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1.
ABSTRACT: BACKGROUND: The Deg/HtrA family of ATP-independent serine endopeptidases is present in nearly all organisms from bacteria to human and vascular plants. In recent years, multiple deg/htrA protease genes were identified in various plant genomes. During genome annotations most proteases were named according to the order of discovery, hence the same names were sometimes given to different types of Deg/HtrA enzymes in different plant species. This can easily lead to false inference of individual protease functions based solely on a shared name. Therefore, the existing names and classification of these proteolytic enzymes does not meet our current needs and a phylogeny-based standardized nomenclature is required. RESULTS: Using phylogenetic and domain arrangement analysis, we improved the nomenclature of the Deg/HtrA protease family, standardized protease names based on their well-established nomenclature in Arabidopsis thaliana, and clarified the evolutionary relationship between orthologous enzymes from various photosynthetic organisms across several divergent systematic groups, including dicots, a monocot, a moss and a green alga. Furthermore, we identified a "core set" of eight proteases shared by all organisms examined here that might provide all the proteolytic potential of Deg/HtrA proteases necessary for a hypothetical plant cell. CONCLUSIONS: In our proposed nomenclature, the evolutionarily closest orthologs have the same protease name, simplifying scientific communication when comparing different plant species and allowing for more reliable inference of protease functions. Further, we proposed that the high number of Deg/HtrA proteases in plants is mainly due to gene duplications unique to the respective organism.  相似文献   

2.
The family of Deg/HtrA proteases: from Escherichia coli to Arabidopsis   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
In the genomic era, an increasing number of protease genes have been identified in various organisms. During the last few years, many of these proteases have been characterized using biochemical as well as molecular biological techniques. However, neither the precise location nor the physiological substrates of these enzymes has been identified in many cases, including the Deg/HtrA proteases, a family of serine-type ATP-independent proteases. This family has become especially interesting for many researchers following the determination of the crystal structures of an Escherichia coli and a human Deg/HtrA protease. A breakthrough in photosynthesis research has revealed that a Deg/HtrA protease of Arabidopsis thaliana is involved in the degradation of the D1 protein of photosystem II following photoinhibition. In this review, the available data on Deg/HtrAs of different organisms are compared with those from the photoautotroph cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 and the plant Arabidopsis thaliana .  相似文献   

3.
Members of the DegP/HtrA (or Deg) family of proteases are found widely in nature and play an important role in the proteolysis of misfolded and damaged proteins. As yet, their physiological role in oxygenic photosynthetic organisms is unclear, although it has been widely speculated that they participate in the degradation of the photodamaged D1 subunit in the photosystem two complex (PSII) repair cycle, which is needed to maintain PSII activity in both cyanobacteria and chloroplasts. We have examined the role of the three Deg proteases found in the cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 through analysis of double and triple insertion mutants. We have discovered that these proteases show overlap in function and are involved in a number of key physiological responses ranging from protection against light and heat stresses to phototaxis. In previous work, we concluded that the Deg proteases played either a direct or an indirect role in PSII repair in a glucose-tolerant version of Synechocystis 6803 (Silva, P., Choi, Y. J., Hassan, H. A., and Nixon, P. J. (2002) Philos. Trans. R. Soc. Lond. B Biol. Sci. 357, 1461-1467). In this work, we have now been able to demonstrate unambiguously, using a triple deg mutant created in the wild type strain of Synechocystis 6803, that the Deg proteases are not obligatory for PSII repair and D1 degradation. We therefore conclude that although the Deg proteases are needed for photoprotection of Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803, they do not play an essential role in D1 turnover and PSII repair in vivo.  相似文献   

4.
DegP proteases have been shown to possess both chaperone and protease activities. The proteolytic activities of chloroplast DegP‐like proteases have been well documented. However, whether chloroplast Deg proteases also have chaperone activities has remained unknown. Here we show that chloroplast Deg1 also has chaperone activities, like its Escherichia coli ortholog DegP. Transgenic plants with reduced levels of Deg1 accumulated normal levels of different subunits of the major photosynthetic protein complexes, but their levels of photosystem‐II (PSII) dimers and supercomplexes were reduced. In vivo pulse‐chase protein labeling experiments showed that the assembly of newly synthesized proteins into PSII dimers and supercomplexes was impaired, although the synthesis rate of chloroplast proteins was unaffected in the transgenic lines. Protein overlay assays provided direct evidence that Deg1 interacts with the PSII reaction center protein D2. These results suggest that Deg1 assists the assembly of the PSII complex, probably through interaction with the PSII reaction center D2 protein.  相似文献   

