Artículos de revistas
D-lactate dehydrogenase links methylglyoxal degradation and electron transport through cytochrome
Fecha
2016-10Registro en:
Welchen, Elina; Schmitz, Jessica; Fuchs, Philippe; García, Lucila; Wagner, Stephan; et al.; D-lactate dehydrogenase links methylglyoxal degradation and electron transport through cytochrome; American Society of Plant Biologist; Plant Physiology; 172; 2; 10-2016; 901-912
0032-0889
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
Welchen, Elina
Schmitz, Jessica
Fuchs, Philippe
García, Lucila
Wagner, Stephan
Wienstroer, Judith
Schertl, Peter
Braun, Hans Peter
Schwarzländer, Marcus
Gonzalez, Daniel Hector
Maurino, Verónica G.
Resumen
Glycolysis generates methylglyoxal (MGO) as an unavoidable, cytotoxic by-product in plant cells. MGO scavenging is performed by the glyoxalase system, which produces D-lactate as an end product. D-Lactate dehydrogenase (D-LDH) is encoded by a single gene in Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana; At5g06580). It catalyzes in vitro the oxidation of D-lactate to pyruvate using flavin adenine dinucleotide as a cofactor; knowledge of its function in the context of the plant cell remains sketchy. Blue native-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis of mitochondrial extracts combined with in gel activity assays using different substrates and tandem mass spectrometry allowed us to definitely show that D-LDH acts specifically on D-lactate, is active as a dimer, and does not associate with respiratory supercomplexes of the inner mitochondrial membrane. The combined use of cytochrome c (CYTc) loss-of-function mutants and respiratory complex III inhibitors showed that CYTc acts as the in vivo electron acceptor of D-LDH. CYTc loss-of-function mutants, as well as the D-LDH mutants, were more sensitive to D-lactate and MGO, indicating that they function in the same pathway. In addition, overexpression of D-LDH and CYTc increased tolerance to D-lactate and MGO. Together with fine-localization of D-LDH, the functional interaction with CYTc in vivo strongly suggests that D-lactate oxidation takes place in the mitochondrial intermembrane space, delivering electrons to the respiratory chain through CYTc. These results provide a comprehensive picture of the organization and function of D-LDH in the plant cell and exemplify how the plant mitochondrial respiratory chain can act as a multifunctional electron sink for reductant from cytosolic pathways.