P58IPK facilitates plant recovery from ER stress by enhancing protein synthesis

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Title
P58IPK facilitates plant recovery from ER stress by enhancing protein synthesis
Author(s)
K S Ko; J Y Yoo; K H Kim; B Y Hwang; B N Vu; Y E Lee; H N Choi; Y N Lee; J Yun; J Y Park; W S Chung; J C Hong; M S Jeong; H S Jung; Su Kyoung Jung; Jeong Mee Park; K O Lee
Bibliographic Citation
Plant Biotechnology Reports, vol. 16, pp. 665-681
Publication Year
2022
Abstract
P58IPK has been implicated in eukaryotic ER stress responses and viral pathogenesis, however, its biological functions and molecular mechanism in plants are unclear. Prolonged ER stress produced by tunicamycin (TM) increased P58IPK mRNA and protein levels in Arabidopsis. Although the growth of 2 × 35S:P58IPK-myc plants was less severely inhibited than that of Col-0 plants, TM inhibited the growth of p58ipk-2 mutants more severely than that of Col-0 plants. Under prolonged ER stress conditions, the unfolded protein response (UPR)-related genes were expressed at a higher level in the p58ipk-2 mutants than in Col-0 plants. Protein synthesis inhibition by TM in 2 × 35S:P58IPK-myc plants was lower than in Col-0 plants under prolonged ER stress conditions, however, not significantly different in p58ipk-2 mutants. The GST-P58IPK protein exhibited both chaperone and RNA-binding activities in a dose-dependent manner. P58IPK has been shown to interact with ribosomes, allowing for enhanced protein production on the ER membrane. Following ER stress, 2 × 35S:P58IPK-myc plants recovered better than Col-0, but p58ipk-2 mutants recovered less than Col-0. These findings reveal that P58IPK can promote protein translation in association with ribosomes and contribute to stress recovery in Arabidopsis when induced during the last phase of ER stress.
Keyword
P58IPKRibosomeProtein synthesisER stressUnfolded protein response (UPR)
ISSN
1863-5466
Publisher
Springer
Full Text Link
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11816-022-00797-3
Type
Article
Appears in Collections:
Division of Research on National Challenges > Plant Systems Engineering Research > 1. Journal Articles
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