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1.
K Cline  R Henry  C Li    J Yuan 《The EMBO journal》1993,12(11):4105-4114
Many thylakoid proteins are cytosolically synthesized and have to cross the two chloroplast envelope membranes as well as the thylakoid membrane en route to their functional locations. In order to investigate the localization pathways of these proteins, we over-expressed precursor proteins in Escherichia coli and used them in competition studies. Competition was conducted for import into the chloroplast and for transport into or across isolated thylakoids. We also developed a novel in organello method whereby competition for thylakoid transport occurred within intact chloroplasts. Import of all precursors into chloroplasts was similarly inhibited by saturating concentrations of the precursor to the OE23 protein. In contrast, competition for thylakoid transport revealed three distinct precursor specificity groups. Lumen-resident proteins OE23 and OE17 constitute one group, lumenal proteins plastocyanin and OE33 a second, and the membrane protein LHCP a third. The specificity determined by competition correlates with previously determined protein-specific energy requirements for thylakoid transport. Taken together, these results suggest that thylakoid precursor proteins are imported into chloroplasts on a common import apparatus, whereupon they enter one of several precursor-specific thylakoid transport pathways.  相似文献   

2.
Summary We have isolated and analyzed cDNA clones for aSilene pratensis chlorophyll-a/b-binding protein (CAB) and a small subunit (SS) of ribulosebisphosphate carboxylase. These cDNA clones contain the coding information for the complete transit peptides. The CAB clone codes for a divergent CAB protein that differs from most published CAB sequences in both the transit peptide part and in the amino terminal part of the mature protein, a region with an important regulatory function. The SS clone codes for a precursor that is homologous to other published precursor sequences. In the mature part some non-conservative changes are observed.Silene cDNA clones for four chloroplast specific precursor proteins that are directed towards three different chloroplast compartments have been analyzed and the transit peptides compared.  相似文献   

3.
The precursor to the nuclear-coded 22-kDa heat-shock protein of chloroplasts (HSP 22) has been transported into isolated intact chloroplasts from heat-shocked plants. The localization of the mature protein in the chloroplast membrane was investigated. We have shown that the processed HSP 22 of pea was not bound to envelopes and found predominantly in thylakoid membranes. The binding of HSP 22 was stable in the presence of high salt concentrations. Solubilization of thylakoid membranes with Triton X-100 and phase partitioning with Triton X-114 indicate an intrinsic localization of HSP 22 or, alternatively, a non-covalent association with integral membrane protein(s). After fractionation into grana and stroma lamellae, HSP 22 was found mostly in the grana-membrane subfraction.  相似文献   

4.
In order to determine if the cognate transit peptide of the light-harvesting chlorophyll a/b-binding protein (LHCP) is essential for LHCP import into the chloroplast and proper localization to the thylakoids, it was replaced with the transit peptide of the small subunit (S) of ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase, a stromal protein. Wheat LHCP and S genes were fused to make a chimeric gene coding for the hybrid precursor, which was synthesized in vitro and incubated with purified pea chloroplasts. My results show that LHCP is translocated into chloroplasts by the S transit peptide. The hybrid precursor was processed; and most importantly, mature LHCP did not remain in the stroma, but was inserted into thylakoid membranes, where it normally functions. Density gradient centrifugation showed no LHCP in the envelope fraction. Hence, the transit peptide of LHCP is not required for intraorganellar routing, and LHCP itself contains an internal signal for localization to the correct membrane compartment.  相似文献   

5.
The precursor to the nuclear-coded 17 kDa early light-inducible protein (ELIP) of pea has been transported into isolated intact chloroplasts. The location of the mature protein in the thylakoid membranes was investigated after using cleavable crosslinkers such as DSP and SAND in conjunction with immuno-fractionation methods and by application of mild detergent fractionation. We show that ELIP is integrated into the membranes via the unstacked stroma thylakoids. After isolation of protein complexes by solubilization of membranes with Triton X-100 and sucrose density-gradient centrifugation the crosslinked ELIP comigrates with the PS II core complex. Using SAND we identified ELIP as a 41–51 kDa crosslinked product while with DSP four products of 80 kDa, 70 kDa, 50–42 kDa and 23–21 kDa were found. The immunoprecipitation data suggested that the D1-protein of the PS II complex is one of the ELIP partners in crosslinked products.Abbreviations chl chlorophyll - D1 herbicide-binding protein - DSP dithiobis-(succinimidylpropionate) - ELIP early light-inducible protein - LHC I and LHC II light-harvesting chlorophyll a/b complex associated with photosystem I or II - PAGE polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis - poly(A)-rich RNA polyadenyd mRNA - PS I and PS II photosystems I and II - SAND sulfosuccinimidyl 2-(m-azido-o-nitro-benzamido)-ethyl-1,3-dithiopropionate - Triton X-100 octylphenoxypolyethoxyethanol  相似文献   

