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1.
The distribution of chloroplast ribosomal protein genes between the organelle DNA and the nuclear DNA is highly conserved in land plants, but a notable exception is rpl21. This gene has been found in the completely sequenced chloroplast genome of a lower plant but not in that of two higher plants. We describe the purification and characterization of the spinach chloroplast ribosomal protein L21 and the isolation and nucleotide sequence of a cDNA clone that encodes its cytoplasmic precursor. The mature protein, identified by NH2-terminal sequencing, has 201 residues (Mr 22,766) and is thus substantially larger than either its Escherichia coli (103 residues) or the lower plant homologue (116 residues). The extra length is in peptide extensions at both amino and carboxyl termini. The COOH-terminal extension is unusual in that it comprises seven Ala-Glu repeats, a feature not found in any other ribosomal proteins described so far. The cDNA clone also encodes a 55-residue long transit peptide (with a high proportion of the polar residues, threonine and serine), to target the L21 protein into chloroplasts. The identification of rpl21 as a nuclear gene in a higher plant (spinach) and chloroplast gene in a lower plant (liverwort) suggests an organelle-to-nucleus gene relocation during the evolution of the former.  相似文献   

2.
Most chloroplast and mitochondrial proteins are encoded by nuclear genes that once resided in the organellar genomes. Transfer of most of these genes appears to have occurred soon after the endosymbiotic origin of organelles, and so little is known about the process. Our efforts to understand how chloroplast genes are functionally transferred to the nuclear genome have led us to discover the most recent evolutionary gene transfer yet described. The gene rpl22, encoding chloroplast ribosomal protein CL22, is present in the chloroplast genome of all plants examined except legumes, while a functional copy of rpl22 is located in the nucleus of the legume pea. The nuclear rpl22 gene has acquired two additional domains relative to its chloroplast ancestor: an exon encoding a putative N-terminal transit peptide, followed by an intron which separates this first exon from the evolutionarily conserved, chloroplast-derived portion of the gene. This gene structure suggests that the transferred region may have acquired its transit peptide by a form of exon shuffling. Surprisingly, phylogenetic analysis shows that rpl22 was transferred to the nucleus in a common ancestor of all flowering plants, at least 100 million years preceding its loss from the legume chloroplast lineage.  相似文献   

3.
 We have identified two genes coding for chloroplast ribosomal protein L12 encoded in the nuclear genome of rice (Oryza sativa). These genes were designated rpl12-1 and rpl12-2 (rpl12, ribosomal protein L12). Northern analysis with specific probes revealed that both genes are transcribed. The expression of each gene seems to have a different regulatory machinery. It is also suggested that the expression of rpl12-1 is controlled in an organ-specific manner. The deduced amino-acid sequences of the mature peptide parts are more conserved than those of the transit peptide parts in both monocotyledonous and dicotyledonous plants. A phylogenetic tree was constructed using the nucleotide sequences of the transit peptide region of the rpl12s of reported plant. The tree includes estimates of when the transit peptides were acquired, and when the genes were duplicated, in the course of evolution. According to our hypothesis, the nuclear-translocated chloroplast ribosomal protein L12 gene obtained its transit peptide after the divergence of monocots and dicots, then gene duplications occurred independently in monocots and dicots, and subsequently rice and rye branched apart. Received: 4 October 1997 / Accepted: 5 January 1998  相似文献   

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Mitochondrial genomes of plants are much larger than those of mammals and often contain conserved open reading frames (ORFs) of unknown function. Here, we show that one of these conserved ORFs is actually the gene for ribosomal protein L10 (rpl10) in plant. No rpl10 gene has heretofore been reported in any mitochondrial genome other than the exceptionally gene-rich genome of the protist Reclinomonas americana. Conserved ORFs corresponding to rpl10 are present in a wide diversity of land plant and green algal mitochondrial genomes. The mitochondrial rpl10 genes are transcribed in all nine land plants examined, with five seed plant genes subject to RNA editing. In addition, mitochondrial-rpl10-like cDNAs were identified in EST libraries from numerous land plants. In three lineages of angiosperms, rpl10 is either lost from the mitochondrial genome or a pseudogene. In two of them (Brassicaceae and monocots), no nuclear copy of mitochondrial rpl10 is identifiably present, and instead a second copy of nuclear-encoded chloroplast rpl10 is present. Transient assays using green fluorescent protein indicate that this duplicate gene is dual targeted to mitochondria and chloroplasts. We infer that mitochondrial rpl10 has been functionally replaced by duplicated chloroplast counterparts in Brassicaceae and monocots.  相似文献   

