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1.
The 33-, 23-, and 16-kDa proteins of the photosynthetic oxygen-evolving complex are synthesized as precursors in the cytoplasm and transported into the thylakoid lumen of higher plant chloroplasts. In this report we have analyzed the import and maturation of these precursors, using reconstituted protein import assays and partially purified preparations of the processing peptidases involved. Precursors of the 33- and 23-kDa proteins from Spinacia and Triticum aestivum are processed by a stromal peptidase to intermediate forms; polypeptides of similar size are observed during the transport of these precursors and possibly that of the 16-kDa protein, into isolated chloroplasts. Complete maturation of the 33- and 23-kDa proteins is carried out by a thylakoidal peptidase shown previously to be involved in plastocyanin biogenesis. The data support an import mechanism involving successive cleavages by the stromal and thylakoidal processing peptidases.  相似文献   

2.
The import of cytoplasmically synthesized proteins into chloroplasts involves an interaction between at least two components; the precursor protein, and the import apparatus in the chloroplast envelope membrane. This review summarizes the information available about each of these components. Precursor proteins consist of an amino terminal transit peptide attached to a passenger protein. Transit peptides from various precurosrs are diverse with respect to length and amino acid sequence; analysis of their sequences has not revealed insight into their mode of action. A variety of foreign passenger proteins can be imported into chloroplasts when a transit peptide is present at the amino terminus. However, foreign passenger proteins are not imported as efficiently as natural passenger proteins, and some chimeric precursor proteins are not imported into chloroplasts at all. Therefore, the passenger protein, as well as the transit peptide, influences the import process. Import begins by binding of the precursor to the chloroplast surface. It has been suggested that this binding is mediated by a receptor, but evidence to support this hypothesis remains incomplete and a receptor protein has not yet been characterized. Protein translocation requires energy derived from ATP hydrolysis, although there are conflicting reports as to where hydrolysis occurs and it is unclear how this energy is utilized. The mechanism(s) whereby proteins are translocated across either the two envelope membranes or the thylakoid membrane is not known.Abbreviations EPSP 5-enolpyruvyulshikimate-3-phosphate - LHCP Chlorophyll a/b binding protein of the light-harvesting complex - NPT-II Neomycin phosphotransferase II - PC Plastocyanin - Pr Precursor - Rubisco Ribulose-1,5,-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase - SS Small subunit of Rubisco  相似文献   

3.
Many chloroplast proteins are synthesized in the cytoplasm as precursors which contain an amino terminal transit peptide. These precursors are subsequently imported into chloroplast and targeted to one of several organellar locations. This import is mediated by the transit peptide, which is cleaved off during import. We have used the transit peptides of ferredoxin (chloroplast stroma) and plastocyanin (thylakoid lumen) to study chloroplast protein import and intra-organellar routing toward different compartments. Chimeric genes were constructed that encode precursor proteins in which the transit peptides are linked to yeast mitochondrial manganese superoxide dismutase. Chloroplast protein import and localization experiments show that both chimeric proteins are imported into the chloroplast stroma and processed. The plastocyanin transit sequence did not direct superoxide dismutase to the thylakoids; this protein was found in the stroma as an intermediate that still contains part of the plastocyanin transit peptide. The organelle specificity of these chimeric precursors reflected the transit peptide parts of the molecules, because neither the ferredoxin and plastocyanin precursors nor the chimeric proteins were imported into isolated yeast mitochondria.  相似文献   

4.
The 33- and 23-kDa proteins of the photosynthetic oxygen-evolving complex are synthesized in the cytosol as larger precursors and transported into the thylakoid lumen via stromal intermediate forms. We have investigated the energetics of protein transport across the thylakoid membrane using import assays that utilize either intact chloroplasts or isolated thylakoids. We have found that the light-driven import of the 23-kDa protein into isolated thylakoids is almost completely inhibited by electron transport inhibitors or by the ionophore nigericin but not by valinomycin. These compounds have similar effects in chloroplast import assays: precursors of both the 33- and 23-kDa proteins are imported and processed to intermediate forms in the stroma, but transport into the thylakoid lumen is blocked when electron transport is inhibited or nigericin is present. These results indicate that the transport of these proteins across the thylakoid membrane requires a protonmotive force and that the dominant component in this respect is the proton gradient and not the electrical potential.  相似文献   

