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1.
Thioredoxins are small ubiquitous proteins which act as general protein disulfide reductases in living cells. Chloroplasts contain two distinct thioredoxins ( f and m) with different phylogenetic origin. Both act as enzyme regulatory proteins but have different specificities towards target enzymes. Thioredoxin f (Trx f), which shares only low sequence identity with thioredoxin m (Trx m) and with all other known thioredoxins, activates enzymes of the Calvin cycle and other photosynthetic processes. Trx m shows high sequence similarity with bacterial thioredoxins and activates other chloroplast enzymes. The here described structural studies of the two chloroplast thioredoxins were carried out in order to gain insight into the structure/function relationships of these proteins. Crystal structures were determined for oxidized, recombinant thioredoxin f (Trx f-L) and at the N terminus truncated form of it (Trx f-S), as well as for oxidized and reduced thioredoxin m (at 2.1 and 2.3 A resolution, respectively). Whereas thioredoxin f crystallized as a monomer, both truncated thioredoxin f and thioredoxin m crystallized as non-covalent dimers. The structures of thioredoxins f and m exhibit the typical thioredoxin fold consisting of a central twisted five-stranded beta-sheet surrounded by four alpha-helices. Thioredoxin f contains an additional alpha-helix at the N terminus and an exposed third cysteine close to the active site. The overall three-dimensional structures of the two chloroplast thioredoxins are quite similar. However, the two proteins have a significantly different surface topology and charge distribution around the active site. An interesting feature which might significantly contribute to the specificity of thioredoxin f is an inherent flexibility of its active site, which has expressed itself crystallographically in two different crystal forms.  相似文献   

2.
In contrast to prokaryotes, which typically possess one thioredoxin gene per genome, three different thioredoxin types have been described in higher plants. All are encoded by nuclear genes, but thioredoxins m and f are chloroplastic while thioredoxins h have no transit peptide and are probably cytoplasmic. We have cloned and sequencedArabidopsis thaliana genomic fragments encoding the five previously described thioredoxins h, as well as a sixth gene encoding a new thioredoxin h. In spite of the high divergence of the sequences, five of them possess two introns at positions identical to the previously sequenced tobacco thioredoxin h gene, while a single one has only the first intron. The recently published sequence ofChlamydomonas thioredoxin h shows three introns, two at the same positions as in higher plants. This strongly suggests a common origin for all cytoplasmic thioredoxins of plants and green algae. In addition, we have cloned and sequenced pea DNA genomic fragments encoding thioredoxins m and f. The thioredoxin m sequence shows only one intron between the regions encoding the transit peptide and the mature protein, supporting the prokaryotic origin of this sequence and suggesting that its association with the transit peptide has been facilitated by exon shuffling. In contrast, the thioredoxin f sequence shows two introns, one at the same position as an intron in various plant and animal thioredoxins and the second at the same position as an intron in thioredoxin domains of disulfide isomerases. This strongly supports the hypothesis of a eukaryotic origin for chloroplastic thioredoxin f.  相似文献   

3.
Enzymes that are regulated by the ferredoxin/thioredoxin system in chloroplasts — fructose-1,6-bisphosphatase (FBPase), sedoheptulose-1,7-bisphosphatase purified from two different types of photosynthetic prokaryotes (cyanobacteria, purple sulfur bacteria) and tested for a response to thioredoxins. Each of the enzymes from the cyanobacterium Nostoc muscorum, an oxygenic organism known to contain the ferredoxin/thioredoxin system, was activated by thioredoxins that had been reduced either chemically by dithiothreitol or photochemically by reduced ferredoxin and ferredoxin-thioredoxin reductase. Like their chloroplast counterparts, N. muscorum FBPase and SBPase were activated preferentially by reduced thioredoxin f. SBPase was also partially activated by thioredoxin m. PRK, which was present in two regulatory forms in N. muscorum, was activated similarly by thioredoxins f and m. Despite sharing the capacity for regulation by thioredoxins, the cyanobacterial FBPase and SBPase target enzymes differed antigenically from their chloroplast counterparts. The corresponding enzymes from Chromatium vinosum, an anoxygenic photosynthetic purple bacterium found recently to contain the NADP/thioredoxin sytem, differed from both those of cyanobacteria and chloroplasts in showing no response to reduced thioredoxin. Instead, C. vinosum FBPase, SBPase, and PRK activities were regulated by a metabolite effector, 5-AMP. The evidence is in accord with the conclusion that thioredoxins function in regulating the reductive pentose phosphate cycle in oxygenic prokaryotes (cyanobacteria) that contain the ferredoxin/thioredoxin system, but not in anoxygenic prokaryotes (photosynthetic purple bacteria) that contain the NADP/thioredoxin system. In organisms of the latter type, enzyme effectors seem to play a dominant role in regulating photosynthetic carbon dioxide assimilation.  相似文献   

4.
Cyanobacteria perform oxygenic photosynthesis, which makes them unique among the prokaryotes, and this feature together with their abundance and worldwide distribution renders them a central ecological role. Cyanobacteria and chloroplasts of plants and algae are believed to share a common ancestor and the modern chloroplast would thus be the remnant of an endosymbiosis between a eukaryotic cell and an ancestral oxygenic photosynthetic prokaryote. Chloroplast metabolic processes are coordinated with those of the other cellular compartments and are strictly controlled by means of regulatory systems that commonly involve redox reactions. Disulphide/dithiol exchange catalysed by thioredoxin is a fundamental example of such regulation and represents the molecular mechanism for light-dependent redox control of an ever-increasing number of chloroplast enzymatic activities. In contrast to chloroplast thioredoxins, the functions of the cyanobacterial thioredoxins have long remained elusive, despite their common origin. The sequenced genomes of several cyanobacterial species together with novel experimental approaches involving proteomics have provided new tools for re-examining the roles of the thioredoxin systems in these organisms. Thus, each cyanobacterial genome encodes between one and eight thioredoxins and all components necessary for the reduction of thioredoxins. Screening for thioredoxin target proteins in cyanobacteria indicates that assimilation and storage of nutrients, as well as some central metabolic pathways, are regulated by mechanisms involving disulphide/dithiol exchange, which could be catalysed by thioredoxins or related thiol-containing proteins.  相似文献   