6.
Many of the thylakoid membrane proteins of plant and algal chloroplasts are synthesized in the cytosol as soluble, higher molecular weight precursors. These precursors are post-translationally imported into chloroplasts, incorporated into the thylakoids, and proteolytically processed to mature size. In the present study, the process by which precursors are incorporated into thylakoids was reconstituted in chloroplast lysates using the precursor to the light-harvesting chlorophyll a/b protein (preLHCP) as a model. PreLHCP inserted into thylakoid membranes, but not envelope membranes, if ATP was present in the reaction mixture. Correct integration into the bilayer was verified by previously documented criteria. Integration could also be reconstituted with purified thylakoid membranes if reaction mixtures were supplemented with a soluble extract of chloroplasts. Several other thylakoid precursor proteins in addition to preLHCP, but no stromal precursor proteins, were incorporated into thylakoids under the described assay conditions. These results suggest that the observed in vitro activity represents in vivo events during the biogenesis of thylakoid proteins.  相似文献   

7.
The NADPH-protochlorophyllide oxidoreductase (pchlide reductase, EC 1.6.99.1) is the major protein in the prolamellar bodies (PLBs) of etioplasts, where it catalyzes the light-dependent reduction of protochlorophyllide to chlorophyllide during chlorophyll synthesis in higher plants. The suborganellar location in chloroplasts of light-grown plants is less clear. In vitro assays were performed to characterize the assembly process of the pchlide reductase protein in pea chloroplasts. Import reactions employing radiolabelled precursor protein of the pchlide reductase showed that the protein was efficiently imported into fully matured green chloroplasts of pea. Fractionation assays following an import reaction revealed that imported protein was targeted to the thylakoid membranes. No radiolabelled protein could be detected in the stromal or envelope compartments upon import. Assembly reactions performed in chloroplast lysates showed that maximum amount of radiolabelled protein was associated to the thylakoid membranes in a thermolysin-resistant conformation when the assays were performed in the presence of hydrolyzable ATP and NADPH, but not in the presence of NADH. Furthermore, membrane assembly was optimal at pH 7.5 and at 25°C. However, further treatment of the thylakoids with NaOH after an assembly reaction removed most of the membrane-associated protein. Assembly assays performed with the mature form of the pchlide reductase, lacking the transit peptide, showed that the pre-sequence was not required for membrane assembly. These results indicate that the pchlide reductase is a peripheral protein located on the stromal side of the membrane, and that both the precursor and the mature form of the protein can act as substrates for membrane assembly.  相似文献   

8.
Cline K 《Plant physiology》1988,86(4):1120-1126
The apoprotein of the light-harvesting chlorophyll a/b protein (LHCP) is a major integral thylakoid membrane protein that is normally complexed with chlorophyll and xanthophylls and serves as the antenna complex of photosystem II. LHCP is encoded in the nucleus and synthesized in the cytosol as a higher molecular weight precursor that is subsequently imported into chloroplasts and assembled into thylakoids. In a previous study it was established that the LHCP precursor can integrate into isolated thylakoid membranes. The present study demonstrates that under conditions designed to preserve thylakoid structure, the inserted LHCP precursor is processed to mature size, assembled into the LHC II chlorophyll-protein complex, and localized to the appressed thylakoid membranes. Under these conditions, light can partially replace exogenous ATP in the membrane integration process.  相似文献   

9.
In higher plants, the chloroplastic protein plastocyanin is synthesized as a transit peptide-containing precursor by cytosolic ribosomes and posttranslationally transported to the thylakoid lumen. En route to the lumen, a plastocyanin precursor is first imported into chloroplasts and then further directed across the thylakoid membrane by a second distinct transport event. A partially processed form of plastocyanin is observed in the stroma during import experiments using intact chloroplasts and has been proposed to be the translocation substrate for the second step (Smeekens, S., Bauerle, C., Hageman, J., Keegstra, K., and Weisbeek, P. (1986) Cell 46, 365-375). To further characterize this second step, we have reconstituted thylakoid transport in a system containing in vitro-synthesized precursor proteins and isolated thylakoid membranes. This system was specific for lumenal proteins since stromal proteins lacking the appropriate targeting information did not accumulate in the thylakoid lumen. Plastocyanin precursor was taken up by isolated thylakoids, proteolytically processed to mature size, and converted to holo form. Translocation was temperature-dependent and was stimulated by millimolar levels of ATP but did not strictly require the addition of stromal factors. We have examined the substrate requirements of thylakoid translocation by testing the ability of different processed forms of plastocyanin to transport in the in vitro system. Interestingly, only the full-length plastocyanin precursor, not the partially processed intermediate form, was competent for transport in this in vitro system.  相似文献   