5.
Degradation of periplasmic proteins (Deg)/high temperature requirement A (HtrA) proteases are ATP-independent serine endopeptidases found in almost every organism. Database searches revealed that 16 Deg paralogues are encoded by the genome of Arabidopsis thaliana, six of which were experimentally shown to be located in chloroplasts, one in peroxisomes, one in mitochondria and one in the nucleus. Two more Deg proteases are predicted to reside in chloroplasts, five in mitochondria (one of them with a dual chloroplastidial/mitochondrial localization) and the subcellular location of one protein is uncertain. This review summarizes the current knowledge on the role of Deg proteases in maintaining protein homeostasis and protein processing in various subcompartments of the plant cell. The chloroplast Deg proteases are the best examined so far, especially with respect to their role in the degradation of photodamaged photosynthetic proteins and in biogenesis of photosystem II (PSII). A combined action of thylakoid lumen and stroma Deg proteases in the primary cleavage of photodamaged D1 protein from PSII reaction centre is discussed on the basis of a recently resolved crystal structure of plant Deg1. The peroxisomal Deg protease is a processing enzyme responsible for the cleavage of N-terminal peroxisomal targeting signals (PTSs). A. thaliana mutants lacking this enzyme show reduced peroxisomal β-oxidation, indicating for the first time the impact of protein processing on peroxisomal functions in plants. Much less data is available for mitochondrial and nuclear Deg proteases. Based on the available expression data we hypothesize a role in general protein quality control and during acquired heat resistance.  相似文献   

6.
Kato Y  Sun X  Zhang L  Sakamoto W 《Plant physiology》2012,159(4):1428-1439
Light energy constantly damages photosynthetic apparatuses, ultimately causing impaired growth. Particularly, the sessile nature of higher plants has allowed chloroplasts to develop unique mechanisms to alleviate the irreversible inactivation of photosynthesis. Photosystem II (PSII) is known as a primary target of photodamage. Photosynthetic organisms have evolved the so-called PSII repair cycle, in which a reaction center protein, D1, is degraded rapidly in a specific manner. Two proteases that perform processive or endopeptidic degradation, FtsH and Deg, respectively, participate in this cycle. To examine the cooperative D1 degradation by these proteases, we engaged Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) mutants lacking FtsH2 (yellow variegated2 [var2]) and Deg5/Deg8 (deg5 deg8) in detecting D1 cleaved fragments. We detected several D1 fragments only under the var2 background, using amino-terminal or carboxyl-terminal specific antibodies of D1. The appearance of these D1 fragments was inhibited by a serine protease inhibitor and by deg5 deg8 mutations. Given the localization of Deg5/Deg8 on the luminal side of thylakoid membranes, we inferred that Deg5/Deg8 cleaves D1 at its luminal loop connecting the transmembrane helices C and D and that the cleaved products of D1 are the substrate for FtsH. These D1 fragments detected in var2 were associated with the PSII monomer, dimer, and partial disassembly complex but not with PSII supercomplexes. It is particularly interesting that another processive protease, Clp, was up-regulated and appeared to be recruited from stroma to the thylakoid membrane in var2, suggesting compensation for FtsH deficiency. Together, our data demonstrate in vivo cooperative degradation of D1, in which Deg cleavage assists FtsH processive degradation under photoinhibitory conditions.  相似文献   

