Understanding protein import in diverse non-green plastids

Front Genet. 2023 Mar 16:14:969931. doi: 10.3389/fgene.2023.969931. eCollection 2023.

Abstract

The spectacular diversity of plastids in non-green organs such as flowers, fruits, roots, tubers, and senescing leaves represents a Universe of metabolic processes in higher plants that remain to be completely characterized. The endosymbiosis of the plastid and the subsequent export of the ancestral cyanobacterial genome to the nuclear genome, and adaptation of the plants to all types of environments has resulted in the emergence of diverse and a highly orchestrated metabolism across the plant kingdom that is entirely reliant on a complex protein import and translocation system. The TOC and TIC translocons, critical for importing nuclear-encoded proteins into the plastid stroma, remain poorly resolved, especially in the case of TIC. From the stroma, three core pathways (cpTat, cpSec, and cpSRP) may localize imported proteins to the thylakoid. Non-canonical routes only utilizing TOC also exist for the insertion of many inner and outer membrane proteins, or in the case of some modified proteins, a vesicular import route. Understanding this complex protein import system is further compounded by the highly heterogeneous nature of transit peptides, and the varying transit peptide specificity of plastids depending on species and the developmental and trophic stage of the plant organs. Computational tools provide an increasingly sophisticated means of predicting protein import into highly diverse non-green plastids across higher plants, which need to be validated using proteomics and metabolic approaches. The myriad plastid functions enable higher plants to interact and respond to all kinds of environments. Unraveling the diversity of non-green plastid functions across the higher plants has the potential to provide knowledge that will help in developing climate resilient crops.

Keywords: non-green plastid; plastid; protein import; protein translocation; proteomics; transit peptide.

Publication types

  • Review

Grants and funding

Work in the Dhingra lab in the area of plastid biology is supported in part by Washington State University Agriculture Center Research Hatch grant WNP00011 to AD. RC acknowledges the support received from the National Institutes of Health/National Institute of General Medical Sciences through an institutional training grant award T32-GM008336. AD acknowledges Texas A&M AgriLife Research for the startup support and RA support for JL.