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1.
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   

2.
Summary Antibodies to individual chloroplast ribosomal (r-)proteins ofChlamydomonas reinhardtii synthesized in either the chloroplast or the cytoplasm were used to examine the relatedness ofChlamydomonas r-proteins to r-proteins from the spinach (Spinacia oleracea) chloroplast,Escherichia coli, and the cyanobacteriumAnabaena 7120. In addition,35S-labeled chloroplast r-proteins from large and small subunits ofC. reinhardtii were coelectrophoresed on 2-D gels with unlabeled r-proteins from similar subunits of spinach chloroplasts,E. coli, andAnabaena to compare their size and net charge. Comigrating protein pairs were not always immunologically related, whereas immunologically related r-protein pairs often did not comigrate but differed only slightly in charge and molecular weight. In constrast, when35S-labeled chloroplast r-proteins from large and small subunits of a closely related speciesC. smithii were coelectrophoresed with unlabeledC. reinhardtii chloroplast r-proteins, only one pair of proteins from each subunit showed a net displacement in mobility.Analysis of immunoblots of one-dimensional SDS and two-dimensional urea/SDS gels of large and small subunit r-proteins from these species revealed more antigenic conservation among the four species of large subunit r-proteins than small subunit r-proteins.Anabaena r-proteins showed the greatest immunological similarity toC. reinhardtii chloroplast r-proteins. In general, antisera made against chloroplast-synthesized r-proteins inC. reinhardtii showed much higher levels of cross-reactivity with r-proteins fromAnabaena, spinach, andE. coli than did antisera to cytoplasmically synthesized r-proteins. All spinach r-proteins that cross-reacted with antisera to chloroplast-synthesized r-proteins ofC. reinhardtii are known to be made in the chloroplast (Dorne et al. 1984b). FourE. coli r-proteins encoded by the S10 operon (L2, S3, L16, and L23) were found to be conserved immunologically among the four species. Two of the large subunit r-proteins, L2 and L16, are essential for peptidyltransferase activity. The third (L23) and two otherE. coli large subunit r-proteins (L5 and L27) that have immunological equivalents among the four species are functionally related to but not essential for peptidyltransferase activity.  相似文献   

3.
Summary Ribulose bisphosphate carboxylase-oxygenase (Rubisco) is a key enzyme in the photosynthetic fixation of CO2 by the chloroplast. The synthesis of the enzyme is an example of the cooperation between the chloroplast and the nucleocytoplasmic compartments, as it is assembled from subunits encoded in the two respective genomes. I have used a synthetic oligonucleotide probe to isolate the nuclear Rubisco small subunit genes (rbcS) directly from a genomic library of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii DNA. They constitute only a small family: there are two rbcS genes, and an additional related sequence, in the C. reinhardtii genome. All three are clustered within 11kb at a single locus, and should thus be particularly well suited for genetic manipulation. The pattern of expression of rbcS RNA is dependent on the growth conditions.  相似文献   

4.
Two fructose-bisphosphate aldolases(EC 4.1.2.13) from Klebsormidium flaccidum Silver, Mattox and Black-well were purified by affinity elution from phosphocellulose. The two enzymes were subsequently separated by HPLC on an anion-exchange column (QAE-silica). The aldolase eluting first represented 5% of the total activity; the other aldolase represented the remaining activity. The activity of the enzymes was not reduced by the presence of 1 mM EDTA or increased by 0.1 mM Zn2+, establishing their character as class I type (Me2+ independent) aldolases. The Km(fructose-1,6-bisphosphate) values were 1.7 and 34.7 μM for the enzyme eluting first and second, respectively, from the QAE-silica column. The subunit molecular masses, as determined by SDS-PACE, were 40.5 and 37 kD; the specific activities of the purified enzymes were 7.9 and 24.7 · mg?1 protein, respectively. The two aldolases of K. flaccidum are homologous to the cytosol and chloroplast specific isoenzymes of higher plants by several criteria and are therefore probably located in the same cellular compartments in K. flaccidum. The Km and specific activity for the chloroplast aldolase of K. flaccidum are three times higher than for the chloroplast aldolase of higher plants, a remarkable difference. Immunotitration with specific antisera against the chloroplast aldolase of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii Dangeard and spinach showed that the chloroplast aldolase of K. flaccidum was immunochemically intermediate in structure to the respective aldolases of C. reinhardtii and higher plants. K. flaccidum is the second species of Charophyceae (besides Chara foetida Braun) with two class I aldolases as in higher plants whereas two species of Chlorophyceae have only one class I aldolase and, under some conditions, an additional class II (Me2+ dependent) aldolase. Thus, aldolases may turn out, in addition to the known enzymes of glycolate conversion and urea degradation, be a novel enzyme system to evaluate algal evolution along with cytological features.  相似文献   

