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Chloroplastic ascorbate peroxidases targeted to stroma or thylakoid membrane: The chicken or egg dilemma

Douglas Jardim‐Messeder, Marcel Zámocký, Gilberto Sachetto‐Martins, Márcia Margis‐Pinheiro

2022FEBS Letters17 citationsDOI

Abstract

Ascorbate peroxidases (APXs) are heme peroxidases that remove hydrogen peroxide in different subcellular compartments with concomitant ascorbate cycling. Here, we analysed and discussed phylogenetic and molecular features of the APX family. Ancient APX originated as a soluble stromal enzyme, and early during plant evolution, acquired both chloroplast-targeting and mitochondrion-targeting sequences and an alternative splicing mechanism whereby it could be expressed as a soluble or thylakoid membrane-bound enzyme. Later, independent duplication and neofunctionalization events in some angiosperm groups resulted in individual genes encoding stromal, thylakoidal and mitochondrial isoforms. These data reaffirm the complexity of plant antioxidant defenses that allow diverse plant species to acquire new means to adapt to changing environmental conditions.

Topics & Concepts

ThylakoidPeroxidaseBiochemistryBiologyChloroplastAPXChloroplast stromaAscorbic acidEnzymeGeneFood sciencePlant Stress Responses and TolerancePhotosynthetic Processes and MechanismsArsenic contamination and mitigation
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