7.
For some chloroplast proteases ATP binding and hydrolysis is not necessary for their catalytic activity, most probably because even strongly unfolded substrates may penetrate their catalytic chamber. Deg1, 2, 5 and 8 are the best known of Arabidopsis thaliana ATP- independent chloroplast proteases, encoded by orthologues of genes coding for DegP, DegQ and DegS proteases of Escherichia coli. Current awareness in the area of structure and functions of chloroplast Degs is much more limited vs the one about their bacterial counterparts. Deg5 and Deg8 form a catalytic heterododecamer which is loosely attached to luminal side of thylakoid membrane. The complex catalyses--supported by Deg1 and one of FtsH proteases--the degradation of PsbA damaged due to plant exposition to elevated irradiance and thus these protease are of key importance for the plants' sensitivity to photoinhibition. Deg2 role in the disposal of damaged PsbA has not been elucidated. Recombinant Deg1 may degrade PsbO and plastocyanin in vitro but it is not clear whether this reaction is performed in vivo as well.  相似文献   

8.
Eukaryotic organelles have developed elaborate protein quality control systems to ensure their normal activity, among which Deg/HtrA proteases play an essential role. Plant Deg2 protease is a homologue of prokaryotic DegQ/DegP proteases and is located in the chloroplast stroma, where its proteolytic activity is required to maintain the efficiency of photosynthetic machinery during stress. Here, we demonstrate that Deg2 exhibits dual protease-chaperone activities, and we present the hexameric structure of Deg2 complexed with co-purified peptides. The structure shows that Deg2 contains a unique second PDZ domain (PDZ2) following a conventional PDZ domain (PDZ1), with PDZ2 orchestrating the cage assembly of Deg2. We discovered a conserved internal ligand for PDZ2 that mediates hexamer formation and thus locks the protease in the resting state. These findings provide insight into the diverse modes of PDZ domain-mediated regulation of Deg proteases.  相似文献   

9.
10.
Although light is the ultimate substrate in photosynthesis, it can also be harmful and lead to oxidative damage of the photosynthetic apparatus. The main target for light stress is the central oxygen-evolving photosystem II (PSII) and its D1 reaction centre protein. Degradation of the damaged D1 protein and its rapid replacement by a de novo synthesized copy represent the important repair mechanism of PSII crucial for plant survival under light stress conditions. Here we report the isolation of a single-copy nuclear gene from Arabidopsis thaliana, encoding a protease that performs GTP-dependent primary cleavage of the photodamaged D1 protein and hence catalysing the key step in the repair cycle in plants. This protease, designated DegP2, is a homologue of the prokaryotic Deg/Htr family of serine endopeptidases and is associated with the stromal side of the non-appressed region of the thylakoid membranes. Increased expression of DegP2 under high salt, desiccation and light stress conditions was measured at the protein level.  相似文献   

11.
Deg1 is a Ser protease peripherally attached to the lumenal side of the thylakoid membrane. Its physiological function is unknown, but its localization makes it a suitable candidate for participation in photoinhibition repair by degradation of the photosystem II reaction center protein D1. We transformed Arabidopsis thaliana with an RNA interference construct and obtained plants with reduced levels of Deg1. These plants were smaller than wild-type plants, flowered earlier, were more sensitive to photoinhibition, and accumulated more of the D1 protein, probably in an inactive form. Two C-terminal degradation products of the D1 protein, of 16 and 5.2 kD, accumulated at lower levels compared with the wild type. Moreover, addition of recombinant Deg1 to inside-out thylakoid membranes isolated from the mutant could induce the formation of the 5.2-kD D1 C-terminal fragment, whereas the unrelated proteases trypsin and thermolysin could not. Immunoblot analysis revealed that mutants containing less Deg1 also contain less FtsH protease, and FtsH mutants contain less Deg1. These results suggest that Deg1 cooperates with the stroma-exposed proteases FtsH and Deg2 in degrading D1 protein during repair from photoinhibition by cleaving lumen-exposed regions of the protein. In addition, they suggest that accumulation of Deg1 and FtsH proteases may be coordinated.  相似文献   

