Mol. Cells 2020; 43(6): 501-508
Published online June 15, 2020
https://doi.org/10.14348/molcells.2020.0007
© The Korean Society for Molecular and Cellular Biology
Correspondence to : hsyun@konkuk.ac.kr
In eukaryotes, membraneous cellular compartmentation essentially requires vesicle trafficking for communications among distinct organelles. A donor organelle-generated vesicle releases its cargo into a target compartment by fusing two distinct vesicle and target membranes. Vesicle fusion, the final step of vesicle trafficking, is driven intrinsically by complex formation of soluble N-ethylmaleimide-sensitive factor attachment protein receptors (SNAREs). Although SNAREs are well-conserved across eukaryotes, genomic studies revealed that plants have dramatically increased the number of SNARE genes than other eukaryotes. This increase is attributed to the sessile nature of plants, likely for more sensitive and harmonized responses to environmental stresses. In this review, we therefore try to summarize and discuss the current understanding of plant SNAREs function in responses to biotic and abiotic stresses.
Keywords abiotic stress, biotic stress, plant, SNARE, trafficking
A plant cell, as a eukaryotic one, contains several membrane-separated compartments such as nucleus, endoplasmic reticulum (ER), Golgi body, mitochondria and plastids. Although each subcellular compartment performs its own tasks, a more complex cellular work requires cooperative activities among distinct organelles, even between neighboring cells. For this, cellular compartments communicate by exchanging their contents which are transported by small membraneous containers called vesicles. A cargo-loaded vesicle from a donor organelle moves to a target site and releases its cargo. However, to transport the cargo into a target place, membranes between a vesicle and a target compartment should be fused, which is energetically unfavorable. To overcome this, eukaryotes have successfully invented a membrane-merging machinery that consists of soluble
Simply based on their locations, SNAREs can be categorized as t (target)-SNARE that is placed on the target compartment membrane and v (vesicle)-SNARE that is localized on the vesicle membrane (Sollner et al., 1993). Based on the conserved central amino acid in the SNARE motif that is responsible for interactions between SNAREs, they can be additionally grouped into Q (Gln)-SNARE that generally corresponds to t-SNARE and R (Arg)-SNARE that corresponds to v-SNARE (Fasshauer et al., 1998). Q-SNAREs, on the basis of their sequence similarity, can be further classified into Qa-, Qb-, Qc-, and two SNARE motifs-containing Qbc-SNARE (Bock et al., 2001). Although most SNAREs are membrane-inserted by transmembrane motif, some SNAREs, such as SNAP25 (synaptosome-associated protein 25) Qbc-SNAREs and YKT6 R-SNAREs, are peripherally attached to the membrane by posttranslational lipidation (Hong, 2005). To drive the energy-required mergence of two distinct membranes, SNAREs form a SDS-resistant tight complex that contains four α-helical SNARE motifs (Hanson et al., 1997; Lin and Scheller, 2000). In general, four distinct SNAREs (Qa + Qb + Qc + R; e.g., AtSYP22 [syntaxin of plant 22] + AtVTI11 [vesicle transport v-SNARE 11] + AtSYP51 + AtVAMP727 [vesicle-associated membrane protein 727] in Arabidopsis) engage in the fusion between a vesicle and an intracellular endomembrane compartment (Fig. 1A), whereas three different SNAREs (Qa + Qbc + R; e.g., AtSYP121 + AtSNAP33 + AtVAMP721/722 in Arabidopsis) involve in the fusion between the plasma membrane (PM) and a vesicle (Fig. 1B) (Antonin et al., 2002; Ebine et al., 2008; Kwon et al., 2008b; Sutton et al., 1998).
