Coordinated post-translational responses of aquaporins to abiotic and nutritional stimuli in arabidopsis roots

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Abstract

In plants, aquaporins play a crucial role in regulating root water transport in response to environmental and physiological cues. Controls achieved at the post-translational level are thought to be of critical importance for regulating aquaporin function. To investigate the general molecular mechanisms involved, we performed, using the model species Arabidopsis, a comprehensive proteomic analysis of root aquaporins in a large set of physiological contexts. We identified nine physiological treatments that modulate root hydraulics in time frames of minutes (NO and H2O2 treatments), hours (mannitol and NaCl treatments, exposure to darkness and reversal with sucrose, phosphate supply to phosphate-starved roots), or days (phosphate or nitrogen starvation). All treatments induced inhibition of root water transport except for sucrose supply to darkgrown plants and phosphate resupply to phosphatestarved plants, which had opposing effects. Using a robust label-free quantitative proteomic methodology, we identified 12 of 13 plasma membrane intrinsic protein (PIP) aquaporin isoforms, 4 of the 10 tonoplast intrinsic protein isoforms, and a diversity of post-translational modifications including phosphorylation, methylation, deamidation, and acetylation. A total of 55 aquaporin peptides displayed significant changes after treatments and enabled the identification of specific and as yet unknown patterns of response to stimuli. The data show that the regulation of PIP and tonoplast intrinsic protein abundance was involved in response to a few treatments (i.e. NaCl, NO, and nitrate starvation), whereas changes in the phosphorylation status of PIP aquaporins were positively correlated to changes in root hydraulic conductivity in the whole set of treatments. The identification of in vivo deamidated forms of aquaporins and their stimulus-induced changes in abundance may reflect a new mechanism of aquaporin regulation. The overall work provides deep insights into the in vivo post-translational events triggered by environmental constraints and their possible role in regulating plant water status. Molecular & Cellular Proteomics 12: 10.1074/mcp.M113.028241, 3886-3897, 2013. © 2013 by The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Inc.

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Di Pietro, M., Vialaret, J., Hem, S., Prado, K., Rossignol, M., Maurel, C., & Santoni, V. (2013). Coordinated post-translational responses of aquaporins to abiotic and nutritional stimuli in arabidopsis roots. Molecular and Cellular Proteomics, 12(12), 3886–3897. https://doi.org/10.1074/mcp.M113.028241

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