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The Mitochondrial Endonuclease M20 Participates in the Down-regulation of Mitochondrial DNA in Pollen Cells.

Plant Physiology 2018 October 10
Maintaining the appropriate number of mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) molecules is crucial for supporting mitochondrial metabolism and function in both plant and animal cells. For example, a substantial decrease in mtDNA levels occurs as a key part of pollen development. The molecular mechanisms regulating mtDNA copy number are largely unclear, particularly with regard to those that reduce mtDNA levels. Here, we identified and purified a 20 kD endonuclease, M20, from maize (Zea mays) pollen mitochondria. We found M20 to be an H-N-H/N nuclease that degrades linear and circular DNA in the presence of Mg2+ or Mn2+. Arabidopsis thaliana AtM20, which shared high sequence similarity with maize M20, localized to the mitochondria, had a similar H-N-H/N structure, and degraded both linear and circular DNA. AtM20 transcript levels increased during pollen development, in parallel with a rapid reduction in mtDNA. Clustered regularly interspaced short palindromic repeats (CRISPR)/CRISPR-associated protein 9 (Cas9) genome editing techniques were used to generate knockout lines of AtM20 (atm20), which exhibited a significant delay in the reduction in mtDNA levels in pollen vegetative cells but normal mtDNA levels in somatic cells. The delayed reduction in pollen mtDNA levels was rescued by the transgenic expression of AtM20 in atm20 plants. This study thus uncovers an endonucleolytic DNase in plant mitochondria and its crucial role in reducing mtDNA levels, pointing to the complex mechanism regulating mtDNA levels in plants.

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