retrograde signal
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2022 ◽  
Vol 23 (2) ◽  
pp. 790
Author(s):  
Csilla Lea Fazekas ◽  
Adrienn Szabó ◽  
Bibiána Török ◽  
Krisztina Bánrévi ◽  
Pedro Correia ◽  
...  

Glutamate is the most abundant excitatory amino acid in the central nervous system. Neurons using glutamate as a neurotransmitter can be characterised by vesicular glutamate transporters (VGLUTs). Among the three subtypes, VGLUT3 is unique, co-localising with other “classical” neurotransmitters, such as the inhibitory GABA. Glutamate, manipulated by VGLUT3, can modulate the packaging as well as the release of other neurotransmitters and serve as a retrograde signal through its release from the somata and dendrites. Its contribution to sensory processes (including seeing, hearing, and mechanosensation) is well characterised. However, its involvement in learning and memory can only be assumed based on its prominent hippocampal presence. Although VGLUT3-expressing neurons are detectable in the hippocampus, most of the hippocampal VGLUT3 positivity can be found on nerve terminals, presumably coming from the median raphe. This hippocampal glutamatergic network plays a pivotal role in several important processes (e.g., learning and memory, emotions, epilepsy, cardiovascular regulation). Indirect information from anatomical studies and KO mice strains suggests the contribution of local VGLUT3-positive hippocampal neurons as well as afferentations in these events. However, further studies making use of more specific tools (e.g., Cre-mice, opto- and chemogenetics) are needed to confirm these assumptions.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jin-Zheng Wang ◽  
Wilhelmina van de Ven ◽  
Yanmei Xiao ◽  
Xiang He ◽  
Haiyan Ke ◽  
...  

Reconfiguration of the plastidial proteome in response to environmental inputs is central to readjustment of its metabolic and structural states. This is necessary for the functionality of this metabolic hub, and the maintenance of organismal integrity. This report establishes the role of the plastidial retrograde signaling metabolite, MEcPP, in increasing the abundance of the putative plastidial metalloprotease (VIR3), and the ensuing decline of VIR3 target enzymes, ascorbate peroxidase and glyceraldehyde 3-phophate dehydrogenase B. The decreased abundance of these enzymes is linked to increased levels of their substrates: H2O2, an elicitor of salicylic acid production and stromule formation; and G3P the substrate for MEcPP synthesis. High-light treatment of wild type plants recapitulated the VIR3-associated reconfiguration of the plastidial metabolic and structural states. These results identify a previously unrecognized link between the stress-induced plastidial retrograde signaling metabolite and a putative zinc-binding metalloprotease. Moreover, the data reveal that the reciprocity between these two components, results in the reconfiguration of the metabolic and structural states of the plastid, deemed necessary to maintain cellular integrity and to shape adaptive responses.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Liping Zeng ◽  
Jin‐Zheng Wang ◽  
Xiang He ◽  
Haiyan Ke ◽  
Mark Lemos ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
liping zeng ◽  
Jin-Zheng Wang ◽  
Xiang He ◽  
Haiyan Ke ◽  
Mark Lemos ◽  
...  

Plants employ an array of intricate and hierarchical signaling cascades to perceive and transduce informational cues to synchronize and tailor adaptive responses. Systemic stress response (SSR) is a recognized complex signaling and response network quintessential to plant's local and distal responses to environmental triggers, however, the identity of the initiating signals has remained fragmented. Here, we show that both biotic (aphids and viral pathogens) and abiotic (high light and wounding) stresses induce accumulation of the plastidial-retrograde-signaling metabolite, methylerythritol cyclodiphosphate (MEcPP), leading to reduction of the phytohormone, auxin, and the subsequent decreased expression of the phosphatase, PP2C.D1. This enables phosphorylation of mitogen-activated protein kinases (MAPK3/6), and the consequential induction of the downstream events ultimately resulting in biosynthesis of the two SSR priming metabolites, pipecolic- and N-hydroxy-pipecolic acid. This work identifies plastids as the initiation site, and the plastidial retrograde-signal, MEcPP as the initiator of a multi-component signaling cascade potentiating the biosynthesis of SSR activators, in response to biotic and abiotic triggers.


2021 ◽  
Vol 12 (4) ◽  
Author(s):  
Yaodan Zhang ◽  
Jin Tan ◽  
Yuyang Miao ◽  
Qiang Zhang

AbstractMitochondria are indispensable organelles for maintaining cell energy metabolism, and also are necessary to retain cell biological function by transmitting information as signal organelles. Hypoxia, one of the important cellular stresses, can directly regulates mitochondrial metabolites and mitochondrial reactive oxygen species (mROS), which affects the nuclear gene expression through mitochondrial retrograde signal pathways, and also promotes the delivery of signal components into cytoplasm, causing cellular injury. In addition, mitochondria can also trigger adaptive mechanisms to maintain mitochondrial function in response to hypoxia. Extracellular vesicles (EVs), as a medium of information transmission between cells, can change the biological effects of receptor cells by the release of cargo, including nucleic acids, proteins, lipids, mitochondria, and their compositions. The secretion of EVs increases in cells under hypoxia, which indirectly changes the mitochondrial function through the uptake of contents by the receptor cells. In this review, we focus on the mitochondrial regulation indirectly through EVs under hypoxia, and the possible mechanisms that EVs cause the changes in mitochondrial function. Finally, we discuss the significance of this EV-mitochondria axis in hypoxic diseases.


eLife ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 10 ◽  
Author(s):  
Pratish Thakore ◽  
Michael G Alvarado ◽  
Sher Ali ◽  
Amreen Mughal ◽  
Paulo W Pires ◽  
...  

