168
Entry URI http://metadb.riken.jp/db/SciNetS_ria224i/cria224u4ria224u15695592i
Entry name Baxter Ivan R et al. 2005 Feb. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 102(7):2649-54.
Title A plasma membrane H+-ATPase is required for the formation of proanthocyanidins in the seed coat endothelium of Arabidopsis thaliana.
Authors Armstrong Gordon|Baxter Ivan R|Bogenschutz Naomi|Cordova Tatiana|Foster Nathan|Harper Jeffrey F|Hazen Samuel P|Murphy Angus S|Peer Wendy Ann|Young Jeffery C
Abstract The plasma membrane in plant cells is energized with an electrical potential and proton gradient generated through the action of H+ pumps belonging to the P-type ATPase superfamily. The Arabidopsis genome encodes 11 plasma membrane H+ pumps. Auto-inhibited H+-ATPase isoform 10 (AHA10) is expressed primarily in developing seeds. Here we show that four independent gene disruptions of AHA10 result in seed coats with a transparent testa (tt) phenotype (light-colored seeds). A quantitative analysis of extractable flavonoids in aha10 seeds revealed an approximately 100-fold reduction of proanthocyanidin (PA), one of the two major end-product pigments in the flavonoid biosynthetic pathway. In wild-type seed coat endothelial cells, PA accumulates in a large central vacuole. In aha10 mutants, the formation of this vacuole is impaired, as indicated by the predominance of multiple small vacuoles observed by fluorescence microscopy using a vacuole-specific dye, 5-(and -6)-carboxy 2',7'-dichlorofluorescein diacetate. A similar vacuolar defect was also observed for another tt mutant, tt12, a proton-coupled multidrug and toxic compound extrusion transporter potentially involved in loading provacuoles with a flavonoid intermediate required for PA production. The endothelial cells in aha10 mutants are otherwise healthy, as indicated by the lack of a significant decrease in (i) the accumulation of other flavonoid pathway end products, such as anthocyanins, and (ii) mRNA levels for two endothelium-specific transcripts (TT12 and BAN). Thus, the specific effect of aha10 on vacuolar and PA biogenesis provides genetic evidence to support an unexpected endomembrane function for a member of the plasma membrane H+-ATPase family.
Pubmed ID 15695592
Journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
Volume 102
Issue 7
Pages 2649-54
Publication date 2005 Feb
Num of phenotype gene 0