5.
Most proteins in chloroplasts are encoded by the nuclear genome and synthesized in the cytosol with N-terminal extensions called transit peptides. Transit peptides function as the import signal to chloroplasts. The import process requires several protein components in the envelope and stroma and also requires the hydrolysis of ATP. Lipids have been implicated in the import process based on theories or experiments with in vitro model systems. We show here that chloroplasts isolated from an Arabidopsis mutant deficient in the plastid lipid digalactosyl diacylglycerol (DGD) were normal in importing a chloroplast outer membrane protein, but were defective in importing precursor proteins targeted to the interior of chloroplasts. The impairment includes the binding, or docking, step of the import process that is supported by 100 μM ATP.  相似文献   

6.
It is unclear how transit peptides target nuclear-encoded precursor proteins to the chloroplast. This study establishes the feasibility of using synthetic peptides as competitive inhibitors of chloroplast protein import and as probes for the function of domains within transit peptides. We show that peptide pL(1-20), MAASTMALSSPAFAGKAVNY, an analog of the NH2 terminus of a pre-light harvesting chlorophyll a/b protein II from Arabidopsis, inhibits the import of several Arabidopsis and pea precursor proteins into pea chloroplasts. Inhibition occurs at a step between the initial binding of precursors to the chloroplast and the first proteolytic cleavage event and is not due to interference with ATP availability or chloroplast integrity. Presumably this reflects specific binding of the peptide to the import machinery in the chloroplast envelope. Our data are consistent with the suggestion (Karlin-Neumann, G. A., and Tobin, E. M. (1986) EMBO J. 5, 9-13) that two conserved blocks of amino acids near the NH2-terminus of transit peptides (spanned by peptide pL(1-20] participate in protein targeting. Computer analysis also shows peptide pL(1-20) lacks the amphiphilic properties characteristic of pre-sequences of many nuclear-encoded mitochondrial proteins. This shows a difference in the mechanisms for targeting proteins to chloroplasts and mitochondria.  相似文献   

7.
K Ko  A R Cashmore 《The EMBO journal》1989,8(11):3187-3194
Various chimeric precursors and deletions of the 33 kd oxygen-evolving protein (OEE1) were constructed to study the mechanism by which chloroplast proteins are imported and targeted to the thylakoid lumen. The native OEE1 precursor was imported into isolated chloroplasts, processed and localized in the thylakoid lumen. Replacement of the OEE1 transit peptide with the transit peptide of the small subunit of ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase, a stromal protein, resulted in redirection of mature OEE1 into the stromal compartment of the chloroplast. Utilizing chimeric transit peptides and block deletions we demonstrated that the 85 residue OEE1 transit peptide contains separate signal domains for importing and targeting the thylakoid lumen. The importing domain, which mediates translocation across the two membranes of the chloroplast envelope, is present in the N-terminal 58 amino acids. The thylakoid lumen targeting domain, which mediates translocation across the thylakoid membrane, is located within the C-terminal 27 residues of the OEE1 transit peptide. Chimeric precursors were constructed and used in in vitro import experiments to demonstrate that the OEE1 transit peptide is capable of importing and targeting foreign proteins to the thylakoid lumen.  相似文献   

8.
Protein import into chloroplasts requires a transit peptide, which interacts with the chloroplast transport apparatus and leads to translocation of the protein across the chloroplast envelope. While the amino acid sequences of many transit peptides are known, functional domains have been difficult to identify. Previous studies suggest that the carboxyl terminus of the transit peptide for ribulose bisphosphate carboxylase small subunit is important for both translocation across the chloroplast envelope and proper processing of the precursor protein. We dissected this region using in vitro mutagenesis, creating a set of mutants with small changes in primary structure predicted to cause alterations in secondary structure. The import behavior of the mutant proteins was assessed using isolated chloroplasts. Our results show that removal of a conserved arginine residue in this region results in impaired processing, but does not necessarily affect import rates. In contrast, substituting amino acids with low reverse turn or amphiphilic potential for other original residues affected import rate but not processing.  相似文献   

