Contribution of Massive Mitochondrial Fusion and Subsequent Fission in the Plant Life Cycle to the Integrity of the Mitochondrion and Its Genome

Plant mitochondria have large genomes to house a small number of key genes. Most mitochondria do not contain a whole genome. Despite these latter characteristics, the mitochondrial genome is faithfully maternally inherited. To maintain the mitochondrial genes—so important for energy production—the f...

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Main Author: Ray J. Rose
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2021-05-01
Series:International Journal of Molecular Sciences
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/1422-0067/22/11/5429
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spelling doaj-afff6a6481e54e2f875f9fe945d053a92021-06-01T00:41:27ZengMDPI AGInternational Journal of Molecular Sciences1661-65961422-00672021-05-01225429542910.3390/ijms22115429Contribution of Massive Mitochondrial Fusion and Subsequent Fission in the Plant Life Cycle to the Integrity of the Mitochondrion and Its GenomeRay J. Rose0School of Environmental and Life Sciences, The University of Newcastle, Callaghan, NSW 2308, AustraliaPlant mitochondria have large genomes to house a small number of key genes. Most mitochondria do not contain a whole genome. Despite these latter characteristics, the mitochondrial genome is faithfully maternally inherited. To maintain the mitochondrial genes—so important for energy production—the fusion and fission of mitochondria are critical. Fission in plants is better understood than fusion, with the dynamin-related proteins (DRP 3A and 3B) driving the constriction of the mitochondrion. How the endoplasmic reticulum and the cytoskeleton are linked to the fission process is not yet fully understood. The fusion mechanism is less well understood, as obvious orthologues are not present. However, there is a recently described gene, <i>MIRO2</i>, that appears to have a significant role, as does the ER and cytoskeleton. Massive mitochondrial fusion (MMF or hyperfusion) plays a significant role in plants. MMF occurs at critical times of the life cycle, prior to flowering, in the enlarging zygote and at germination, mixing the cells’ mitochondrial population—the so-called “discontinuous whole”. MMF in particular aids genome repair, the conservation of critical genes and possibly gives an energy boost to important stages of the life cycle. MMF is also important in plant regeneration, an important component of plant biotechnology.https://www.mdpi.com/1422-0067/22/11/5429plant mitochondriaplant mitochondrial fusionplant mitochondrial fissionplant mitochondrial DNAmassive mitochondrial fusion in plantsplant life cycle
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ray J. Rose
spellingShingle Ray J. Rose
Contribution of Massive Mitochondrial Fusion and Subsequent Fission in the Plant Life Cycle to the Integrity of the Mitochondrion and Its Genome
International Journal of Molecular Sciences
plant mitochondria
plant mitochondrial fusion
plant mitochondrial fission
plant mitochondrial DNA
massive mitochondrial fusion in plants
plant life cycle
author_facet Ray J. Rose
author_sort Ray J. Rose
title Contribution of Massive Mitochondrial Fusion and Subsequent Fission in the Plant Life Cycle to the Integrity of the Mitochondrion and Its Genome
title_short Contribution of Massive Mitochondrial Fusion and Subsequent Fission in the Plant Life Cycle to the Integrity of the Mitochondrion and Its Genome
title_full Contribution of Massive Mitochondrial Fusion and Subsequent Fission in the Plant Life Cycle to the Integrity of the Mitochondrion and Its Genome
title_fullStr Contribution of Massive Mitochondrial Fusion and Subsequent Fission in the Plant Life Cycle to the Integrity of the Mitochondrion and Its Genome
title_full_unstemmed Contribution of Massive Mitochondrial Fusion and Subsequent Fission in the Plant Life Cycle to the Integrity of the Mitochondrion and Its Genome
title_sort contribution of massive mitochondrial fusion and subsequent fission in the plant life cycle to the integrity of the mitochondrion and its genome
publisher MDPI AG
series International Journal of Molecular Sciences
issn 1661-6596
1422-0067
publishDate 2021-05-01
description Plant mitochondria have large genomes to house a small number of key genes. Most mitochondria do not contain a whole genome. Despite these latter characteristics, the mitochondrial genome is faithfully maternally inherited. To maintain the mitochondrial genes—so important for energy production—the fusion and fission of mitochondria are critical. Fission in plants is better understood than fusion, with the dynamin-related proteins (DRP 3A and 3B) driving the constriction of the mitochondrion. How the endoplasmic reticulum and the cytoskeleton are linked to the fission process is not yet fully understood. The fusion mechanism is less well understood, as obvious orthologues are not present. However, there is a recently described gene, <i>MIRO2</i>, that appears to have a significant role, as does the ER and cytoskeleton. Massive mitochondrial fusion (MMF or hyperfusion) plays a significant role in plants. MMF occurs at critical times of the life cycle, prior to flowering, in the enlarging zygote and at germination, mixing the cells’ mitochondrial population—the so-called “discontinuous whole”. MMF in particular aids genome repair, the conservation of critical genes and possibly gives an energy boost to important stages of the life cycle. MMF is also important in plant regeneration, an important component of plant biotechnology.
topic plant mitochondria
plant mitochondrial fusion
plant mitochondrial fission
plant mitochondrial DNA
massive mitochondrial fusion in plants
plant life cycle
url https://www.mdpi.com/1422-0067/22/11/5429
work_keys_str_mv AT rayjrose contributionofmassivemitochondrialfusionandsubsequentfissionintheplantlifecycletotheintegrityofthemitochondrionanditsgenome
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