12.
Light is the ultimate source of energy for photosynthesis; however, excessive light leads to photooxidative damage and hence reduced photosynthetic efficiency, especially when combined with other abiotic stresses. Although the photosystem II (PSII) reaction center D1 protein is the primary target of photooxidative damage, other PSII core proteins are also damaged and degraded. However, it is still largely unknown whether degradation of D1 and other PSII proteins involves previously uncharacterized proteases. Here, we show that Deg7 is peripherally associated with the stromal side of the thylakoid membranes and that Deg7 interacts directly with PSII. Our results show that Deg7 is involved in the primary cleavage of photodamaged D1, D2, CP47, and CP43 and that this activity is essential for its function in PSII repair. The double mutants deg5 deg7 and deg8 deg7 showed no obvious phenotypic differences under normal growth conditions, but additive effects were observed under high light. These results suggest that Deg proteases on both the stromal and luminal sides of the thylakoid membranes are important for the efficient PSII repair in Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana).Chloroplasts of higher plants carry out one of the most important biochemical reactions: the capture of light energy and its conversion into chemical energy. Although light is the ultimate source of energy for photosynthesis, it can also be harmful to plants. Light-induced loss of photosynthetic efficiency, which is generally termed as photoinhibition, limits plant growth and lowers productivity, especially when combined with other abiotic stresses.The main target of photoinhibition is PSII, which catalyzes the light-dependent water oxidation concomitantly with oxygen production (for review, see Prasil et al., 1992; Aro et al., 1993; Adir et al., 2003). In higher plants, PSII consists of more than 20 subunits, including the reaction center D1 and D2 proteins, cytochrome (Cyt) b559, the light-harvesting chlorophyll a-binding proteins CP47 and CP43, the oxygen-evolving 33-kD protein (PsbO), and several low molecular mass proteins (Nelson and Yocum, 2006). The PSII reaction center D1 protein has been identified among PSII proteins as the primary target of light-induced damage (Kyle et al., 1984; Mattoo et al., 1984; Ohad et al., 1984; Adir et al., 1990), but several studies have shown that the D2, CP47, and CP43 proteins are degraded under photoinhibitory conditions (Schuster et al., 1988; Yamamoto and Akasaka, 1995; Jansen et al., 1999; Adir et al., 2003). Moreover, several small PSII subunits, such as PsbH, PsbW, and Cyt b559, were also found to be frequently replaced within PSII (Hagman et al., 1997; Ortega et al., 1999; Bergantino et al., 2003). Evidence for the involvement of two families of proteases, FtsH and Deg, in the degradation of the D1 protein in thylakoids of higher plants has been recently described (Lindahl et al., 1996, 2000; Bailey et al., 2002; Sakamoto et al., 2003; Silva et al., 2003; Kapri-Pardes et al., 2007; Sun et al., 2007a, 2007b). However, it is still largely unknown whether degradation of D1 and other PSII proteins involves previously uncharacterized proteases.DegP (or HtrA) proteases were initially identified based on the fact that they are required for the survival of Escherichia coli at high temperatures and for the degradation of abnormal periplasmic proteins (Lipinska et al., 1988; Strauch and Beckwith, 1988). DegP is an ATP-independent Ser endopeptidase, and it contains a trypsin-like protease domain at the N terminus, followed by two PDZ domains (Gottesman, 1996; Pallen and Wren, 1997; Clausen et al., 2002). PDZ domains appear to be important for complex assembly and substrate binding through three or four residues in the C terminus of their target proteins (Doyle et al., 1996; Harris and Lim, 2001). DegP switches between chaperone and protease functions in a temperature-dependent manner. The chaperone function dominates at low temperatures, and DegP becomes proteolytically active at elevated temperatures (Spiess et al., 1999). Crystal structures of different members of the DegP protein family (Krojer et al., 2002; Li et al., 2002; Kim et al., 2003; Wilken et al., 2004) have revealed the structure-function relationship of these PDZ-containing proteases. Trimeric DegP is the functional unit, and the hexameric DegP is formed via the staggered association of trimers (Clausen et al., 2002; Kim and Kim, 2005). At normal growth temperatures, the active site of the protease is located within the chamber of hexameric DegP, which is not accessible to the substrates. However, at high temperatures, conformational changes induce the activation of the protease function (Krojer et al., 2002). Recent studies have shed light on the substrate binding-induced formation of larger oligomeric complexes of DegP (Jiang et al., 2008; Krojer et al., 2008).In Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana), 16 genes coding for DegP-like proteases have been identified, and at least seven gene products are predicted to be located in chloroplasts (Kieselbach and Funk, 2003; Huesgen et al., 2005; Adam et al., 2006; Sakamoto, 2006; Kato and Sakamoto, 2009). Based on proteomic data, four Deg proteases have been shown to be localized to the chloroplast (Peltier et al., 2002; Schubert et al., 2002) and functionally characterized. Deg1, Deg5, and Deg8 are located in thylakoid lumen, and Deg2 is peripherally associated with the stromal side of thylakoid membranes (Itzhaki et al., 1998; Haußühl et al., 2001; Sun et al., 2007a). Recombinant DegP1, now renamed Deg1, has been shown to be proteolytically active toward thylakoid lumen proteins such as plastocyanin and PsbO of PSII in vitro (Chassin et al., 2002). A 5.2-kD C-terminal fragment of the D1 protein was detected in vitro after incubation of recombinant Deg1 with inside-out thylakoid membranes. In transgenic plants with reduced levels of Deg1, fewer of its 16- and 5.2-kD degradation products were observed (Kapri-Pardes et al., 2007). Deg5 and Deg8 form a dodecameric complex in the thylakoid lumen, and recombinant Deg8 is able to degrade the photodamaged D1 protein of PSII in an in vitro assay (Sun et al., 2007a). The 16-kD N-terminal degradation fragment of the D1 protein was detected in wild-type plants but not in a deg5 deg8 double mutant after high-light treatment. The deg5 deg8 double mutant showed increased sensitivity to high light and high temperature in terms of growth and PSII activity compared with the single mutants deg5 and deg8, suggesting that Deg5 and Deg8 have overlapping functions in the primary cleavage of the CD loop of the D1 protein (Sun et al., 2007a, 2007b). In vitro analysis has demonstrated that recombinant stroma-localized Deg2 was also shown to be involved in the primary cleavage of the DE loop of the D1 protein (Haußühl et al., 2001). However, analysis of a mutant lacking Deg2 suggested that Deg2 may not be involved in D1 degradation in vivo (Huesgen et al., 2006).Here, we have expressed and purified a recombinant DegP protease, His-Deg7. In vitro experiments showed that His-Deg7 is proteolytically active toward the PSII proteins D1, D2, CP43, and CP47. In vivo analyses of a deg7 mutant revealed that the mutant is more sensitive to high light stress than the wild-type plants. We demonstrated that Deg7 is a chloroplast stroma protein associated with the thylakoid membranes and that it interacts with PSII, which suggests that it can cleave the stroma-exposed region of substrate proteins. Our results also provide evidence that Deg7 is important for maintaining PSII function.  相似文献   