9.
A bacterial thermostable cellulase, the endo-1,4--D-glucanase E1 from Acidothermus cellulolyticus, was imported into chloroplasts, and an active enzyme was recovered both in vitro and in vivo. Precursor fusion proteins were synthesized with E1 or its catalytic domain, CD, fused to the transit peptide of ferredoxin or ribulose-bisphosphate carboxylase activase for stromal targeting. A spacer region of 1, 5 or 15 amino acids was included carboxy to the transit peptide. The efficiency of import and processing by the stromal processing peptidase depended on the nature of the transit peptide and the passenger protein, and increased with the length of the spacer between them. Besides finding E1 or CD in the stroma, protein was arrested in the envelope during import showing that structural features of E1 and CD, along with their proximity to the transit peptide, influence translocation. The cellulose binding domain and/or serine/proline/threoline-rich linker of E1 may impede efficient import. Significantly, most precursors for E1 and CD synthesized by in vitro translation possessed endoglucanse activity that was temperature-dependent, and required the residues AGGGY at the N-terminus of E1 and CD. Furthermore, activity was detected upon import into chloroplasts. Based on the in vitro analyses, five precursor fusion proteins were selected to determine if E1 and CD would be successfully targeted to chloroplasts in vivo. In transgenic tobacco plants, E1 and CD accumulated in both the stromal and membrane fractions and, importantly, chloroplast extracts showed endoglucanase activity.  相似文献   

10.
Protein transport across organelles' membranes requires that precursor proteins adopt an unfolded structure in order to be translocated by the import machinery. Ferredoxin-NADP+ reductase precursor, as well as many others, acquires a tightly folded structure that needs to be unfolded before or during its import. Several steps of chloroplast protein import are not fully understood. In particular, the role of different regions of the precursor protein has not been completely elucidated. In this work, we have studied the import into chloroplasts of precursor proteins with inclusions of amino acid spacers between the transit peptide and the mature protein, and with deletions in the N-terminal region of the mature enzyme. We measured the import rate constants for these precursors and the results indicate that the distance between the transit peptide and the core of the mature protein determines the import kinetics. The longer precursors were imported into the organelle faster than the wild type form. Precursors with deletions in the N-terminal region of the mature protein also showed increased import rates compared to the wild type. Homology studies amongst all family members reveal that only chloroplastic proteins possess this region. We suggest that even if the first amino acids of the mature protein do not contribute to its overall structural stability, they condition the kinetic parameters of the import reaction. Besides, the distance between the transit peptide and the mature protein core may be modulating the import rate at which the chloroplast incorporates this protein from the cytosol.  相似文献   

11.
In order to ascertain whether there is one site for the import of precursor proteins into chloroplasts or whether different precursor proteins are imported via different import machineries, chloroplasts were incubated with large quantities of the precursor of the 33 kDa subunit of the oxygen-evolving complex (pOE33) or the precursor of the light-harvesting chlorophyll a/b-binding protein (pLHCP) and tested for their ability to import a wide range of other chloroplast precursor proteins. Both pOE33 and pLHCP competed for import into chloroplasts with precursors of the stromally-targeted small subunit of Rubisco (pSSu), ferredoxin NADP(+) reductase (pFNR) and porphobilinogen deaminase; the thylakoid membrane proteins LHCP and the Rieske iron-sulphur protein (pRieske protein); ferrochelatase and the gamma subunit of the ATP synthase (which are both associated with the thylakoid membrane); the thylakoid lumenal protein plastocyanin and the phosphate translocator, an integral membrane protein of the inner envelope. The concentrations of pOE33 or pLHCP required to cause half-maximal inhibition of import ranged between 0.2 and 4.9 microM. These results indicate that all of these proteins are imported into the chloroplast by a common import machinery. Incubation of chloroplasts with pOE33 inhibited the formation of early import intermediates of pSSu, pFNR and pRieske protein.  相似文献   