5.
The periplasmic carbonic anhydrase (CA) gene CAH1 of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii codes for a highly processed secreted glycoprotein. The primary translation product of the CAH1 gene is targeted to the ER, where it is proteolytically processed to yield two different subunits, glycosylated, assembled into an active heterotetramer, and secreted. After replacing the target leader sequence with that from tobacco anionic peroxidase, expression of this gene in transgenic tobacco plants was investigated. SDS-PAGE gels of the purified protein from tobacco, showed that it migrated as a series of discrete bands (two large and one small) with slightly faster mobility than the comparable bands in the purified algal protein. The expressed protein in the plant was active, and staining with thymol and sulfuric acid confirmed that it was also glycosylated. The periplasmic CA1 (peri-CA1) also was found to be enriched in the intercellular fluid of transgenic tobacco, indicating it was secreted. The specific activity of the enzyme and its sensitivity to sulfonamide inhibitors were similar to that of the native algal enzyme. These results suggest that the post translational processing of Chlamydomonas peri-CA1 is largely conserved in a higher plant.  相似文献   

6.
7.
The chloroplast ATP synthase gates the flow of protons out of the thylakoid lumen. In Chlamydomonas reinhardtii deletion of any of the genes for the ATP synthase subunits, or misfolding of the peptides results in photosynthetic membranes devoid of the enzyme (Lemaire and Wollman, J Biol Chem 264:675–685, 1989). This work examines the physiologic response of an algal strain in which the epsilon subunit of the chloroplast ATP synthase has been truncated. Removal of 10 amino acids from the C-terminus of the peptide results in a sharp decrease in the content of the enzyme, but does not result in its exclusion from the thylakoid membranes. The ATP synthase of this mutant strain has a higher rate of ATP hydrolysis than the wild-type enzyme. This strain of C. reinhardtii exhibits reduced growth in the light, dependence on acetate, and a low threshold for the onset of photoinhibition. The role of the ATP synthase in regulating the proton concentration of the lumen is discussed. This work was supported in part by a grant from the National Science Foundation (MCB0110232).  相似文献   

8.
The demethoxycarbonyl reaction of pheophorbide a in plants and algae was investigated. Two types of enzyme that catalyze alternative reactions in the formation of pyropheophorbide a were found. One enzyme, designated `pheophorbidase (Phedase)', was purified nearly to homogeneity from cotyledons of radish (Raphanus sativus). This enzyme catalyzes the conversion of pheophorbide a to a precursor of pyropheophorbide a, C-132-carboxylpyropheophorbide a, by demethylation, and then the precursor is decarboxylated non-enzymatically to yield pyropheophorbide a. The activity of Phedase was inhibited by the reaction product, methanol. The other enzyme, termed `pheophorbide demethoxycarbonylase (PDC)', was highly purified from the Chl b-less mutant NL-105 of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii. This enzyme had produced no intermediate as shown in the Phedase reaction, indicating that it converts pheophorbide a directly into pyropheophorbide a, probably by nucleophilic reaction. Phedase and PDC consisted of both senescence-induced and constitutive enzymes. The molecular weight of both Phedases was 113 000 and of senescence-induced PDC was 170 000. The K m values against pheophorbide a for both Phedases were 14–15 μM and 283 μM for senescence-induced PDC. The activity of both Phedases was inhibited by the reaction product, methanol, whereas methanol had no specific effect on senescence-induced PDC. Phenylmethylsulfonic fluoride and N-ethylmaleimide inhibited the senescence-induced Phedase and PDC, respectively. Among the 23 species from 15 different families tested, Phedase activity was found in 10 species from three families. PDC activity was not detected in plants lacking Phedase activity, except for Chlamydomonas. Based on these findings, a likely conclusion is that at least two alternative pathways that are catalyzed by two different enzymes, Phedase and PDC, exist for the formation of pyropheophorbide a. This revised version was published online in June 2006 with corrections to the Cover Date.  相似文献   

