Cysteine residues contribute to the regulation of Arabidopsis state transition 7 kinase

FEBS Lett. 2024 Oct 11. doi: 10.1002/1873-3468.15032. Online ahead of print.

Abstract

State transitions are an acclimatory response by which plants, algae, and cyanobacteria counteract photosynthetic inefficiency caused by changes in incident light quality. In plants and green algae, state transition 7 (STN7/STT7) kinase promotes state 2 transition. Conserved cysteine residues are implicated in STN7/STT7 regulation, but the precise nature of their involvement remains unclear. Here, an analysis of the STN7 thiols in vitro and a determination of their midpoint redox potential indicate that the lumenal disulfide linkage is unlikely to be redox regulated while the stromal cysteines form a regulatory intramolecular disulfide. We further show that thioredoxin f1 (Trx-f1) reduces the STN7 stromal disulfide linkage as consistent with a Trx-f1-mediated inhibition of the kinase under high light.

Keywords: LHCII; PQ pool; STN7/STT7; state transitions; thiol regulation; thioredoxin.