Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
2042432 | Cell Reports | 2014 | 12 Pages |
•The acd11 mutant of Arabidopsis provides a genetic model for cell suicide in plants•ACD11 forms a GLTP fold and functions as a ceramide-1-phosphate transfer protein•apo-ACD11 is a unique GLTP fold because of a π bulge located near the lipid binding site•In acd11 mutants, ceramide-1-phosphate increases, but phytoceramide rises acutely
SummaryThe accelerated cell death 11 (acd11) mutant of Arabidopsis provides a genetic model for studying immune response activation and localized cellular suicide that halt pathogen spread during infection in plants. Here, we elucidate ACD11 structure and function and show that acd11 disruption dramatically alters the in vivo balance of sphingolipid mediators that regulate eukaryotic-programmed cell death. In acd11 mutants, normally low ceramide-1-phosphate (C1P) levels become elevated, but the relatively abundant cell death inducer phytoceramide rises acutely. ACD11 exhibits selective intermembrane transfer of C1P and phyto-C1P. Crystal structures establish C1P binding via a surface-localized, phosphate headgroup recognition center connected to an interior hydrophobic pocket that adaptively ensheaths lipid chains via a cleft-like gating mechanism. Point mutation mapping confirms functional involvement of binding site residues. A π helix (π bulge) near the lipid binding cleft distinguishes apo-ACD11 from other GLTP folds. The global two-layer, α-helically dominated, “sandwich” topology displaying C1P-selective binding identifies ACD11 as the plant prototype of a GLTP fold subfamily.
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