The importance of flavodoxin for environmental stress tolerance in photosynthetic microorganisms and transgenic plants. Mechanism, evolution and biotechnological potential

FEBS Lett. 2012 Aug 31;586(18):2917-24. doi: 10.1016/j.febslet.2012.07.026. Epub 2012 Jul 20.

Abstract

Ferredoxins are electron shuttles harboring iron-sulfur clusters which participate in oxido-reductive pathways in organisms displaying very different lifestyles. Ferredoxin levels decline in plants and cyanobacteria exposed to environmental stress and iron starvation. Flavodoxin is an isofunctional flavoprotein present in cyanobacteria and algae (not plants) which is induced and replaces ferredoxin under stress. Expression of a chloroplast-targeted flavodoxin in plants confers tolerance to multiple stresses and iron deficit. We discuss herein the bases for functional equivalence between the two proteins, the reasons for ferredoxin conservation despite its susceptibility to aerobic stress and for the loss of flavodoxin as an adaptive trait in higher eukaryotes. We also propose a mechanism to explain the tolerance conferred by flavodoxin when expressed in plants.

Publication types

  • Review

MeSH terms

  • Adaptation, Physiological*
  • Biological Evolution*
  • Biotechnology*
  • Flavodoxin / metabolism*
  • Photosynthesis*
  • Plants, Genetically Modified*

Substances

  • Flavodoxin