A Synthetic Multidomain Peptide That Drives a Macropinocytosis-Like
Mechanism for Cytosolic Transport of Exogenous Proteins into Plants
Posted on 2021-12-28 - 17:11
Direct delivery of
proteins into plants represents a promising
alternative to conventional gene delivery for probing and modulating
cellular functions without the risk of random integration of transgenes
into the host genome. This remains challenging, however, because of
the lack of a protein delivery tool applicable to diverse plant species
and the limited information about the entry mechanisms of exogenous
proteins in plant cells. Here, we present the synthetic multidomain
peptide (named dTat-Sar-EED4) for cytosolic protein delivery in various
plant species via simple peptide-protein coincubation. dTat-Sar-EED4
enabled the cytosolic delivery of an active enzyme with up to ∼20-fold
greater efficiency than previously described cell-penetrating peptides
in several model plant systems. Our analyses using pharmacological
inhibitors and transmission electron microscopy revealed that dTat-Sar-EED4
triggered a unique endocytic mechanism for cargo protein internalization.
This endocytic mechanism shares several features with macropinocytosis,
including the dependency of actin polymerization, sensitivity to phosphatidylinositol-3
kinase activity, and formation of membrane protrusions and large intracellular
vesicles (>200 nm in diameter), even though macropinocytosis has
not
been identified to date in plants. Our study thus presents a robust
molecular tool that can induce a unique cellular uptake mechanism
for the efficient transport of bioactive proteins into plants.
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Miyamoto, Takaaki; Toyooka, Kiminori; Chuah, Jo-Ann; Odahara, Masaki; Higchi-Takeuchi, Mieko; Goto, Yumi; et al. (1753). A Synthetic Multidomain Peptide That Drives a Macropinocytosis-Like
Mechanism for Cytosolic Transport of Exogenous Proteins into Plants. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/jacsau.1c00504