Low-oxygen response is triggered by an ATP-dependent shift in oleoyl-CoA in Arabidopsis

Schmidt RR, Fulda M, Paul MV, Anders M, Plum F, Weits DA, Kosmacz M, Larson TR, Graham IA, Beemster GTS, Licausi F, Geigenberger P
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et al

Plant response to environmental stimuli involves integration of multiple signals. Upon low-oxygen stress, plants initiate a set of adaptive responses to circumvent an energy crisis. Here, we reveal how these stress responses are induced by combining (i) energy-dependent changes in the composition of the acyl-CoA pool and (ii) the cellular oxygen concentration. A hypoxia-induced decline of cellular ATP levels reduces LONG-CHAIN ACYL-COA SYNTHETASE activity, which leads to a shift in the composition of the acyl-CoA pool. Subsequently, we show that different acyl-CoAs induce unique molecular responses. Altogether, our data disclose a role for acyl-CoAs acting in a cellular signaling pathway in plants. Upon hypoxia, high oleoyl-CoA levels provide the initial trigger to release the transcription factor RAP2.12 from its interaction partner ACYL-COA BINDING PROTEIN at the plasma membrane. Subsequently, according to the N-end rule for proteasomal degradation, oxygen concentration-dependent stabilization of the subgroup VII ETHYLENE-RESPONSE FACTOR transcription factor RAP2.12 determines the level of hypoxia-specific gene expression. This research unveils a specific mechanism activating low-oxygen stress responses only when a decrease in the oxygen concentration coincides with a drop in energy.

Keywords:

adenosine triphosphate

,

gene expression regulation, plant

,

stress, physiological

,

ACBP

,

acyl coenzyme A

,

low-oxygen stress

,

oxygen

,

cell hypoxia

,

diazepam binding inhibitor

,

acyl-CoA

,

Arabidopsis proteins

,

ERFVII

,

integrative signalling

,

signal transduction

,

models, biological

,

Arabidopsis