The first functionally identified SNARE in plants is the Arabidopsis AtSYP111 (also called KNOLLE) (Lauber et al., 1997; Lukowitz et al., 1996). Mitosis-specific expression of AtSYP111, division plane localization of AtSYP111, and cytokinesis defect in
Unlike animals, plants are immobile once rooted in the soil. This indicates that plants are continuously exposed to potential threats. However, they are healthy and well living in nature, suggesting that plants have evolved a sophisticated system to effectively resist to variable environmental stresses. Such a system includes correct detection of extrinsic stresses, proper signaling to synthesize defense molecules, and accurate delivery of those molecules to right places. Since these stress-resistant molecules are likely harmful to plants themselves, they have to be transported in a safely membrane-separated vesicle. SNAREs are the minimal core factors to drive the vesicle fusion with a destination compartment to discharge the cargo. Therefore, we will discuss in this review the current understanding of the importance of SNAREs in stress responses in plants.
Due to the lack of the circulatory system and mobile immune cells, plants solely depend on the cell-autonomous innate immunity. Plants detect a pathogen by recognizing a pathogen-associated molecular pattern (PAMP) by a surface receptor called a pattern-recognition receptor (PRR) (Dodds and Rathjen, 2010; Jones and Dangl, 2006). A cognate PRR-PAMP pairing initiates an immune signal that leads to the transcriptional reprogramming in a pathogen-challenged plant cell via the mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) cascade and WRKY transcription factors (Dodds and Rathjen, 2010; Jones and Dangl, 2006). To expel extracellular pathogens, plant cells finally secrete immune molecules to pathogen-attempting sites (Yun and Kwon, 2017).
So far, two distinct immune secretory pathways have been identified (Kwon et al., 2008a; Yun and Kwon, 2017). One is a transporter-mediated secretion which involves the mitochondrium/peroxisome-localized AtPEN2 (penetration 2) myrosinase and the PM-residing AtPEN3 ABC transporter (Fuchs et al., 2016; Lipka et al., 2005; Stein et al., 2006). The other is a SNARE-assisted exocytosis. The first identified SNARE that is required for plant immunity is the Arabidopsis PM-residing AtSYP121 (also called AtPEN1) Qa-SNARE, whose barley ortholog is HvROR2 (required for
SYP121 is required for resistance to fungal and oomycete pathogens but not to bacterial ones (Kwon et al., 2008b). The compromised defense against
Although AtVAMP721/722 are engaged in multiple immune responses to distinct types of pathogens, what are transported and secreted via AtVAMP721/722 vesicles remain poor yet. Recent proteomic approaches for either Arabidopsis seedling-grown liquid media (likely containing plant-secreted proteins) or leaf apoplastic fractions revealed that AtSYP121 and AtVAMP721/722 are important for the secretion of many cell wall-associated proteins (Uemura et al., 2019; Waghmare et al., 2018). A reciprocal proteomic approach to compare intracellular proteins between wild-type (WT) and AtVAMP721/722-depleted plants additionally found that a lignin biosynthetic enzyme, caffeoyl-CoA
Pathogenesis-related (PR) proteins are well-known plant- secreted immune proteins through the default secretory pathway in response to pathogen attack (van Loon et al., 2006). Indeed, disruption in ER translocation or modification of default-secreted proteins reduces the secretion of PR1, a representative PR, resulting in impaired immune responses to
Orthologous ternary SNARE complexes required for immune responses between Arabidopsis (AtSYP121-AtSNAP33- AtVAMP721/722) and barley (HvROR2-HvSNAP34-HvVAMP721) (Collins et al., 2003; Kwon et al., 2008b) indicate that this SNARE complex-driven exocytosis is a conserved ancient secretory pathway for immunity in plants. Recently, OsSYP121 that interacts with OsSNAP32 and OsVAMP714/724 was reported to be required for rice resistance to the
Plants are also continuously exposed to a variety of abiotic stresses such as drought, high salinity, heat, cold, freezing, UV-B and osmotic stresses as well as to biotic stresses during their life cycles. The existence of a large number of
Suppression of the
In addition to R-SNAREs, Q-SNAREs are also found to be engaged in abiotic stress responses. Before the identification of AtSYP121 in plant immunity in Arabidopsis, its tobacco ortholog, NtSYP121 (also called NtSyr1 [syntaxin-related protein 1]), was isolated as a component to be required for ion channel control at the PM in response to ABA (Leyman et al., 1999). Although functional loss mutant of AtSYP121 (
Abiotic stress response-related SNAREs from other plant species than Arabidopsis have also been recently reported. A SNARE-like superfamily protein-encoding gene,
In response to environmental stresses, plants utilize SNAREs to transport pathogenesis-terminating and abiotic stress-alleviating molecules. Since SNAREs drive vesicle fusion between donor and target compartments, those otherwise harmful molecules might be safely delivered to the working places via membrane-contained vesicles. The understanding of those transported molecules during stress responses undoubtedly helps to improve crop productivity especially in this rapidly climate-changing era. However, a single molecule of known secreted PR proteins and secondary metabolites in response to pathogen infection has a limited immune activity. This indicates that stress-relieving molecules may work in a more complex way than expected, likely as a cocktail rather than a single compound. Therefore, precise and comparative isolation and identification of trafficked molecules in response to a single pure stress would be critical to correctly understand how those molecules act in a specific combination for plant resistance to an environmental stress.