13.
Enzymes of the ATP-independent Deg serine endopeptidase family are very flexible with regard to their substrate specificity. Some family members cleave only one substrate, while others act as general proteases on unfolded substrates. The proteolytic activity of Deg proteases is regulated by PDZ protein interaction domains. Here we characterized the HhoA protease from Synechocystis sp. strain PCC 6803 in vitro using several recombinant protein constructs. The proteolytic activity of HhoA was found to increase with temperature and basic pH and was stimulated by the addition of Mg(2+) or Ca(2+). We found that the single PDZ domain of HhoA played a critical role in regulating protease activity and in the assembly of a hexameric complex. Deletion of the PDZ domain strongly reduced proteolysis of a sterically challenging resorufin-labeled casein substrate, but unlabeled beta-casein was still degraded. Reconstitution of the purified HhoA with total membrane proteins isolated from Synechocystis sp. wild-type strain PCC 6803 and a DeltahhoA mutant resulted in specific degradation of selected proteins at elevated temperatures. We concluded that a single PDZ domain of HhoA plays a critical role in defining the protease activity and oligomerization state, combining the functions that are attributed to two PDZ domains in the homologous DegP protease from Escherichia coli. Based on this first enzymatic study of a Deg protease from cyanobacteria, we propose a general role for HhoA in the quality control of extracytoplasmic proteins, including membrane proteins, in Synechocystis sp. strain PCC 6803.  相似文献   

