Autophagy Controls Sulphur Metabolism in the Rosette Leaves of Arabidopsis and Facilitates S Remobilization to the Seeds

Sulphur deficiency in crops became an agricultural concern several decades ago, due to the decrease of S deposition and the atmospheric sulphur dioxide emissions released by industrial plants. Autophagy, which is a conserved mechanism for nutrient recycling in eukaryotes, is involved in nitrogen, ir...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Aurélia Lornac, Marien Havé, Fabien Chardon, Fabienne Soulay, Gilles Clément, Jean-Christophe Avice, Céline Masclaux-Daubresse
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2020-01-01
Series:Cells
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Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2073-4409/9/2/332
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Summary:Sulphur deficiency in crops became an agricultural concern several decades ago, due to the decrease of S deposition and the atmospheric sulphur dioxide emissions released by industrial plants. Autophagy, which is a conserved mechanism for nutrient recycling in eukaryotes, is involved in nitrogen, iron, zinc and manganese remobilizations from the rosette to the seeds in <i>Arabidopsis thaliana</i>. Here, we have compared the role of autophagy in sulphur and nitrogen management at the whole plant level, performing concurrent labelling with <sup>34</sup>S and <sup>15</sup>N isotopes on <i>atg5</i> mutants and control lines. We show that both <sup>34</sup>S and <sup>15</sup>N remobilizations from the rosette to the seeds are impaired in the <i>atg5</i> mutants irrespective of salicylic acid accumulation and of sulphur nutrition. The comparison in each genotype of the partitions of <sup>15</sup>N and <sup>34</sup>S in the seeds (as % of the whole plant) indicates that the remobilization of <sup>34</sup>S to the seeds was twice more efficient than that of <sup>15</sup>N in both autophagy mutants and control lines under high S conditions, and also in control lines under low S conditions. This was different in the autophagy mutants grown under low S conditions. Under low S, the partition of <sup>34</sup>S to their seeds was indeed not twice as high but similar to that of <sup>15</sup>N. Such discrepancy shows that when sulphate availability is scarce, autophagy mutants display stronger defects for <sup>34</sup>S remobilization relative to <sup>15</sup>N remobilization than under high S conditions. It suggests, moreover, that autophagy mainly affects the transport of N-poor S-containing molecules and possibly sulphate.
ISSN:2073-4409