Additional difficulty in understanding molecules that are SNARE-transported in a specific response is that a same SNARE is engaged in multiple stress responses. For example, AtSYP121 and AtVAMP721/722 are required for both biotic and abiotic stress responses in Arabidopsis (Collins et al., 2003; Eisenach et al., 2012; Kwon et al., 2008b; Leyman et al., 1999; Yi et al., 2013; Yun et al., 2013a). Interestingly, plant SNAREs promiscuously form a SNARE complex in vitro (Kwon et al., 2008b), indicating that their specific
This work was supported by grants from the National Research Foundation, Korea (and 2016R1D1A1B02007322 to C.K., 2019R1F1A1041226 to J.H.L., and 2017R1D1A1B03029802 to H.S.Y.), and a grant (PJ01477001 to C.K.) from Rural Development Administration, Korea.
J.H.L. wrote the part of SNAREs in abiotic stress responses, and C.K. and H.S.Y. wrote the other parts of the manuscript.
The authors have no potential conflicts of interest to disclose.
Mol. Cells 2020; 43(6): 501-508
Published online June 30, 2020 https://doi.org/10.14348/molcells.2020.0007
Copyright © The Korean Society for Molecular and Cellular Biology.
Chian Kwon1,4 , Jae-Hoon Lee2,4
, and Hye Sup Yun3,*
1Department of Molecular Biology, Dankook University, Cheonan 31116, Korea, 2Department of Biology Education, Pusan National University, Busan 46241, Korea, 3Department of Biological Sciences, Konkuk University, Seoul 05029, Korea, 4These authors contributed equally to this work.
Correspondence to:hsyun@konkuk.ac.kr
In eukaryotes, membraneous cellular compartmentation essentially requires vesicle trafficking for communications among distinct organelles. A donor organelle-generated vesicle releases its cargo into a target compartment by fusing two distinct vesicle and target membranes. Vesicle fusion, the final step of vesicle trafficking, is driven intrinsically by complex formation of soluble N-ethylmaleimide-sensitive factor attachment protein receptors (SNAREs). Although SNAREs are well-conserved across eukaryotes, genomic studies revealed that plants have dramatically increased the number of SNARE genes than other eukaryotes. This increase is attributed to the sessile nature of plants, likely for more sensitive and harmonized responses to environmental stresses. In this review, we therefore try to summarize and discuss the current understanding of plant SNAREs function in responses to biotic and abiotic stresses.