10.
Post-translational integration of cytochrome f into thylakoid membranes was observed after import by isolated pea chloroplasts of a chimeric protein consisting of the presequence of the small subunit of ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase fused to the cytochrome f precursor. Import of a similar chimeric protein lacking the C-terminal 33 amino acid residues resulted in a soluble cytochrome f protein in the thylakoid lumen, indicating that the C-terminal region contains a stop-transfer sequence for membrane integration. Azide inhibited the insertion of cytochrome f into the thylakoid membrane, whereas the ionophores nigericin and valinomycin had little effect on membrane insertion. The precursor of the 33 kDa protein, but not the 23 kDa protein, of the photosystem II oxygen-evolving complex inhibited the thylakoid insertion of cytochrome f , suggesting competition for a component of the transport pathway. These experiments suggest that the post-translational insertion of cytochrome f into the thylakoid membrane uses a SecA-dependent pathway.  相似文献   

11.
Plastid DNA, like bacterial and mitochondrial DNA, is organized into protein–DNA complexes called nucleoids. Plastid nucleoids are believed to be associated with the inner envelope in developing plastids and the thylakoid membranes in mature chloroplasts, but the mechanism for this re-localization is unknown. Here, we present the further characterization of the coiled-coil DNA-binding protein MFP1 as a protein associated with nucleoids and with the thylakoid membranes in mature chloroplasts. MFP1 is located in plastids in both suspension culture cells and leaves and is attached to the thylakoid membranes with its C-terminal DNA-binding domain oriented towards the stroma. It has a major DNA-binding activity in mature Arabidopsis chloroplasts and binds to all tested chloroplast DNA fragments without detectable sequence specificity. Its expression is tightly correlated with the accumulation of thylakoid membranes. Importantly, it is associated in vivo with nucleoids, suggesting a function for MFP1 at the interface between chloroplast nucleoids and the developing thylakoid membrane system.  相似文献   

12.
A system has been developed for the import in vitro of precursor proteins into Euglena chloroplasts, which have three envelope membranes. Preparation of functional chloroplasts with intact envelope membranes has been optimized. Import of the precursor (50 kDa) for the tetrapyrrole biosynthesis enzyme porphobilinogen deaminase (PBGD), and processing to the mature size (40 kDa), occurred at 25 degrees C in the light and the presence of ATP, with an estimated efficiency of 62%. Pretreatment of the chloroplasts with proteases abolished this import, suggesting the involvement of specific protein receptors. The presequence of PBGD was found to be cleaved by Escherichia coli leader peptidase to an intermediate form (46 kDa). A construct in which the first 30 residues of the presequence (presumed to be the region removed by leader peptidase) had been deleted was no longer imported. Neither prePBGD nor the truncated precursor were imported into pea chloroplasts, although both bound to the pea chloroplast envelope. Conversely, a chimeric construct, in which the mature PBGD protein was fused downstream of the transit peptide for pea ferredoxin-NADP reductase, was efficiently imported into pea chloroplasts and processed to the mature size. However, this was not imported into Euglena chloroplasts, although again it bound to them. These results provide preliminary evidence for the possibility of two functional domains within the Euglena PBGD presequence. The implications of these findings with respect to the evolution of Euglena chloroplasts are discussed.  相似文献   

13.
《Biophysical journal》2022,121(18):3411-3421
The inner membrane-associated protein of 30 kDa (IM30) is essential in chloroplasts and cyanobacteria. The spatio-temporal cellular localization of the protein appears to be highly dynamic and triggered by internal as well as external stimuli, mainly light intensity. The soluble fraction of the protein is localized in the cyanobacterial cytoplasm or the chloroplast stroma, respectively. Additionally, the protein attaches to the thylakoid membrane as well as to the chloroplast inner envelope or the cyanobacterial cytoplasmic membrane, respectively, especially under conditions of membrane stress. IM30 is involved in thylakoid membrane biogenesis and/or maintenance, where it either stabilizes membranes and/or triggers membrane-fusion processes. These apparently contradicting functions have to be tightly controlled and separated spatiotemporally in chloroplasts and cyanobacteria. IM30’s fusogenic activity depends on Mg2+ binding to IM30; yet, it still is unclear how Mg2+-loaded IM30 interacts with membranes and promotes membrane fusion. Here, we show that the interaction of Mg2+ with IM30 results in increased binding of IM30 to native, as well as model, membranes. Via atomic force microscopy in liquid, IM30-induced bilayer defects were observed in solid-supported bilayers in the presence of Mg2+. These structures differ dramatically from the membrane-stabilizing carpet structures that were previously observed in the absence of Mg2+. Thus, Mg2+-induced alterations of the IM30 structure switch the IM30 activity from a membrane-stabilizing to a membrane-destabilizing function, a crucial step in membrane fusion.  相似文献   

