Âé¶¹ÒùÔº


How a protein complex in plant chloroplasts regulates adaptations to drought

How plants regulate adapting to drought
Wild type (left) and genetically modified Arabidopsis plant (right) after drought stress. Credit: Heidelberg University/COS

A heretofore unknown molecular mechanism helps plants save water in extreme drought and intense sunlight. A research team at Heidelberg University's Center for Organismal Studies (COS), in cooperation with partners at Nanjing Agricultural University (China), has discovered that a protein complex—the cysteine synthase complex—serves as a sensor in the chloroplasts. It receives and forwards stress signals and ensures that the hormone abscisic acid is formed via biosynthesis. This hormone triggers the closure of tiny pores on the leaves, thus preventing water loss.

For , periods of drought and intense sunlight often mean excessive . To control the exchange of air and water vapor, plant leaves have microscopic pores on their surface that act like vents. The plant hormone (ABA) is mainly responsible for closing these pores.

To activate the , the cysteine synthase complex in the chloroplasts, which consists of two enzymes, evaluates a number of signals. Among these are the sulfate nutrient signal and a small protein molecule that are both transported from the roots into the shoots when the soil dries up.

The researchers at Heidelberg University also discovered a particular plant hormone induced by strong light intensity. Their study is in the journal Nature Communications.

"When the cysteine synthase complex in the chloroplasts is activated by one of these stress signals, it stimulates ABA biosynthesis in the guard cells and ensures that the pores on the leaves close. In this way, the plant conserves water," explain Prof. Dr. Rüdiger Hell and Dr. Markus Wirtz from the "Molecular Biology of Plants" research group at the COS.

How plants regulate adapting to drought
Schematic diagram highlighting the critical role of pCSC in integrating drought and high light stress via the sulfate-pCSC-ABA, the CLE25-pCSC-ABA, and the OPDA-pCSC-ABA axes. Credit: Nature Communications (2025). DOI: 10.1038/s41467-025-64705-3

"Our results show that chloroplast metabolism not only provides building blocks through photosynthesis but also actively responds to , thereby fine-tuning plant responses to environmental conditions like drought."

Based on these findings, the researchers were able to generate an Arabidopsis plant—a molecular biology model organism of the Brassicaceae family—that withstands soil dehydration more effectively while maintaining growth. For the researchers, this is an approach to developing new strategies to improve crop resilience in the face of climate change.

More information: Sheng-Kai Sun et al, The plastid cysteine synthase complex regulates ABA biosynthesis and stomatal closure in Arabidopsis, Nature Communications (2025).

Journal information: Nature Communications

Provided by Heidelberg University

Citation: How a protein complex in plant chloroplasts regulates adaptations to drought (2025, October 9) retrieved 9 October 2025 from /news/2025-10-protein-complex-chloroplasts-drought.html
This document is subject to copyright. Apart from any fair dealing for the purpose of private study or research, no part may be reproduced without the written permission. The content is provided for information purposes only.

Explore further

Sulfate helps plants cope with water scarcity

0 shares

Feedback to editors