Cerebral blood flow is dynamically regulated by neurovascular coupling to meet the dynamic metabolic demands of the brain. We hypothesized that TRPA1 channels in capillary endothelial cells are stimulated by neuronal activity and instigate a propagating retrograde signal that dilates upstream parenchymal arterioles to initiate functional hyperemia. We find that activation of TRPA1 in capillary beds and post-arteriole transitional segments with mural cell coverage initiates retrograde signals that dilate upstream arterioles. These signals exhibit a unique mode of biphasic propagation. Slow, short-range intercellular Ca2+ signals in the capillary network are converted to rapid electrical signals in transitional segments that propagate to and dilate upstream arterioles. We further demonstrate that TRPA1 is necessary for functional hyperemia and neurovascular coupling within the somatosensory cortex of mice in vivo. These data establish endothelial cell TRPA1 channels as neuronal activity sensors that initiate microvascular vasodilatory responses to redirect blood to regions of metabolic demand.


2020 ◽  
Vol 14 ◽  
Author(s):  
Li-Qing Jin ◽  
Brittany H. John ◽  
Jianli Hu ◽  
Michael E. Selzer

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Charlotte M. M. Gommers ◽  
María Águila Ruiz-Sola ◽  
Alba Ayats ◽  
Lara Pereira ◽  
Marta Pujol ◽  
...  

AbstractWhen germinating in the light, Arabidopsis seedlings undergo photomorphogenic development, characterized by short hypocotyls, greening and expanded cotyledons. Stressed chloroplasts emit retrograde signals to the nucleus that induce developmental responses and repress photomorphogenesis. The nuclear targets of these retrograde signals are not yet fully known. Here, we show that lincomycin-treated seedlings (which lack developed chloroplasts) show strong phenotypic similarities to seedlings treated with ethylene (ET) precursor 1-aminocyclopropane-1-carboxylic acid (ACC), as both signals inhibit cotyledon separation in the light. We show that the lincomycin-induced phenotype partly requires a functioning ET signaling pathway, but could not detect increased ET emissions in response to lincomycin treatment. The two treatments show overlap in up-regulated gene transcripts, downstream of transcription factors ETHYLENE INSENSITIVE3 (EIN3) and EIN3-LIKE1 (EIL1). The induction of the ethylene signaling pathway is triggered by an unknown retrograde signal acting independently of GENOMES UNCOUPLED1 (GUN1). Our data show how two apparently different stress responses converge to optimize photomorphogenesis.One Sentence SummaryChloroplast retrograde signaling targets the ethylene-regulated gene network to repress photomorphogenesis in Arabidopsis


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zhaofa Wu ◽  
Yuting Cui ◽  
Huan Wang ◽  
Kun Song ◽  
Zhengwei Yuan ◽  
...  

AbstractThe purinergic signaling molecule adenosine (Ado) modulates many physiological and pathological brain functions,but its spatiotemporal release dynamics in the brain remains largely unknown. We developed a genetically encoded GPCR-Activation–Based Ado sensor (GRABAdo) in which Ado-induced changes in the human A2A receptor are reflected by fluorescence increases. This GRABAdo revealed that neuronal activity-induced extracellular Ado elevation was due to direct Ado release from somatodendritic regions of the neuron, requiring calcium influx through L-type calcium channels, rather than the degradation of extracellular ATP. The Ado release was slow (∼30 s) and depended on equilibrative nucleoside transporters (ENTs) rather than conventional vesicular release mechanisms. Thus, GRABAdo reveals an activity-dependent slow Ado release from somatodendritic region of the neuron, potentially serving modulating functions as a retrograde signal.


2020 ◽  
Vol 375 (1801) ◽  
pp. 20190488 ◽  
Author(s):  
Takayuki Shimizu ◽  
Rintaro Yasuda ◽  
Yui Mukai ◽  
Ryo Tanoue ◽  
Tomohiro Shimada ◽  
...  

Chloroplast biogenesis involves the coordinated expression of the plastid and nuclear genomes, requiring information to be sent from the nucleus to the developing chloroplasts and vice versa. Although it is well known how the nucleus controls chloroplast development, it is still poorly understood how the plastid communicates with the nucleus. Currently, haem is proposed as a plastid-to-nucleus (retrograde) signal that is involved in various physiological regulations, such as photosynthesis-associated nuclear genes expression and cell cycle in plants and algae. However, components that transduce haem-dependent signalling are still unidentified. In this study, by using haem-immobilized high-performance affinity beads, we performed proteomic analysis of haem-binding proteins from Arabidopsis thaliana and Cyanidioschyzon merolae . Most of the identified proteins were non-canonical haemoproteins localized in various organelles. Interestingly, half of the identified proteins were nucleus proteins, some of them have a similar function or localization in either or both organisms. Following biochemical analysis of selective proteins demonstrated haem binding. This study firstly demonstrates that nucleus proteins in plant and algae show haem-binding properties. This article is part of the theme issue ‘Retrograde signalling from endosymbiotic organelles’.


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