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The activity of pea chloroplast elongation factor G (EF-G), a nuclear-coded protein required for the elongation cycle of chloroplast protein synthesis, is regulated in response to light. In pea seedlings germinated and grown under continuous white or red light, EF-G specific activity reaches a maximum between days 10 to 15, and then decreases. EF-G activity is almost undetectable in extracts from dark-grown seedlings. When 13-day dark-grown pea seedlings are transferred to light, EF-G specific activity reaches a higher value after 2 to 3 days than observed in seedlings grown under continuous light. The small and large subunits of ribulose bisphosphate carboxylase continue to accumulate after EF-G specific activity has reached maximum levels. Cytoplasmically synthesized components of the chloroplast protein synthetic apparatus, such as EF-G, may help coordinate cytoplasmic and nuclear events with chloroplast gene expression during light-induced chloroplast differentiation.  相似文献   

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Lee BH  Won SH  Lee HS  Miyao M  Chung WI  Kim IJ  Jo J 《Gene》2000,245(2):283-290
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Luciferase reporter genes have been successfully used in a variety of organisms to examine gene expression in living cells, but are yet to be successfully developed for use in chloroplast. Green fluorescent protein (gfp) has been used as a reporter of chloroplast gene expression, but because of high auto-fluorescence, very high levels of GFP accumulation are required for visualization in vivo. We have developed a luciferase reporter for chloroplast by synthesizing the two-subunit bacterial luciferase (lux)AB, as a single fusion protein in Chlamydomonas reinhardtii chloroplast codon bias. We expressed a chloroplast luciferase gene, luxCt, in C. reinhardtii chloroplasts under the control of the ATPase alpha subunit (atpA) or psbA promoter and 5' untranslated regions (UTRs) and the rubisco large subunit (rbcL) 3' UTR. We show that luxCt is a sensitive reporter of chloroplast gene expression, and that luciferase activity can be measured in vivo using a charge coupled device (CCD) camera or in vitro using a luminometer. We further demonstrate that luxCt protein accumulation, as measured by Western blot analysis, is proportional to luminescence, as determined both in vivo and in vitro, and that luxCt is capable of reporting changes in chloroplast gene expression during a dark to light shift. These data demonstrate the utility of the luxCt gene as a versatile and sensitive reporter of chloroplast gene expression in living cells.  相似文献   

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The pea plastocyanin gene in a 3.5 kbp Eco RI fragment of pea nuclear DNA was introduced into tobacco by Agrobacterium-mediated transformation. Regenerated plants contained pea plastocyanin located within the chloroplast thylakoid membrane system. Analysis of seedlings from a self-pollinated transgenic plant containing a single copy of the pea plastocyanin gene indicated that seedlings homozygous for the pea gene contained almost twice as much pea plastocyanin as seedlings hemizygous for the pea gene. Homozygous seedlings contained approximately equal amounts of pea and tobacco plastocyanins. The amount of tobacco plastocyanin in leaves of transgenic plants was unaffected by the expression of the pea plastocyanin gene. The mRNA from the pea gene in tobacco was indistinguishable by northern blotting and S1 nuclease protection from the mRNA found in pea. In both pea and transgenic tobacco, expression of the pea plastocyanin gene was induced by light in leaves but was suppressed in roots. Pea plastocyanin free of contaminating tobacco plastocyanin was purified from transgenic tobacco plants and shown to be indistinguishable from natural pea plastocyanin by N-terminal protein sequencing and 1H NMR spectroscopy.  相似文献   

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The pea chloroplast fructose-1,6-bisphosphatase (FBPase) gene was cloned from a pea genomic library and sequenced. The gene contained three introns and four exons. Both in vitro and in vivo analyses of the promoter region of the gene were carried out simultaneously to elucidate the mechanisms of light-mediated gene expression. Two light-responsive elements were identified in gel mobility shift assays: a GT-1-like sequence for the binding of a GT-1-like factor (termed pea factor 1; PF1) and a binding site for a dark-specific factor (termed pea factor 2; PF2). The binding affinity of PF1 was higher in light-grown peas than in dark-grown peas and was affected by phosphorylation. The binding site was located at nucleotides (nt) -326 to -341. PF2 binding was dark-specific and the binding region was located upstream of the PF1-binding site (nt -492 to -412). In vivo experiments with transgenic tobacco plants suggested that the region between nt -411 and -272 contained a PF1-binding site that promoted light-mediated expression of the pea chloroplast FBPase. In contrast, the 81-bp region between nt -492 and -412, which is located further upstream than the PF1-binding site, negatively regulated light-mediated expression of FBPase. Moreover, activation of gene expression by the region (nt -411 to -272) contained a PF1-binding site that was sensitive to red-light irradiation, suggesting that the expression of the chloroplast FBPase was regulated by the phytochrome system. Interestingly, the binding region for the dark-specific factor (PF2; nt -492 to -412) not only repressed gene expression in the dark, but also acted as a light-dependent activating element of the chloroplast FBPase gene.  相似文献   

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