6.
We have cloned a novel nuclear gene for a ribosomal protein of rice and Arabidopsis that is like the bacterial ribosomal protein S9. To determine the subcellular localization of the gene product, we fused the N-terminal region and green fluorescent protein and expressed it transiently in rice seedlings. Localized fluorescence was detectable only in chloroplasts, indicating that this nuclear gene encodes chloroplast ribosomal protein S9. The N-terminal region of rice ribosomal protein S9 was found to have a high sequence similarity to the transit peptide region of the rice chloroplast ribosomal protein L12, suggesting that these transit peptides have a common lineage.  相似文献   

7.
In Gracilaria tenuistipitata, a highly differentiated multicellular member of the marine red algae, Rhodophyta, chloroplast (cp) DNA can be separated as a satellite band from the nuclear DNA in a CsCl gradient. Using a heterologous probe from Chlamydomonas, the ribosomal protein-encoding gene, rpl16, was located on a 4.5-kb EcoRI fragment of cp DNA. The fragment was cloned and a 1365-bp region around rpl16 was sequenced. The gene order around rpl16, 5′ rpl22-rps3-rpl16, is identical to that detected in the chloroplast DNA of liverwort, tobacco and maize. Both the nucleotide sequence and the amino-acid sequence of rpl16 are more conserved than that of rps3. The rpl16 gene contains no intron, a feature which shows more similarity to the unicellular green algae, Chlamydomonas, than the other land plants. Sequences that may form a stable stem-loop structure were detected within the coding sequence of rpl16.  相似文献   

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Many proteins synthesized in the cytosol are delivered to their appropriate compartments in the cell by specific targeting signals. Here, we provide new insight into the generation of the chloroplast-targeting signal (called the transit peptide) in rice. First, we identified the mitochondrial ribosomal protein L13 (mt rpl13) gene on chromosome 5. Downstream of the gene, we identified a DNA fragment of 266 bp: a segment within a duplication of mt rpl13. The duplicated region was transcribed and found to encode an open reading frame (ORF) of 160 amino acids (aa) (orf160). The orf160 gene comprises C-terminal 60 aa derived from the mt rpl13 gene and N-terminal 100 aa derived from another duplicated fragment of a pentatricopeptide repeat (ppr)564 gene that encodes 564 aa with ppr motifs on chromosome 1. Examination of the localization of the ORF160 protein tagged with green fluorescent protein (GFP) showed that it is targeted to the chloroplasts. As such, ORF160 clearly contains a transit peptide. Interestingly, this was translated from the alternative reading frame of the duplicated fragment of ppr564. To confirm this, the reading frame of the ppr564 gene was shifted according to that of the orf160 gene, and the frameshifted ppr564 sequence was fused to the gene for GFP. The expressed GFP-fused protein was also located in the chloroplasts. These results provide clear evidence for the generation of the transit peptide through duplication and subsequent frameshifting of a reading frame of a preexisting protein gene. We also demonstrate the importance of sequence redundancy and frameshift mutation in this evolutionary process.  相似文献   

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A cDNA clone for the cytosolic Cu/Zn superoxide dismutase (Cu/Zn SOD) from Chinese cabbage (Brassica campestris ssp.pekinensis) was isolated and its DNA sequence was determined. The cDNA clone contains a complete coding sequence which encodes a protein of 152 amino acids and a 3-untranslated region including a poly A signal. The deduced amino acid sequence shows that it is highly homologous to the Cu/Zn SODs from other plants (60–90%). The lack of a putative chloroplast targeting transit peptide indicates that the clone represents a cytosolic form of Cu/Zn SOD. Genomic Southern hybridization suggests that cytosolic Cu/Zn SOD genes are present in 1 or 2 copies per genome.  相似文献   