14.
It is currently thought that chloroplasts of higher plants were derived from endosymbiont oxygenic photosynthetic bacteria (primary endosymbiosis), while Euglena, a photosynthetic protista, gained chloroplasts by secondary endosymbiosis (i.e., incorporation of a photosynthetic eukaryote into heterotrophic eukaryotic host). To examine if the protein transport inside chloroplasts is similar between these organisms, we carried out heterologous protein import experiments with Euglena precursor proteins and spinach chloroplasts. The precursor of a 30-kDa subunit of the oxygen-evolving complex (OEC30) from the thylakoid lumen of Euglena chloroplasts contained the N-terminal signal, stroma targeting, and thylakoid transfer domains. Truncated preOEC30s lacking the N-terminal domain were post-translationally imported into spinach chloroplasts, transported into the thylakoid lumen, and processed to a mature protein. These results showed that protein translocations within chloroplasts in Euglena and higher plants are similar and supported the hypothesis that Euglena chloroplasts are derived from the ancestral Chlorophyta.  相似文献   

15.
The 20 kDa polypeptide, the apoprotein of the chlorophyll a/b antenna complex CP24 associated with photosystem II, is a remote relative of light-harvesting complex (LHC) apoproteins and thus a member of the extended cab gene family. LHC apoproteins are poly-topic integral components of the thylakoid membrane with probably three transmembrane segments which originate in nuclear genes and are made in the cytosol as precursors. They possess exclusively stroma-targeting transit peptides for import into the organelle and integrate into the thylakoid membrane via uncleaved hydrophobic domains of the mature protein. The CP24 apoprotein displays intriguing structural differences to LHC apoproteins with a potential impact on the routing and targeting processes during biogenesis. In particular, it lacks a pronounced second hydrophobic segment in the mature polypeptide chain found in LHCPs, and carries a transit peptide that is reminiscent of thylakoid-targeting transit peptides. We have used in organello assays with isolated intact chloroplasts and the authentic precursor of the 20 kDa apoprotein from spinach, or appropriate chimaeric polypeptides consisting of a transit peptide and the mature part of various nuclear-encoded thylakoid proteins of known location and targeting epitopes, in order to resolve the characteristics of its targeting properties, as well as to determine the contribution of the individual parts of the precursor molecule to its import and subsequent intra-organellar routing. Our experiments demonstrate that the transit peptide of the CP24 apoprotein is required only for the import of the protein into the organelle. All subsequent steps, such as the integration of the protein into the thylakoid membrane, binding of chlorophyll, assembly into the CP24 complex and migration to the grana lamellae, still take place if the authentic transit peptide is replaced by a targeting signal of a nuclear-encoded stromal protein.  相似文献   

16.
Pure plasma membrane and thylakoid membrane fractions from Synechocystis 6803 were isolated to study the localisation and processing of the precursor form of the D1 protein (pD1) of photosystem II (PSII). PSII core proteins (D1, D2 and cytb559) were localised both to plasma and thylakoid membrane fractions, the majority in thylakoids. pD1 was found only in the thylakoid membrane where active PSII is known to function. Membrane fatty acid unsaturation was shown to be critical in processing of pD1 into mature D1 protein. This was concluded from pulse-labelling experiments at low temperature using wild type and a mutant Synechocystis 6803 with a low level of membrane fatty acid unsaturation. Further, pD1 was identified as two distinct bands, an indication of two cleavage sites in the precursor peptide or, alternatively, two different conformations of pD1. Our results provide evidence for thylakoid membranes being a primary synthesis site for D1 protein during its light-activated turnover. The existence of the PSII core proteins in the plasma membrane, on the other hand, may be related to the biosynthesis of new PSII complexes in these membranes.  相似文献   

