The role of the Arabidopsis tandem zinc-finger C3H15 protein in metal homeostasis
Living organisms have developed finely regulated homeostatic networks to mitigate the effects of environmental fluctuations in transition metal micronutrients, including iron, zinc, and copper. In Saccharomyces cerevisiae, the tandem zinc-finger protein Cth2 post-transcriptionally regulates gene exp...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Plant physiology and biochemistry 2024-11, Vol.216, p.109123, Article 109123 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Living organisms have developed finely regulated homeostatic networks to mitigate the effects of environmental fluctuations in transition metal micronutrients, including iron, zinc, and copper. In Saccharomyces cerevisiae, the tandem zinc-finger protein Cth2 post-transcriptionally regulates gene expression under conditions of iron deficiency by controlling the levels of mRNAs that code for non-essential ferroproteins. The molecular mechanism involves Cth2 binding to AU-rich elements present in the 3′ untranslated region of target mRNAs, negatively affecting their stability and translation. Arabidopsis thaliana has two TZF proteins homologous to yeast Cth2, C3H14 and C3H15, which participate in cell wall remodelling. The present work examines the expression of representative metal homeostasis genes with putative AREs in plants with altered levels of C3H14 and C3H15 grown under varying metal availabilities. The results suggest that C3H15 may act as a post-transcriptional plant modulator of metal adequacy, as evidenced by the expression of SPL7, the main transcriptional regulator under copper deficiency, and PETE2, which encodes plastocyanin. In contrast to S. cerevisiae, the plant C3H15 affects copper and zinc homeostasis rather than iron. When grown under copper-deficient conditions, adult C3H15OE plants exhibit lower chlorophyll content and photosynthetic efficiency compared to control plants, suggesting accelerated senescence. Likewise, metal content in C3H15OE plants under copper deficiency shows altered mobilization of copper and zinc to seeds. These data suggest that the C3H15 protein plays a role in modulating both cell wall remodelling and metal homeostasis. The interaction between these processes may be the cause of altered metal translocation.
•C3H15 functions as a post-transcriptional regulator in Arabidopsis copper and zinc homeostasis.•A comparison of the TZF domains of S. cerevisiae Cth2 and higher plants reveals that the TZF1 is most conserved than TZF2.•Analysis of Arabidopsis genes with putative C3H15 target sequences reveals that metal homeostasis genes are overrepresented.•Under copper deficiency, C3H15OE show an accelerated senescence as indicated by chlorophyll content and fluorescence.•Seeds of C3H15OE contain reduced zinc and copper levels pointing to their difficulty in mobilizing copper. |
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ISSN: | 0981-9428 1873-2690 1873-2690 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.plaphy.2024.109123 |