9.
Summary A Chlamydomonas reinhardtii (C. reinhardtii) chloroplast expression vector, papc-B, containing the apc-B gene that encodes the beta subunit of the light-harvesting antenna protein allophycocyanin (APC) of cyanobacteria, was constructed and transferred to the chloroplast genome of C. reinhardtii by the biolistic method. The transformants were identified by Southern blot, Western blot and ELISA assays after selection on resistant medium. The recombinant APC beta subunit was expressed in the C. reinhardtii chloroplast and accounted for up to 2–3% (w/w) of the total soluble protein (TSP), suggesting a promising prospect of using C. reinhardtii chloroplasts to produce functional plant-derived proteins.  相似文献   

10.
Summary Experiments were undertaken to characterize the cytoplasmic ribosomal proteins (r-proteins) in Chlamydomonas reinhardtii and to compare immunologically several cytoplasmic r-proteins with those of chloroplast ribosomes of this alga, Escherichia coli, and yeast. The large and small subunits of the C. reinhardtii cytoplasmic ribosomes were shown to contain, respectively, 48 and 45 r-proteins, with apparent molecular weights of 12,000–59,000. No cross-reactivity was seen between antisera made against cytoplasmic r-proteins of Chlamydomonas and chloroplast r-proteins, except in one case where an antiserum made against a large subunit r-protein cross-reacted with an r-protein of the small subunit of the chloroplast ribosome. Antisera made against one out of five small subunit r-proteins and three large subunit r-proteins recognized r-proteins from the yeast large subunit. Each of the yeast r-proteins has been previously identified as an rRNA binding protein. The antiserum to one large subunit r-protein cross-reacted with specific large subunit r-proteins from yeast and E. coli.  相似文献   

11.
The photosystem II activity and energy dissipation was investigated when algal Chlamydomonas reinhardtii genotypes were exposed to dichromate toxicity effect. The exposure during 24 h to dichromate effect of two C. reinhardtii mutants having non-functional xanthophylls cycle, as npq1 zeaxanthin deficient and npq2 zeaxanthin accumulating, induced inhibition of PSII electron transport. After dichromate-induced toxicity, PSII functions of C. reinhardtii mutants were investigated under different light intensities. To determine dichromate toxicity and light intensity effect on PSII functional properties we investigated the change of energy dissipation via PSII electron transport, non-photochemical regulated and non-regulated energy dissipation according to Kramer et al. (Photosynth Res 79:209–218, 2004). We showed the dependency between dichromate toxicity and light-induced photoinhibition in algae deficient in xanthophyll cycle. When algal mutants missing xanthophylls cycle were exposed to dichromate toxicity and to high light intensity energy dissipation via non-regulated mechanism takes the most important pathway reaching the value of 80%. Therefore, the mutants npq1 and npq2 having non-functional xanthophylls cycle were more sensitive to dichromate toxic effects.  相似文献   

12.
The recently cloned cDNA for pea chloroplast thioredoxin f was used to produce, by PCR, a fragment coding for a protein lacking the transit peptide. This cDNA fragment was subcloned into a pET expression vector and used to transform E. coli cells. After induction with IPTG the transformed cells produce the protein, mainly in the soluble fraction of the broken cells. The recombinant thioredoxin f has been purified and used to raise antibodies and analysed for activity. The antibodies appear to be specific towards thioredoxin f and do not recognize other types of thioredoxin. The recombinant protein could activate two chloroplastic enzymes, namely NADP-dependent malate dehydrogenase (NADP-MDH) and fructose 1,6-bisphosphatase (FBPase), both using dithiothreitol as a chemical reductant and in a light-reconstituted/thylakoid assay. Recombinant pea thioredoxin f turned out to be an excellent catalyst for NADP-MDH activation, being the more efficient than a recombinant m-type thioredoxin of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii and the thioredoxin of E. coli. At the concentrations of thioredoxin used in the target enzyme activation assays only the recombinant thioredoxin f activated the FBPase.  相似文献   