17.
The localization of protochorophyllide (Pchlide) and of NADPH-protochlorophyllide oxidoreductase (POR, EC 1.6.99.1) within (etio)chloroplasts has been investigated at selected stages of greening of barley seedlings. Pchlide pigment and POR protein contents were evaluated in different plastid membrane fractions by fluorescence spectroscopy and immunoblot analysis using a monospecific polyclonal antibody raised against the purified enzyme. Fluorescence analysis showed the presence of Pchlide in both the envelope and thylakoid membranes. During greening, the Pchlide content, expressed on a total protein basis, decreased in thylakoid membranes, whereas it increased in the envelope membranes. POR proteins were detected mainly in thylakoid membranes at early greening stages. In contrast, the weak amount of POR proteins was associated more specifically with envelope membranes of mature chloroplasts. Whatever the greening stage, thylakoid-bound Pchlide and POR proteins were more abundant in the thylakoid regions which remained unsolubilized after mild Triton treatment used as standard procedure to prepare PS II particles. This suggests the preferential association of Pchlide and POR to the appressed regions of thylakoids. This revised version was published online in June 2006 with corrections to the Cover Date.  相似文献   

18.
Heterokont algae such as diatoms, brown seaweeds and the raphidophyte Heterosigma akashiwo acquired their chloroplasts via a secondary endosymbiosis involving a red algal endosymbiont and a eukaryote host, resulting in chloroplasts surrounded by four membranes rather than two. The precursor of a nuclear-encoded thylakoid lumen protein, PsbO, from Heterosigma has a presequence composed of a typical ER signal peptide followed by putative stromal and thylakoid targeting domains. A processing enzyme associated with Heterosigma thylakoids cleaved the presequence (with or without the ER signal sequence) in a single step, giving a product of the size of the mature protein. Its sensitivity to a penem inhibitor and insensitivity to other protease inhibitors suggest that it is a member of the Type I signal peptidase family. Furthermore the Heterosigma enzyme appeared to have similar substrate specificity to the pea thylakoidal processing peptidase.  相似文献   

19.
The role of transit peptides in intraorganellar targeting has been studied for a chlorophyll a/b binding (CAB) polypeptide of photosystem II (PSII) and the small subunit of ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase (RBCS) from Pisum sativum (pea). These studies have involved in vitro import of fusion proteins into isolated pea chloroplasts. Fusion of the CAB transit peptide to RBCS mediates import to the stroma, as evidenced by assembly of RBCS with chloroplast-synthesized large subunit (RBCL) to form holoenzyme. Similarly, fusion of the RBCS transit peptide to the mature CAB polypeptide mediates import and results in integration of the processed CAB protein into the thylakoid membrane. Correct integration was indicated by association with PSII and assembly with chlorophyll to form the light-harvesting chlorophyll a/b protein complex (LHCII). We interpret these results as evidence that the CAB transit peptide is functionally equivalent to a stromal-targeting sequence and that intraorganellar sorting of the CAB protein must be determined by sequences residing within the mature protein. Our results and those of others suggest that import and integration of CAB polypeptides into the thylakoid proceeds via the stroma.  相似文献   

20.
We have used a hybrid precursor protein to study the pathway of protein import into chloroplasts. This hybrid (pS/protA) consists of the precursor to the small subunit of Rubisco (pS) fused to the IgG binding domains of staphylococcal protein A. The pS/protA is efficiently imported into isolated chloroplasts and is processed to its mature form (S/protA). In addition to the mature stromal form, two intermediates in the pathway of pS/protA import were identified at early time points in the import reaction. The first intermediate represents unprocessed pS/protA bound to the outer surface of the chloroplast envelope and is analogous to a previously characterized form of pS that is specifically bound to the chloroplast surface and can be subsequently translocated in the stroma (Cline, K., M. Werner-Washburne, T. H. Lubben, and K. Keegstra. 1985. J. Biol. Chem. 260:3691-3696.) The second intermediate represents a partially translocated form of the precursor that remains associated with the envelope membrane. This form is processed to mature S/protA, but remains susceptible to exogenously added protease in intact chloroplasts. We conclude that the envelope associated S/protA is spanning both the outer and inner chloroplast membranes en route to the stroma. Biochemical and immunochemical localization of the two translocation intermediates indicates that both forms are exposed at the surface of the outer membrane at sites where the outer and inner membrane are closely apposed. These contact zones appear to be organized in a reticular network on the outer envelope. We propose a model for protein import into chloroplasts that has as its central features two distinct protein conducting channels in the outer and inner envelope membranes, each gated open by a distinct subdomain of the pS signal sequence.  相似文献   

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