Keywords: abiotic stress, biotic stress, plant, SNARE, trafficking
A plant cell, as a eukaryotic one, contains several membrane-separated compartments such as nucleus, endoplasmic reticulum (ER), Golgi body, mitochondria and plastids. Although each subcellular compartment performs its own tasks, a more complex cellular work requires cooperative activities among distinct organelles, even between neighboring cells. For this, cellular compartments communicate by exchanging their contents which are transported by small membraneous containers called vesicles. A cargo-loaded vesicle from a donor organelle moves to a target site and releases its cargo. However, to transport the cargo into a target place, membranes between a vesicle and a target compartment should be fused, which is energetically unfavorable. To overcome this, eukaryotes have successfully invented a membrane-merging machinery that consists of soluble
Simply based on their locations, SNAREs can be categorized as t (target)-SNARE that is placed on the target compartment membrane and v (vesicle)-SNARE that is localized on the vesicle membrane (Sollner et al., 1993). Based on the conserved central amino acid in the SNARE motif that is responsible for interactions between SNAREs, they can be additionally grouped into Q (Gln)-SNARE that generally corresponds to t-SNARE and R (Arg)-SNARE that corresponds to v-SNARE (Fasshauer et al., 1998). Q-SNAREs, on the basis of their sequence similarity, can be further classified into Qa-, Qb-, Qc-, and two SNARE motifs-containing Qbc-SNARE (Bock et al., 2001). Although most SNAREs are membrane-inserted by transmembrane motif, some SNAREs, such as SNAP25 (synaptosome-associated protein 25) Qbc-SNAREs and YKT6 R-SNAREs, are peripherally attached to the membrane by posttranslational lipidation (Hong, 2005). To drive the energy-required mergence of two distinct membranes, SNAREs form a SDS-resistant tight complex that contains four α-helical SNARE motifs (Hanson et al., 1997; Lin and Scheller, 2000). In general, four distinct SNAREs (Qa + Qb + Qc + R; e.g., AtSYP22 [syntaxin of plant 22] + AtVTI11 [vesicle transport v-SNARE 11] + AtSYP51 + AtVAMP727 [vesicle-associated membrane protein 727] in Arabidopsis) engage in the fusion between a vesicle and an intracellular endomembrane compartment (Fig. 1A), whereas three different SNAREs (Qa + Qbc + R; e.g., AtSYP121 + AtSNAP33 + AtVAMP721/722 in Arabidopsis) involve in the fusion between the plasma membrane (PM) and a vesicle (Fig. 1B) (Antonin et al., 2002; Ebine et al., 2008; Kwon et al., 2008b; Sutton et al., 1998).
The first functionally identified SNARE in plants is the Arabidopsis AtSYP111 (also called KNOLLE) (Lauber et al., 1997; Lukowitz et al., 1996). Mitosis-specific expression of AtSYP111, division plane localization of AtSYP111, and cytokinesis defect in
Unlike animals, plants are immobile once rooted in the soil. This indicates that plants are continuously exposed to potential threats. However, they are healthy and well living in nature, suggesting that plants have evolved a sophisticated system to effectively resist to variable environmental stresses. Such a system includes correct detection of extrinsic stresses, proper signaling to synthesize defense molecules, and accurate delivery of those molecules to right places. Since these stress-resistant molecules are likely harmful to plants themselves, they have to be transported in a safely membrane-separated vesicle. SNAREs are the minimal core factors to drive the vesicle fusion with a destination compartment to discharge the cargo. Therefore, we will discuss in this review the current understanding of the importance of SNAREs in stress responses in plants.
Due to the lack of the circulatory system and mobile immune cells, plants solely depend on the cell-autonomous innate immunity. Plants detect a pathogen by recognizing a pathogen-associated molecular pattern (PAMP) by a surface receptor called a pattern-recognition receptor (PRR) (Dodds and Rathjen, 2010; Jones and Dangl, 2006). A cognate PRR-PAMP pairing initiates an immune signal that leads to the transcriptional reprogramming in a pathogen-challenged plant cell via the mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) cascade and WRKY transcription factors (Dodds and Rathjen, 2010; Jones and Dangl, 2006). To expel extracellular pathogens, plant cells finally secrete immune molecules to pathogen-attempting sites (Yun and Kwon, 2017).
