Protein synthesis increases with photosynthesis via the stimulation of translation initiation
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Tcherkez, Guillaume
Carroll, Adam
Abadie, Cyril
Mainguet, Samuel
Davanture, Marlène
Zivy, Michael
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Elsevier
Abstract
Leaf protein synthesis is an essential process at the heart of plant nitrogen (N) homeostasis and turnover that
preferentially takes place in the light, that is, when N and CO2 fixation occur. The carbon allocation to protein
synthesis in illuminated leaves generally accounts for ca. 1 % of net photosynthesis. It is likely that protein
synthesis activity varies with photosynthetic conditions (CO2/O2 atmosphere composition) since changes in
photorespiration and carbon provision should in principle impact on amino acid supply as well as metabolic
regulation via leaf sugar content. However, possible changes in protein synthesis and translation activity when
gaseous conditions vary are virtually unknown. Here, we address this question using metabolomics, isotopic
techniques, phosphoproteomics and polysome quantitation, under different photosynthetic conditions that were
varied with atmospheric CO2 and O2 mole fraction, using illuminated Arabidopsis rosettes under controlled gas
exchange conditions. We show that carbon allocation to proteins is within 1–2.5 % of net photosynthesis, increases with photosynthesis rate and is unrelated to total amino acid content. In addition, photosynthesis correlates to polysome abundance and phosphorylation of ribosomal proteins and translation initiation factors. Our
results demonstrate that translation activity follows photosynthetic activity, showing the considerable impact of
metabolism (carboxylation–oxygenation balance) on protein synthesis.
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Plant Science
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2037-12-31
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