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Laurence Boudière

Analysis of membrane lipid homeostasis in Arabidopsis thaliana, through a chemical genetic strategy exploiting a new class of diacylglycerol analogs

Published on 20 December 2013


Thesis presented December 20, 2013

Abstract :
Le MGDG (monogalactosyldiacylglycerol) and DGDG (digalactosyldiacylglycerol) are the most abundant membrane lipids of the chloroplast. They are synthesized exclusively in the chloroplast envelope by the action of MGDG synthases (MGD1, MGD2 and MGD3) and DGDG synthases (DGD1 and DGD2). Galactolipids are known to be essential for the structure (and function) of the photosystems and for the biogenesis of thylakoids. In phosphate deprivation, galactolipids ​become a source of lipid for other cell membranes, outside the chloroplast. Based on a high throughput chemical screen, a new molecule called galvestine-1 has been identified and characterized as an inhibitor of MGDG synthases. Galvestine-1 has been identified and characterized as an inhibitor of MGDG synthase. Galvestine-1 competes with the binding of the diacylglycerol substrate to MGDs. This molecular tool can be used to disturb the system comprising all lipid biosynthesis reactions, conversions, and lipid trafficking, responsible for the membrane lipid steady state observed at the whole cell level, or membrane lipid homeostasis. Perturbation of the system occurs at the level of MGDG synthases. The aim of this thesis is to use the effect of galvestine-1 to identify new actors or new pathways involved in the control of lipid homeostasis in plant cells. To this purpose, I designed and performed a screening of a collection of EMS (ethyl methanesulfonate) mutants, in order to isolate galvestine-1-resistant mutants and to identify mutated genes conferring this resistance. Transcriptomic data (Affymetrix genome array genechip, ATH1) of Arabidopsis thaliana treated in the presence of galvestin-1 had been obtained prior to the PhD project. These date were used to identify genes whose expression varied and possibly involved in lipid homeostasis. Based on a complementary candidate gene approach, I focused on Ala10, a putative flippase, which gene is over-expressed after treatment with galvestine-1 and following phosphate deprivation. The purpose of this second part of this thesis is to understand the relationship between the expression of ALA10 and genes involved in galactolipid synthesis in plants.


Keywords:
MGDG, monogalactosyldiacylglycerol, DGDG, digalactosyldiacylglycerol, membrane lipids, galvestine-1, ALA10, EMS mutants, MGDG synthases, DGDG synthases, lipid homeostasis, Arabidopsis thaliana, chloroplast

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