An ancestral role for 3-KETOACYL-COA SYNTHASE3 as a negative regulator of plant cuticular wax synthesis

Author:

Huang Haodong12ORCID,Yang Xianpeng3ORCID,Zheng Minglü1ORCID,Chen Zexi1ORCID,Yang Zhuo1ORCID,Wu Pan1ORCID,Jenks Matthew A4ORCID,Wang Guangchao5ORCID,Feng Tao1ORCID,Liu Li1ORCID,Yang Pingfang1ORCID,Lü Shiyou12ORCID,Zhao Huayan1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. State Key Laboratory of Biocatalysis and Enzyme Engineering, School of Life Sciences, Hubei University , Wuhan 430062 , China

2. Hubei Hongshan Laboratory , Wuhan 430070 , China

3. College of Life Sciences, Shandong Normal University , Jinan 250014 , China

4. School of Plant Sciences, College of Agriculture and Life Sciences, The University of Arizona , Tucson, AZ 85721 , USA

5. College of Biological Sciences and Biotechnology, Beijing Forestry University , Beijing 100083 , China

Abstract

Abstract The plant cuticle, a structure primarily composed of wax and cutin, forms a continuous coating over most aerial plant surfaces. The cuticle plays important roles in plant tolerance to environmental stress, including stress imposed by drought. Some members of the 3-KETOACYL-COA SYNTHASE (KCS) family are known to act as metabolic enzymes involved in cuticular wax production. Here we report that Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) KCS3, which was previously shown to lack canonical catalytic activity, instead functions as a negative regulator of wax metabolism by reducing the enzymatic activity of KCS6, a key KCS involved in wax production. We demonstrate that the role of KCS3 in regulating KCS6 activity involves physical interactions between specific subunits of the fatty acid elongation complex and is essential for maintaining wax homeostasis. We also show that the role of the KCS3–KCS6 module in regulating wax synthesis is highly conserved across diverse plant taxa from Arabidopsis to the moss Physcomitrium patens, pointing to a critical ancient and basal function of this module in finely regulating wax synthesis.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Cell Biology,Plant Science

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