13.
14.
Intact leucoplasts from the endosperm of developing castor oil seed were isolated by Percoll density gradient centrifugation. The precursor to the small subunit of ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase from pea was synthesized in vitro from hybrid-selected mRNA. Leucoplasts imported this precursor by an ATP-requiring mechanism similar to that described in chloroplasts (AR Grossman et al. 1980 Nature 285: 625-628). The small subunit precursor was processed to a molecular weight that was identical with that of the mature pea small subunit. These results show that leucoplasts, though specialized for fatty acid biosynthesis and not photosynthesis, have a mechanism of protein import similar to that of chloroplasts.  相似文献   

15.
Mitochondrial F1F O -ATP synthase of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii and Polytomella sp. is a dimer of 1,600,000 Da. In Chlamydomonas the enzyme lacks the classical subunits that constitute the peripheral stator-stalk as well as those involved in the dimerization of the fungal and mammal complex. Instead, it contains eight novel polypeptides named ASA1 to 8. We show that homologs of these subunits are also present in the chlorophycean algae Polytomella sp. and Volvox carterii. Blue Native Gel Electrophoresis analysis of mitochondria from different green algal species also indicates that stable dimeric mitochondrial ATP synthases may be characteristic of all Chlorophyceae. One additional subunit, ASA9, was identified in the purified mitochondrial ATP synthase of Polytomella sp. The dissociation profile of the Polytomella enzyme at high-temperatures and cross-linking experiments finally suggest that some of the ASA polypeptides constitute a stator-stalk with a unique architecture, while others may be involved in the formation of a highly-stable dimeric complex. The algal enzyme seems to have modified the structural features of its surrounding scaffold, while conserving almost intact the structure of its catalytic subunits.  相似文献   

16.
Strains of Bradyrhizobium japonicum with the ability to catabolize indole-3-acetic acid (IAA) and strains of B. japonicum, Rhizobium loti, and Rhizobium galegae, unable to catabolize IAA, were analyzed for enzymes involved in the pathway for IAA degradation. Two enzymes having isatin as substrate were detected. An isatin amidohydrolase catalyzing the hydrolysis of isatin into isatinic acid was found in some B. japonicum strains and in two Rhizobium species, R loti and R. galegae. The enzyme was inducible (4–5-fold) by its substrate, isatin, and the partially purified enzyme from R. loti showed an apparent KM of 11 M for isatin. A NADPH-dependent isatin reductase was measured in extracts from a strain of B. japonicum lacking the isatin amidohydrolase. The structure of the reaction product, dioxindole was verified by NMR spectroscopy. Isatin reductase activity was also detected in extracts of dry pea seeds, and present in at least two isoforms. A low KM of 10 M for isatin was found with a partially purified preparation of the pea enzyme. The presence of such an enzyme activity in pea indicates dioxindole and isatin as possible intermediates in IAA degradation in pea.  相似文献   

17.
The precursor of the ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase small subunit and other proteins from Chlamydomonas reinhardtii are efficiently transported into chloroplasts isolated from spinach and pea. Thus, similar determinants specify precursor-chloroplast interactions in the alga and vascular plants. Removal of all or part of its transit sequence was found to block import of the algal small subunit into isolated chloroplasts. Comparison of available sequences revealed a nine amino acid segment conserved in the transit sequences of all small subunit precursors. A protease in the vascular plant chloroplasts recognized this region in the Chlamydomonas precursor and produced an intermediate form of the small subunit. We propose that processing of the small subunit precursor involves at least two proteolytic events; only one of these has been evolutionarily conserved.  相似文献   

