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First published online July 14, 2006; 10.1104/pp.106.084483

Plant Physiology 142:88-97 (2006)
© 2006 American Society of Plant Biologists

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ENVIRONMENTAL STRESS AND ADAPTATION TO STRESS

The Role of Pheophorbide a Oxygenase Expression and Activity in the Canola Green Seed Problem1,[W],[OA]

Davyd W. Chung, Adriana Pruzinská, Stefan Hörtensteiner and Donald R. Ort*

Department of Plant Biology, University of Illinois, Urbana, Illinois 61801 (D.W.C., D.R.O.); Department of Biology, University of Bern, CH–3013 Bern, Switzerland (A.P., S.H.); and Photosynthesis Research Unit, United States Department of Agriculture/Agricultural Research Service, Urbana, Illinois 61801 (D.R.O.)

Under normal field growth conditions, canola (Brassica napus) seeds produce chloroplasts during early seed development and then catabolize the photosynthetic machinery during seed maturation, producing mature seeds at harvest that are essentially free of chlorophyll (Chl). However, frost exposure early in canola seed development disrupts the normal programming of Chl degradation, resulting in green seed at harvest and thereby significantly devaluing the crop. Pheophorbide a oxygenase (PaO), a key control point in the overall regulation of Chl degradation, was affected by freezing. Pheophorbide a, the substrate of PaO, accumulated during late stages of maturation in seeds that had been exposed to freezing during early seed development. Freezing interfered with the induction of PaO activity that normally occurs in the later phases of canola seed development when Chl should be cleared from the seed. Moreover, we found that the induction of PaO activity in canola seed was largely posttranslationally controlled and it was at this level that freezing interfered with PaO activation. The increased accumulation of PaO transcript and protein levels during seed development was not altered by the freezing episode, and the increase in PaO protein was small compared to the increase in PaO activity. We found that PaO could be phosphorylated and that phosphorylation decreased with increasing activity, implicating PaO dephosphorylation as an important posttranslational control mechanism for this enzyme. Two PaO genes, BnPaO1 and BnPaO2, were identified in senescing canola leaves and during early seed development, but only BnPaO2 was expressed in maturing, degreening seeds.


1 This work was supported in part by the Integrative Photosynthesis Research Training Grant from the Department of Energy (grant no. DEFGO2–92ER20095), funded under the Program for Collaborative Research in Plant Biology, and by the Swiss National Science Foundation (grant no. 3100A0–105389).

The author responsible for distribution of materials integral to the findings presented in this article in accordance with the policy described in the Instructions for Authors (www.plantphysiol.org) is: Donald R. Ort (d-ort{at}uiuc.edu).

[W] The online version of this article contains Web-only data.

[OA] Open Access articles can be viewed online without a subscription.

www.plantphysiol.org/cgi/doi/10.1104/pp.106.084483

* Corresponding author; e-mail d-ort{at}uiuc.edu; fax 217–244–0656.

Received June 2, 2006; accepted July 6, 2006.


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