14.
Deg/HtrA proteases are a large group of ATP-independent serine endoproteases found in almost every organism. Their usual domain arrangement comprises a trypsin-type protease domain and one or more PDZ domains. All Deg/HtrA proteases form homo-oligomers with trimers as the basic unit, where the active protease domain mediates the interaction between individual monomers. Among the members of the Deg/HtrA protease family, the plant protease DEG7 is unique since it contains two protease domains (one active and one degenerated) and four PDZ domains. In the present study, we investigated the oligomerization behaviour of this unusual protease using yeast two-hybrid analysis in vivo and with recombinant protein in vitro. We show that DEG7 forms trimeric complexes, but in contrast with other known Deg/HtrA proteases, it shows a new principle of oligomerization, where trimerization is based on the interactions between degenerated protease domains. We propose that, during evolution, a duplicated active protease domain degenerated and specialized in protein-protein interaction and complex formation.  相似文献   

15.
The identity and scope of chloroplast and mitochondrial proteases in higher plants has only started to become apparent in recent years. Biochemical and molecular studies suggested the existence of Clp, FtsH, and DegP proteases in chloroplasts, and a Lon protease in mitochondria, although currently the full extent of their role in organellar biogenesis and function remains poorly understood. Rapidly accumulating DNA sequence data, especially from Arabidopsis, has revealed that these proteolytic enzymes are found in plant cells in multiple isomeric forms. As a consequence, a systematic approach was taken to catalog all these isomers, to predict their intracellular location and putative processing sites, and to propose a standard nomenclature to avoid confusion and facilitate scientific communication. For the Clp protease most of the ClpP isomers are found in chloroplasts, whereas one is mitochondrial. Of the ATPase subunits, the one ClpD and two ClpC isomers are located in chloroplasts, whereas both ClpX isomers are present in mitochondria. Isomers of the Lon protease are predicted in both compartments, as are the different forms of FtsH protease. DegP, the least characterized protease in plant cells, has the most number of isomers and they are predicted to localize in several cell compartments. These predictions, along with the proposed nomenclature, will serve as a framework for future studies of all four families of proteases and their individual isomers.  相似文献   

16.
Matrix enzymes are imported into peroxisomes and glyoxysomes, a subclass of peroxisomes involved in lipid mobilization. Two peroxisomal targeting signals (PTS), the C-terminal PTS1 and the N-terminal PTS2, mediate the translocation of proteins into the organelle. PTS2 processing upon import is conserved in higher eukaryotes, and in watermelon the glyoxysomal processing protease (GPP) was shown to catalyse PTS2 processing. GPP and its ortholog, the peroxisomal DEG protease from Arabidopsis thaliana (AtDEG15), belong to the Deg/HtrA family of ATP-independent serine proteases with Escherichia coli DegP as their prototype. GPP existes in monomeric and dimeric forms. Their equilibrium is shifted towards the monomer upon Ca2+-removal and towards the dimer upon Ca2+-addition, which is accompanied by a change in substrate specificity from a general protease (monomer) to the specific cleavage of the PTS2 (dimer). We describe the Ca2+/calmodulin (CaM) mediated dimerization of AtDEG15. Dimerization is mediated by the CaM-like protein AtCML3 as shown by yeast two and three hybrid analyses. The binding of AtCML3 occurs within the first 25 N-terminal amino acids of AtDEG15, a domain containing a predicted CaM-binding motif. Biochemical analysis of AtDEG15 deletion constructs in planta support the requirement of the CaM-binding domain for PTS2 processing. Phylogenetic analyses indicate that the CaM-binding site is conserved in peroxisomal processing proteases of higher plants (dicots, monocots) but not present in orthologs of animals or cellular slime molds. Despite normal PTS2 processing activity, an atcml3 mutant exhibited reduced 2,4-DB sensitivity, a phenotype previously reported for the atdeg15 mutant, indicating similarly impaired peroxisome metabolism.  相似文献   

17.
? The thylakoid protease Deg2 is a serine-type protease peripherally attached to the stromal side of the thylakoid membrane. Given the lack of knowledge concerning its function, two T-DNA insertion lines devoid of Deg2 were prepared to study the functional importance of this protease in Arabidopsis thaliana. ? The phenotypic appearance of deg2 mutants was studied using a combination of stereo and transmission electron microscopy, and short-stress-mediated degradation of apoproteins of minor light-harvesting antennae of photosystem II (PSII) was analysed by immunoblotting in the mutants in comparison with wild-type plants. ? Deg2 repression produced a phenotype in which reduced leaf area and modified chloroplast ultrastructure of older leaves were the most prominent features. In contrast to the wild type, the chloroplasts of second-whorl leaves of 4-wk-old deg2 mutants did not display features typical of the early senescence phase, such as undulation of the chloroplast envelope and thylakoids. The ability to degrade the photosystem II light-harvesting protein Lhcb6 apoprotein in response to brief high-salt, wounding, high-temperature and high-irradiance stress was demonstrated to be impaired in deg2 mutants. ? Our results suggest that Deg2 is required for normal plant development, including the chloroplast life cycle, and has an important function in the degradation of Lhcb6 in response to short-duration stresses.  相似文献   

