A mitochondrial complex I defect impairs cold-regulated
nuclear gene expression.
Lee BH, Lee H, Xiong L, Zhu JK.
Department of Plant Sciences, University of Arizona, Tucson, Arizona 85721.
To study low-temperature signaling in plants, we previously screened for cold
stress response mutants using bioluminescent Arabidopsis plants that express the
firefly luciferase reporter gene driven by the stress-responsive RD29A promoter.
Here, we report on the characterization and cloning of one mutant, frostbite1
(fro1), which shows reduced luminescence induction by cold. fro1 plants display
reduced cold induction of stress-responsive genes such as RD29A, KIN1, COR15A,
and COR47. fro1 leaves have a reduced capacity for cold acclimation, appear
water-soaked, leak electrolytes, and accumulate reactive oxygen species
constitutively. FRO1 was isolated through positional cloning and found to encode
a protein with high similarity to the 18-kD Fe-S subunit of complex I (NADH
dehydrogenase, EC 1.6.5.3) in the mitochondrial electron transfer chain.
Confocal imaging shows that the FRO1:green fluorescent protein fusion protein is
localized in mitochondria. These results suggest that cold induction of nuclear
gene expression is modulated by mitochondrial function.