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Oil palm (Elaeis guineensis Jacq.) is an economically important crop, which is grown for oil production. To better understand the molecular basis of oil palm chloroplasts, we characterized the complete chloroplast (cp) genome sequence obtained from 454 pyrosequencing. The oil palm cp genome is 156,973 bp in length consisting of a large single-copy region of?85,192 bp flanked on each side by inverted repeats of 27,071 bp with a small single-copy region of 17,639 bp joining the?repeats. The genome contains 112 unique genes: 79 protein-coding genes, 4 ribosomal RNA genes and 29 tRNA genes. By aligning the cp?genome sequence with oil palm cDNA sequences, we observed 18 non-silent and 10 silent RNA editing events among 19 cp protein-coding genes. Creation of an initiation codon by RNA editing in rpl2 has been reported in several monocots and was also found in the oil palm cp genome. Fifty common chloroplast protein-coding genes from 33 plant taxa were used to construct ML and MP?phylogenetic trees. Their topologies are similar and strongly support for the position of E. guineensis as the sister of closely related species Phoenix dactylifera in Arecaceae (palm families) of monocot subtrees.  相似文献   

16.
A cDNA was isolated from pea leaf RNA which encodes a phospholipid hydroperoxide glutathione peroxidase (PHGPX; E.C. 1.1.1.1.9). The N-terminal section of this PHGPX encodes a recognisable chloroplast transit peptide. Efficient import in vitro of the pre-PHGPX protein into the stroma of isolated pea chloroplasts confirmed that the PHGPX is a chloroplast-located enzyme. The pea PHGPX has highly conserved homologues in Arabidopsis, citrus and Nicotiana sylvestris and the authors suggest that these proteins are also localised in the chloroplast and not in the cytosol as previously supposed.  相似文献   

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Chlorarachniophytes are marine amoeboflagellate protists that have acquired their plastid (chloroplast) through secondary endosymbiosis with a green alga. Like other algae, most of the proteins necessary for plastid function are encoded in the nuclear genome of the secondary host. These proteins are targeted to the organelle using a bipartite leader sequence consisting of a signal peptide (allowing entry in to the endomembrane system) and a chloroplast transit peptide (for transport across the chloroplast envelope membranes). We have examined the leader sequences from 45 full-length predicted plastid-targeted proteins from the chlorarachniophyte Bigelowiella natans with the goal of understanding important features of these sequences and possible conserved motifs. The chemical characteristics of these sequences were compared with a set of 10 B. natans endomembrane-targeted proteins and 38 cytosolic or nuclear proteins, which show that the signal peptides are similar to those of most other eukaryotes, while the transit peptides differ from those of other algae in some characteristics. Consistent with this, the leader sequence from one B. natans protein was tested for function in the apicomplexan parasite, Toxoplasma gondii, and shown to direct the secretion of the protein.  相似文献   

19.
We used DNA sequencing and gel blot surveys to assess the integrity of the chloroplast gene infA, which codes for translation initiation factor 1, in >300 diverse angiosperms. Whereas most angiosperms appear to contain an intact chloroplast infA gene, the gene has repeatedly become defunct in approximately 24 separate lineages of angiosperms, including almost all rosid species. In four species in which chloroplast infA is defunct, transferred and expressed copies of the gene were found in the nucleus, complete with putative chloroplast transit peptide sequences. The transit peptide sequences of the nuclear infA genes from soybean and Arabidopsis were shown to be functional by their ability to target green fluorescent protein to chloroplasts in vivo. Phylogenetic analysis of infA sequences and assessment of transit peptide homology indicate that the four nuclear infA genes are probably derived from four independent gene transfers from chloroplast to nuclear DNA during angiosperm evolution. Considering this and the many separate losses of infA from chloroplast DNA, the gene has probably been transferred many more times, making infA by far the most mobile chloroplast gene known in plants.  相似文献   

20.
Molecular analysis of the gene encoding a rice starch branching enzyme   总被引:16,自引:0,他引:16  
Summary The sequence of a rice gene encoding a starch branching enzyme (sbe1) shows extreme divergence from that of the rice gene, that is homologous to bacterial glycogen branching enzyme (sbe2). sbe1 is expressed abundantly and specifically in developing seeds and maximally in the middle stages of seed development. This expression pattern completely coincides with that of the waxy gene, which encodes a granule-bound starch synthase. Three G-box motifs and consensus promoter sequences are present in the 5 flanking region of sbe1. It encodes a putative transit peptide, which is required for transport into the amyloplast. A 2.2 kb intron (intron 2) precedes the border between the regions encoding the transit peptide and the mature protein, and contains a high G/C content with several repeated sequences in its 5 half. Although only a single copy of sbe1 is present in the rice genome, Southern analysis using intron 2 as a probe indicates the presence of several homologous sequences in the rice genome, suggesting that this large intron and also the transit peptide coding region may be acquired from another portion of the genome by duplication and insertion of the sequence into the gene.  相似文献   

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