indicates they have functional implications.The regulation of photosynthetic light reactions by reversible protein phosphorylation is well established today, but functional studies have so far mostly been restricted to processes affecting light-harvesting complex II and the core proteins of photosystem II. Virtually no functional data are available on regulatory effects at the other photosynthetic complexes despite the identification of multiple phosphorylation sites. Therefore we summarize the available data from 50 published phospho-proteomics studies covering the main complexes involved in photosynthetic light reactions in the 'green lineage' (i.e. green algae and land plants) as well as its cyanobacterial counterparts. In addition, we performed an extensive orthologue search for the major photosynthetic thylakoid proteins in 41 sequenced genomes and generated sequence alignments to survey the phylogenetic distribution of phosphorylation sites and their evolutionary conservation from green algae to higher plants. We observed a number of uncharacterized phosphorylation hotspots at photosystem I and the ATP synthase with potential functional relevance as well as an unexpected divergence of phosphosites. Although technical limitations might account for a number of those differences, we think that many of these phosphosites have important functions. This is particularly important for mono- and dicot plants, where these sites might be involved in regulatory processes such as stress acclimation.
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页码:3883 / 3896
页数:14
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