12.
Although amino-terminal transit peptides of chloroplastic precursor proteins are known to be necessary and sufficient for import into chloroplasts, the mechanism by which they mediate this process is not understood. Another important question is whether different precursors share a common transport apparatus. We used 20-residue synthetic peptides corresponding to regions of the transit peptide of the precursor to the small subunit of ribulose bisphosphate carboxylase (prSS) as competitive inhibitors for the binding and translocation of precursor proteins into chloroplasts. Synthetic peptides with sequences corresponding to either end of the transit peptide had little to no effect on binding of prSS to chloroplasts, but significantly inhibited its translocation. Synthetic peptides corresponding to the central region of the transit peptide inhibited binding of prSS to chloroplasts. Each of the peptides inhibited binding or translocation of precursors to light-harvesting chlorophyll a/b protein, ferredoxin, and plastocyanin in the same manner and to a similar extent as prSS transport was inhibited. The results presented in this paper suggest that the central regions of the transit peptide of prSS mediate binding to the chloroplastic surface, whereas the ends of this transit peptide are more important for translocation across the envelope. Furthermore, all of the precursors tested appear to share components in the transport apparatus even though they are sorted to different chloroplastic compartments.  相似文献   

13.
The 33- and 23-kDa proteins of the photosynthetic oxygen-evolving complex are synthesized in the cytosol and targeted into the thylakoid lumen by bipartite presequences. In this report, we describe conditions for the efficient import of each of these proteins by isolated pea thylakoids. Import of the 33-kDa protein requires both light and stromal extract. The probable function of the stromal extract is to provide stromal processing peptidase to remove the first "envelope transit" signal of the presequence. Import of the 23-kDa protein is also driven by light, but stromal extract is not required for import; furthermore, efficient import is still observed if the precursor is modified to completely block cleavage by residual stromal processing peptidase activity. The intermediate form of the 23-kDa protein, which is generated by incubation of the precursor protein with stromal processing peptidase, is also efficiently imported. The results indicate that the thylakoidal protein transport system can import both the precursor and intermediate forms of the 23-kDa protein, but probably only the intermediate form of the 33-kDa protein.  相似文献   

14.
Mitochondrial precursor proteins synthesized in rabbit reticulocyte lysate (RRL) are readily imported into mitochondria, whereas the same precursors synthesized in wheat germ extract (WGE) fail to be imported. We have investigated factors that render import incompetence from WGE. A precursor that does not require addition of extramitochondrial ATP for import, the F(A)d ATP synthase subunit, is imported from WGE. Import of chimeric constructs between precursors of the F(A)d protein and alternative oxidase (AOX) with switched presequences revealed that the mature domain of the F(A)d precursor defines the import competence in WGE as only the construct containing the presequence of AOX and mature portion of F(A)d (pAOX-mF(A)d) could be imported. Import competence of F(A)d and pAOX-mF(A)d correlated with solubility of these precursors in WGE, however, solubilization of import-incompetent precursors with urea did not restore import competence. Addition of RRL to WGE-synthesized precursors did not stimulate import but addition of WGE to the RRL-synthesized precursors or to the over-expressed mitochondrial precursor derived from the F1beta ATP synthase precursor inhibited import into mitochondria. The dual-targeted glutathione reductase precursor synthesized in WGE was imported into chloroplasts, but not into mitochondria. Antibodies against the 14-3-3 guidance complex characterized for chloroplast targeting were able to immunoprecipitate all of the precursors tested except the F(A)d ATP synthase precursor. Our results point to the conclusion that the import incompetence of WGE-synthesized mitochondrial precursors is not presequence dependent and is a result of interaction of WGE inhibitory factors with the mature portion of precursor proteins.  相似文献   

15.
Gietl C 《Plant physiology》1992,100(2):557-559
Malate dehydrogenase isoenzymes catalyzing the oxidation of malate to oxaloacetate are highly active enzymes in mitochondria, in peroxisomes, in chloroplasts, and in the cytosol. Determination of the primary structure of the isoenzymes has disclosed that they are encoded in different nuclear genes. All three organelle-targeted malate dehydrogenases are synthesized with an amino terminal extension that is cleaved off in connection with the import of the enzyme precursor into the organelle. The sequence of the 27 amino acids of the mitochondrial transit peptide is unrelated to the 37-residue glyoxysomal transit peptide, which in turn is entirely different in sequence from the 57-residue chloroplastic transit peptide. With the exception of malate dehydrogenase and 3-ketoacyl thiolase, peroxisomal enzymes are synthesized without transit peptides and are frequently translocated into the organelle with a peroxisomal targeting signal consisting of a conserved tripeptide at the carboxy terminus of the protein. Based on the observation that this tripeptide (Ala-His-Leu) occurs in the transit peptides of glyoxysomal malate dehydrogenase and peroxisomal 3-ketoacyl thiolase, the possible significance of amino terminal transit peptides for peroxisome import is discussed.  相似文献   

