S-Nitrosothiol Signaling Is involved in Regulating Hydrogen Peroxide Metabolism of Zinc-Stressed Arabidopsis

Author:

Kolbert Zs1ORCID,Moln�r �1,Ol�h D1,Feigl G1,Horv�th E1,Erdei L1,�rd�g A1,Rudolf E2,Barth T3,Lindermayr C2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Plant Biology, University of Szeged, Szeged, Hungary

2. Institute of Biochemical Plant Pathology, Helmholtz Zentrum M�nchen—German Research Center for Environmental Health, M�nchen/Neuherberg, Germany

3. Research Unit Protein Science, Helmholtz Zentrum M�nchen—German Research Center for Environmental Health, M�nchen/Neuherberg, Germany

Abstract

Abstract Accumulation of heavy metals such as zinc (Zn) disturbs the metabolism of reactive oxygen (e.g. hydrogen peroxide, H2O2) and nitrogen species (e.g. nitric oxide, NO; S-nitrosoglutathione, GSNO) in plant cells; however, their signal interactions are not well understood. Therefore, this study examines the interplay between H2O2 metabolism and GSNO signaling in Arabidopsis. Comparing the Zn tolerance of the wild type (WT), GSNO reductase (GSNOR) overexpressor 35S::FLAG-GSNOR1 and GSNOR-deficient gsnor1-3, we observed relative Zn tolerance of gsnor1-3, which was not accompanied by altered Zn accumulation capacity. Moreover, in gsnor1-3 plants Zn did not induce NO/S-nitrosothiol (SNO) signaling, possibly due to the enhanced activity of NADPH-dependent thioredoxin reductase. In WT and 35S::FLAG-GSNOR1, GSNOR was inactivated by Zn, and Zn-induced H2O2 is directly involved in the GSNOR activity loss. In WT seedlings, Zn resulted in a slight intensification of protein nitration detected by Western blot and protein S-nitrosation observed by resin-assisted capture of SNO proteins (RSNO-RAC). LC-MS/MS analyses indicate that Zn induces the S-nitrosation of ascorbate peroxidase 1. Our data collectively show that Zn-induced H2O2 may influence its own level, which involves GSNOR inactivation-triggered SNO signaling. These data provide new evidence for the interplay between H2O2 and SNO signaling in Arabidopsis plants affected by metal stress.

Funder

National Research, Development and Innovation Fund

EU-funded Hungarian

J�nos Bolyai Research Scholarship of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences

Ministry of Human Capacities

TEMPUS Foundation

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Cell Biology,Plant Science,Physiology,General Medicine

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