Plant Communications (Jan 2023)

The thylakoid membrane protein NTA1 is an assembly factor of the cytochrome b6f complex essential for chloroplast development in Arabidopsis

  • Na Li,
  • Wing Shing Wong,
  • Lei Feng,
  • Chunming Wang,
  • King Shing Wong,
  • Nianhui Zhang,
  • Wei Yang,
  • Yueming Jiang,
  • Liwen Jiang,
  • Jun-Xian He

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 4, no. 1
p. 100509

Abstract

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The cytochrome b6f (Cyt b6f) complex is a multisubunit protein complex in chloroplast thylakoid membranes required for photosynthetic electron transport. Here we report the isolation and characterization of the new tiny albino 1 (nta1) mutant in Arabidopsis, which has severe defects in Cyt b6f accumulation and chloroplast development. Gene cloning revealed that the nta1 phenotype was caused by disruption of a single nuclear gene, NTA1, which encodes an integral thylakoid membrane protein conserved across green algae and plants. Overexpression of NTA1 completely rescued the nta1 phenotype, and knockout of NTA1 in wild-type plants recapitulated the mutant phenotype. Loss of NTA1 function severely impaired the accumulation of multiprotein complexes related to photosynthesis in thylakoid membranes, particularly the components of Cyt b6f. NTA1 was shown to directly interact with four subunits (Cyt b6/PetB, PetD, PetG, and PetN) of Cyt b6f through the DUF1279 domain and C-terminal sequence to mediate their assembly. Taken together, our results identify NTA1 as a new and key regulator of chloroplast development that plays essential roles in assembly of the Cyt b6f complex by interacting with multiple Cyt b6f subunits.

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