So far, two distinct immune secretory pathways have been identified (Kwon et al., 2008a; Yun and Kwon, 2017). One is a transporter-mediated secretion which involves the mitochondrium/peroxisome-localized AtPEN2 (penetration 2) myrosinase and the PM-residing AtPEN3 ABC transporter (Fuchs et al., 2016; Lipka et al., 2005; Stein et al., 2006). The other is a SNARE-assisted exocytosis. The first identified SNARE that is required for plant immunity is the Arabidopsis PM-residing AtSYP121 (also called AtPEN1) Qa-SNARE, whose barley ortholog is HvROR2 (required for
SYP121 is required for resistance to fungal and oomycete pathogens but not to bacterial ones (Kwon et al., 2008b). The compromised defense against
Although AtVAMP721/722 are engaged in multiple immune responses to distinct types of pathogens, what are transported and secreted via AtVAMP721/722 vesicles remain poor yet. Recent proteomic approaches for either Arabidopsis seedling-grown liquid media (likely containing plant-secreted proteins) or leaf apoplastic fractions revealed that AtSYP121 and AtVAMP721/722 are important for the secretion of many cell wall-associated proteins (Uemura et al., 2019; Waghmare et al., 2018). A reciprocal proteomic approach to compare intracellular proteins between wild-type (WT) and AtVAMP721/722-depleted plants additionally found that a lignin biosynthetic enzyme, caffeoyl-CoA
Pathogenesis-related (PR) proteins are well-known plant- secreted immune proteins through the default secretory pathway in response to pathogen attack (van Loon et al., 2006). Indeed, disruption in ER translocation or modification of default-secreted proteins reduces the secretion of PR1, a representative PR, resulting in impaired immune responses to
Orthologous ternary SNARE complexes required for immune responses between Arabidopsis (AtSYP121-AtSNAP33- AtVAMP721/722) and barley (HvROR2-HvSNAP34-HvVAMP721) (Collins et al., 2003; Kwon et al., 2008b) indicate that this SNARE complex-driven exocytosis is a conserved ancient secretory pathway for immunity in plants. Recently, OsSYP121 that interacts with OsSNAP32 and OsVAMP714/724 was reported to be required for rice resistance to the
Plants are also continuously exposed to a variety of abiotic stresses such as drought, high salinity, heat, cold, freezing, UV-B and osmotic stresses as well as to biotic stresses during their life cycles. The existence of a large number of
Suppression of the
In addition to R-SNAREs, Q-SNAREs are also found to be engaged in abiotic stress responses. Before the identification of AtSYP121 in plant immunity in Arabidopsis, its tobacco ortholog, NtSYP121 (also called NtSyr1 [syntaxin-related protein 1]), was isolated as a component to be required for ion channel control at the PM in response to ABA (Leyman et al., 1999). Although functional loss mutant of AtSYP121 (
Abiotic stress response-related SNAREs from other plant species than Arabidopsis have also been recently reported. A SNARE-like superfamily protein-encoding gene,
In response to environmental stresses, plants utilize SNAREs to transport pathogenesis-terminating and abiotic stress-alleviating molecules. Since SNAREs drive vesicle fusion between donor and target compartments, those otherwise harmful molecules might be safely delivered to the working places via membrane-contained vesicles. The understanding of those transported molecules during stress responses undoubtedly helps to improve crop productivity especially in this rapidly climate-changing era. However, a single molecule of known secreted PR proteins and secondary metabolites in response to pathogen infection has a limited immune activity. This indicates that stress-relieving molecules may work in a more complex way than expected, likely as a cocktail rather than a single compound. Therefore, precise and comparative isolation and identification of trafficked molecules in response to a single pure stress would be critical to correctly understand how those molecules act in a specific combination for plant resistance to an environmental stress.
Additional difficulty in understanding molecules that are SNARE-transported in a specific response is that a same SNARE is engaged in multiple stress responses. For example, AtSYP121 and AtVAMP721/722 are required for both biotic and abiotic stress responses in Arabidopsis (Collins et al., 2003; Eisenach et al., 2012; Kwon et al., 2008b; Leyman et al., 1999; Yi et al., 2013; Yun et al., 2013a). Interestingly, plant SNAREs promiscuously form a SNARE complex in vitro (Kwon et al., 2008b), indicating that their specific
This work was supported by grants from the National Research Foundation, Korea (and 2016R1D1A1B02007322 to C.K., 2019R1F1A1041226 to J.H.L., and 2017R1D1A1B03029802 to H.S.Y.), and a grant (PJ01477001 to C.K.) from Rural Development Administration, Korea.
J.H.L. wrote the part of SNAREs in abiotic stress responses, and C.K. and H.S.Y. wrote the other parts of the manuscript.
The authors have no potential conflicts of interest to disclose.
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