Salt stress affects crop productivity worldwide, especially in irrigated lands [
1], and can thus lead to dramatic consequences in food availability. Hence, determinants of plant salt tolerance are intensively investigated to identify targets for plant breeding and to create salt tolerant varieties. Three cellular components of salt tolerance have been proposed in plants: (
i) osmotic stress tolerance, (
ii) Na
+ exclusion capacity and (
iii) tissue tolerance to Na
+ accumulation [
2]. Unlike halophytic species, the glycophytic plant-model
Arabidopsis thaliana is sensitive to moderate levels of NaCl. This has raised the question of its relevance in salt tolerance studies [
3]. However, thanks to genetic and molecular tools developed around this species, several genes involved in plant salt tolerance have been highlighted. Thus, many mutants or transgenic lines of
A.
thaliana were shown to display differential levels of NaCl tolerance and this mostly concerned genes involved in ion transport [
4-
8], detoxication processes [
9,
10] or metabolite biosynthesis [
11,
12].
Among stress-responsive metabolites, γ-aminobutyric acid is of special interest since the molecule accumulates in response to a wide range of environmental stimuli [
13] although its function in plants is still a matter of debate [
14,
15]. GABA is a widespread non protein amino acid, from prokaryotes to eukaryotes. It has been first discovered in plants in the middle of the 20
th century [
16] but rapidly attention shifted to its signaling function in mammals central nervous system as a neurotransmitter. In plants, speculative functions have been attributed to GABA metabolism such as osmoregulation [
17] and glutamate homeostasis control [
18]. Moreover, it has been demonstrated to participate to pH regulation [
19,
20] and bypass of TCA cycle [
21]. GABA has also been shown to act as a signaling molecule in plants as reported for nitrate uptake modulation [
22],
14-3-3 genes regulation [
23] and pollen tube growth and guidance [
24].
In plants and animals, GABA metabolism is sum up in a three-enzyme-pathway that takes place in two cellular compartments (figure ). GABA is mainly synthesized from L-glutamate owing to the activity of the cytosolic glutamate decarboxylase (GAD, EC 4.1.1.15). GABA is then transported into the mitochondrion to be catabolized by the GABA transaminase (GABA-T, EC 2.6.1.19) which converts GABA to succinic semialdehyde (SSA) [
25]. Subsequently, SSA is oxidized by the mitochondrial succinic semialdehyde dehydrogenase (SSADH, EC 1.2.1.16) to produce succinate [
26]. Alternatively, SSA can also be reduced in the cytosol
via the activity of the γ-hydroxybutyrate dehydrogenase (GHBDH, EC 1.1.1.61) that produces γ-hydroxybutyrate (GHB) [
27].
Most of attention has been focused on GABA synthesis under environmental stress owing to changes of catalytic properties of plants GAD depending on cytosolic pH and activity of Ca
2+/calmodulin complex [
28,
29], two known stress-modulated factors [
17]. On this basis, it has been hypothesized that GABA level could be mainly controlled by the rate of its synthesis. However, isolation and characterization of
Arabidopsis GABA-T deficient mutants demonstrated that GABA levels could also result from the rate of its degradation [
24,
30,
31].
Arabidopsis genome contains only one GABA-T encoding gene (
At3 g22200; figure ) [
25], subsequently termed
POP2 (
Pollen-Pistil Incompatibility 2) [
24], whereas 5 genes putatively encode GAD (
GAD1-5; figure ) [
32]. POP2 uses pyruvate as GABA amino group acceptor (GABA-TP activity) [
25], while in mammals GABA-T exclusively uses 2-ketoglutarate as amino group acceptor (GABA-TK activity) [
33]. Recently, it has been shown that POP2 can also uses glyoxylate as amino acceptor and thus produces glycine [
34].
POP2 gene product is a 55.2 kDa polypeptide with a pyridoxal-5-phosphate binding domain and a mitochondrial peptide signal [
34], and shares little homology with non-plant
GABA-T genes [
25]. In
A.thaliana,
POP2 gene was linked to responsiveness to volatile
E-2-hexenal [
30], alanine accumulation occurring in roots during hypoxia [
35] and growth and guidance of pollen tubes [
24].
In this study, we investigated the regulation of GABA metabolism upon NaCl treatments in A. thaliana at the metabolite, enzymatic activity and gene transcription levels. We identified the GABA-T step as a key point of regulation of GABA metabolism and further performed a functional analysis of the POP2 gene that encodes GABA-T.