18.
M L Agarwal  C A Cullis 《Gene》1991,99(1):69-75
Ubiquitin (Ubq), a 76-amino acid (aa) protein, is found in all eukaryotic organisms and is one of the most conserved proteins so far studied. It is implicated in many cellular processes. The Ubq-encoding genes (ubq) are generally present as a multigene family. In flax, we have estimated that this multigene family contains at the most ten members. The initial flax ubq sequences were isolated from a flax genomic library in lambda EMBL4 using a heterologous Arabidopsis thaliana ubq probe. An 916-bp fragment from one of the phage clones was subcloned and sequenced. The aa sequence derived from the nucleotide sequence of this fragment is identical to that of other plant Ubqs. This fragment was then used to isolate additional flax ubq clones. In all, eleven phage lambda clones, which represent six members of the gene family, were restriction-mapped and characterized. These six members are represented as three monomers, three poly-Ubqs, one hexamer and two tetramers. They can be present at either a single locus (two of the monomers and one of the poly-Ubqs) or at two loci (the remaining three genes). The other four members of the family are yet to be cloned and characterized.  相似文献   

19.
The photosystem two (PSII) complex found in oxygenic photosynthetic organisms is susceptible to damage by UV-B irradiation and undergoes repair in vivo to maintain activity. Until now there has been little information on the identity of the enzymes involved in repair. In the present study we have investigated the involvement of the FtsH and Deg protease families in the degradation of UV-B-damaged PSII reaction center subunits, D1 and D2, in the cyanobacterium Synechocystis 6803. PSII activity in a DeltaFtsH (slr0228) strain, with an inactivated slr0228 gene, showed increased sensitivity to UV-B radiation and impaired recovery of activity in visible light after UV-B exposure. In contrast, in DeltaDeg-G cells, in which all the three deg genes were inactivated, the damage and recovery kinetics were the same as in the WT. Immunoblotting showed that the loss of both the D1 and D2 proteins was retarded in DeltaFtsH (slr0228) during UV-B exposure, and the extent of their restoration during the recovery period was decreased relative to the WT. However, in the DeltaDeg-G cells the damage and recovery kinetics of D1 and D2 were the same as in the WT. These data demonstrate a key role of FtsH (slr0228), but not the Deg proteases, for the repair of PS II during and following UV-B radiation at the step of degrading both of the UV-B damaged D1 and D2 reaction center subunits.  相似文献   

20.
Cyanobacteria require efficient protein-quality-control mechanisms to survive under dynamic, often stressful, environmental conditions. It was reported that three serine proteases, HtrA (high temperature requirement A), HhoA (HtrA homologue A) and HhoB (HtrA homologue B), are important for survival of Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 under high light and temperature stresses and might have redundant physiological functions. In the present paper, we show that all three proteases can degrade unfolded model substrates, but differ with respect to cleavage sites, temperature and pH optima. For recombinant HhoA, and to a lesser extent for HtrA, we observed an interesting shift in the pH optimum from slightly acidic to alkaline in the presence of Mg2+ and Ca2+ ions. All three proteases formed different homo-oligomeric complexes with and without substrate, implying mechanistic differences in comparison with each other and with the well-studied Escherichia coli orthologues DegP (degradation of periplasmic proteins P) and DegS. Deletion of the PDZ domain decreased, but did not abolish, the proteolytic activity of all three proteases, and prevented substrate-induced formation of complexes higher than trimers by HtrA and HhoA. In summary, biochemical characterization of HtrA, HhoA and HhoB lays the foundation for a better understanding of their overlapping, but not completely redundant, stress-resistance functions in Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803.  相似文献   

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