iScience (Mar 2020)

A Plant-Specific N-terminal Extension Reveals Evolutionary Functional Divergence within Translocator Proteins

  • Pawel Jurkiewicz,
  • Lucile Senicourt,
  • Haitham Ayeb,
  • Olivier Lequin,
  • Jean-Jacques Lacapere,
  • Henri Batoko

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 23, no. 3

Abstract

Read online

Summary: Conserved translocator proteins (TSPOs) mediate cell stress responses possibly in a cell-type-specific manner. This work reports on the molecular function of plant TSPO and their possible evolutionary divergence. Arabidopsis thaliana TSPO (AtTSPO) is stress induced and has a conserved polybasic, plant-specific N-terminal extension. AtTSPO reduces water loss by depleting aquaporin PIP2;7 in the plasma membrane. Herein, AtTSPO was found to bind phosphoinositides in vitro, but only full-length AtTSPO or chimeric mouse TSPO with an AtTSPO N-terminus bound PI(4,5)P2 in vitro and modified PIP2;7 levels in vivo. Expression of AtTSPO but not its N-terminally truncated variant enhanced phospholipase C activity and depleted PI(4,5)P2 from the plasma membrane and its enrichment in Golgi membranes. Deletion or point mutations within the AtTSPO N-terminus affected PI(4,5)P2 binding and almost prevented AtTSPO-PIP2;7 interaction in vivo. The findings imply functional divergence of plant TSPOs from bacterial and animal counterparts via evolutionary acquisition of the phospholipid-interacting N-terminus. : Cell Biology; Plant Biology; Plant Physiology Subject Areas: Cell Biology, Plant Biology, Plant Physiology