16.
Most mitochondrial and chloroplast proteins are synthesized on cytosolic polyribosomes as precursor proteins, with an N-terminal signal sequence that targets the precursor to the correct organelle. In mitochondria, the chaperone Hsp70 functions as a molecular motor, pulling the precursor across the mitochondrial membranes; 97.0% of plant mitochondrial presequences contain an Hsp70 binding site. In chloroplasts, the outer envelope, intermembrane space and a stromal Hsp70 are thought to participate in protein import; 82.5% of chloroplast transit peptides have an Hsp70 binding site. The interaction of signal peptides with Hsp70 during the import process is supported by biochemical and bioinformatic studies.  相似文献   

17.
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   

18.
The vast majority of chloroplast proteins are synthesized in precursor form on cytosolic ribosomes. Chloroplast precursor proteins have cleavable, N-terminal targeting signals called transit peptides. Transit peptides direct precursor proteins to the chloroplast in an organelle-specific way. They can be phosphorylated by a cytosolic protein kinase, and this leads to the formation of a cytosolic guidance complex. The guidance complex--comprising precursor, hsp70 and 14-3-3 proteins, as well as several unidentified components--docks at the outer envelope membrane. Translocation of precursor proteins across the envelope is achieved by the joint action of molecular machines called Toc (translocon at the outer envelope membrane of chloroplasts) and Tic (translocon at the inner envelope membrane of chloroplasts), respectively. The action of the Toc/Tic apparatus requires the hydrolysis of ATP and GTP at different levels, indicating energetic requirements and regulatory properties of the import process. The main subunits of the Toc and Tic complexes have been identified and characterized in vivo, in organello and in vitro. Phylogenetic evidence suggests that several translocon subunits are of cyanobacterial origin, indicating that today's import machinery was built around a prokaryotic core.  相似文献   

19.
The vast majority of chloroplast proteins are synthesized in precursor form on cytosolic ribosomes. Chloroplast precursor proteins have cleavable, N-terminal targeting signals called transit peptides. Transit peptides direct precursor proteins to the chloroplast in an organelle-specific way. They can be phosphorylated by a cytosolic protein kinase, and this leads to the formation of a cytosolic guidance complex. The guidance complex--comprising precursor, hsp70 and 14-3-3 proteins, as well as several unidentified components--docks at the outer envelope membrane. Translocation of precursor proteins across the envelope is achieved by the joint action of molecular machines called Toc (translocon at the outer envelope membrane of chloroplasts) and Tic (translocon at the inner envelope membrane of chloroplasts), respectively. The action of the Toc/Tic apparatus requires the hydrolysis of ATP and GTP at different levels, indicating energetic requirements and regulatory properties of the import process. The main subunits of the Toc and Tic complexes have been identified and characterized in vivo, in organello and in vitro. Phylogenetic evidence suggests that several translocon subunits are of cyanobacterial origin, indicating that today's import machinery was built around a prokaryotic core.  相似文献   

20.
Phosphorylation of the transit peptide of several chloroplast-targeted proteins enables the binding of 14-3-3 proteins. The complex that forms, together with Hsp70, has been demonstrated to be an intermediate in the chloroplast protein import pathway in vitro[May, T. & Soll, J. (2000) Plant Cell 12, 53-63]. In this paper we report that mutagenesis (in order to remove the phosphorylation site) of the transit peptide of the small subunit of ribulose bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase did not affect its ability to target green fluorescent protein to chloroplasts in vivo. We also found no mistargeting to other organelles such as mitochondria. Similar alterations to the transit peptides of histidyl- or cysteinyl-tRNA synthetase, which are dual-targeted to chloroplasts and mitochondria, had no effect on their ability to target green fluorescent protein in vivo. Thus, phosphorylation of the transit peptide is not responsible for the specificity of chloroplast import.  相似文献   

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