18.
Heterokont algae such as diatoms and the raphidophyte Heterosigma akashiwo and peridinin-containing dinoflagellates such as Heterocapsa triquetra originally acquired their chloroplasts via secondary endosymbiosis involving a red algal endosymbiont and a eukaryote host, resulting in complex chloroplasts surrounded by four and three membranes, respectively. The precursors of both heterokont and dinoflagellate chloroplast-targeted proteins are first inserted into the ER with removal of an N-terminal signal peptide, but how they traverse the remaining membranes is unclear. Using a nuclear-encoded thylakoid lumen protein, PsbO, from the heterokont alga Heterosigma akashiwo, the dinoflagellate Heterocapsa triquetra and the red alga Porphyra yezoensis we show that precursors without the ER signal peptide can be imported into pea chloroplasts. In the case of the H. triquetra and Porphyra PsbO, the precursors were processed to their predicted mature size and localized within the thylakoid lumen, using the Sec-dependent pathway. We report for the first time a stromal processing peptidase (SPP) activity from an alga of the red lineage. The enzyme processes the Heterosigma PsbO precursor at a single site and appears to have different substrate and reaction specificities from the plant SPP. In spite of the fact that we could not find convincing homologs of the plant chloroplast import machinery in heterokont (diatom) and red algal genomes, it is clear that these three very different lines of algae use similar mechanisms to import chloroplast precursors.  相似文献   

19.
Summary The chloroplast gene for the epsilon subunit (atpE) of the CF1/CF0 ATPase in the green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii has been localized and sequenced. In contrast to higher plants, the atpE gene does not lie at the 3 end of the beta subunit (atpB) gene in the chloroplast genome of C. reinhardtii, but is located at a position 92 kb away in the other single copy region. The uninterrupted open reading frame for the atpE gene is 423 bp, and the epsilon subunit exhibits 43% derived amino acid homology to that from spinach. Codon usage for the atpE gene follows the restricted pattern seen in other C. reinhardtii chloroplast genes.The genes for the CF0 subunits I (atpF) and IV (atpI) of the ATPase complex have also been mapped on the chloroplast genome of C. reinhardtii. The six chloroplast ATPase genes in C. reinhardtii are dispersed individually between the two single copy regions of the chloroplast genome, an organization strikingly different from the highly conserved arrangement in two operon-like units seen in chloroplast genomes of higher plants.Abbreviations bp base pairs - CF1 chloroplast coupling factor 1 - CF0 chloroplast coupling factor 0 - F1 coupling factor 1 - F0 coupling factor 0 - kb kilobase pairs  相似文献   

20.
A positive clone against pea (Pisum sativum L.) chloroplast fructose-1,6-bisphosphatase (FBPase; EC 3.1.3.11) antibodies was obtained from a copy DNA (cDNA) library in λgt11. The insert was 1261 nucleotides long, and had an open reading frame of 1143 base pairs with coding capability for the whole FBPase subunit and a fragment of a putative processing peptide. An additional 115 base pairs corresponding to a 3′-untranslated region coding for an mRNA poly(A)+ tail were also found in the clone. The deduced sequence for the FBPase subunit was a 357-amino-acid protein of molecular mass 39253 daltons (Da), showing 82–88% absolute homology with four chloroplastic FBPases sequenced earlier. The 3.1-kilobase (kb)KpnI-SacI fragment of the λgt11 derivative was subcloned between theKpnI-SacI restriction sites of pTZ18R to yield plasmid pAMC100. Lysates ofEscherichia coli (pAMC100) showed FBPase activity; this was purified as a 170-kDa protein which, upon sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, displayed a 44-kDa band. As occurs with native FBPases, this indicates a homotetrameric structure for the expressed FBPase. When assayed under excess Mg2+ (10 mM), the expressed enzyme had a higher affinity for the substrate than the native pea leaf FBPase; this parameter appears to be substantiated by a tenfold higher specific activity than that of the native enzyme. However, when activated with dithiothreitol plus saturating concentrations of pea thioredoxin (Td) f, both FBPase had similar activities, with a 4:1 Td f-FBPase stoichiometry. In contrast to the native pea chloroplast FBPase, theE. coli-expressed enzyme did not react with the monoclonal antibody GR-PB5. It also had a higher heat sensitivity, with 42% residual activity after heating for 30 min at 60°C, conditions which preserved the native enzyme in a fully active state. These results show the existence of some difference(s) in the conformation of the two FBPases; this could be a consequence of a different expression of the genomic and cDNA clones, or be due to the need for some factor for the correct assembly of the oligomeric structure of the native chloroplast enzyme. Accession number for pea chloroplast FBPase coding sequence: X68826 in the European Molecular Biology Laboratory (EMBL)  相似文献   

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