5.
Thioredoxin is a small redox protein that functions as a reducing agent and modulator of enzyme activity. A gene for an unusual thioredoxin was previously isolated from the cyanobacterium Anabaena sp. strain PCC 7120 and cloned and expressed in Escherichia coli. However, the protein could not be detected in Anabaena cells (J. Alam, S. Curtis, F. K. Gleason, M. Gerami-Nejad, and J. A. Fuchs, J. Bacteriol. 171:162-171, 1989). Polyclonal antibodies to the atypical thioredoxin were prepared, and the protein was detected by Western immunoblotting. It occurs at very low levels in extracts of Anabaena sp. and other cyanobacteria. No antibody cross-reaction was observed in extracts of eukaryotic algae, plants, or eubacteria. The anti-Anabaena thioredoxin antibodies did react with another unusual thioredoxin-glutaredoxin produced by bacteriophage T4. Like the T4 protein and other glutaredoxins, the unusual cyanobacterial thioredoxin can be reduced by glutathione. The Anabaena protein can also activate enzymes of carbon metabolism and has some functional similarity to spinach chloroplast thioredoxin f. However, it shows only 23% amino acid sequence identity to the spinach chloroplast protein and appears to be distantly related to other thioredoxins. The data indicate that cyanobacteria, like plant chloroplasts, have two dissimilar thioredoxins. One is related to the more common protein found in other prokaryotes, and the other is an unusual thioredoxin that can be reduced by glutathione and may function in glucose catabolism.  相似文献   

6.
RT-PCR从玉米幼叶总RNA中克隆f型和m型硫氧还蛋白(Thioredoxin, Trx)的编码基因,分别将两种类型Trx活性中心的第二个保守Cys残基定点突变成Ser残基和Ala残基。在大肠杆菌分别重组表达和纯化了含组氨酸标签的Trx及其突变体蛋白,SDS-PAGE显示纯化的蛋白显示一条主带,蛋白分子量分别估计为f型Trx为18kDa,m型Trx为14kDa;纯化的含有SUMO标签融合Trx,用SUMO专一性SUMO水解酶Ulp除去SUMO,等点聚焦电泳显示m型和f型Trx的等电点分别为4.6和5.9。m型Trx比f型Trx有更强的还原胰岛素能力,而突变体蛋白几乎没有还原能力。用Cys残基专一性标记化合物AMS标记Trx,显示野生型Trx有氧化还原态,而突变体蛋白仅有还原态。SDS-PAGE电泳显示固定化的f型Trx突变体比m型Trx突变体捕获的玉米幼叶靶蛋白更具有多样性。  相似文献   

7.
A procedure has been developed for the simultaneous purification to apparent homogeneity of chloroplast thioredoxins f and m, and nonchloroplast thioredoxin h, from the green alga Acetabularia mediterranea. In the chloroplast fraction, three thioredoxins were isolated: one f type thioredoxin (Mr 13.4 kDa) and two m type thioredoxin forms (Mr of 12.9 and 13.8 kDa). A Western blot analysis of crude and purified chloroplast thioredoxin preparations revealed that Acetabularia thioredoxin m was immunologically related to its higher-plant counterparts whereas thioredoxin f was not. In the nonchloroplast fraction, a single form of thioredoxin h (Mr 13.4 kDa) and its associated enzyme NADP-thioredoxin reductase (NTR) were evidenced. Acetabularia NTR was partially purified and shown to be an holoenzyme composed of two 33.0-kDa subunits as is the case for other plant and bacterial NTRs. Similarity was confirmed by immunological tests: the algal enzyme was recognized by antibodies to spinach and Escherichia coli NTRs. Acetabularia thioredoxin h seemed to be more distant from higher-plant type h thioredoxins as recognition by antibodies to thioredoxin h from spinach and wheat was weak. The algal thioredoxin h was also slightly active with spinach and E. coli NTRs. These results suggest that in green algae as in the green tissues of higher plants the NADP and chloroplast thioredoxin systems are present simultaneously, and might play an important regulatory role in their respective cellular compartments.  相似文献   

8.
Procedures are described for the purification to homogeneity of chloroplast thioredoxins f and m from leaves of corn (Zea mays, a C4 plant) and spinach (Spinacea oleracea, a C3 plant). The C3 and C4f thioredoxins were similar immunologically and biochemically, but differed in certain of their physiochemical properties. The f thioredoxins from the two species were capable of activating both NADP-malate dehydrogenase (EC 1.1.1.37) and fructose-1,6-bisphosphatase (EC 3.1.3.11) when tested in standard thioredoxin assays. Relative to its spinach counterpart, corn thioredoxin f showed a greater molecular mass (15.0-16.0 kDa vs 10.5 kDa), lower isoelectric point (ca. 5.2 vs 6.0), and lower ability to form a stable noncovalent complex with its target fructose bisphosphatase enzyme. The C3 and C4 m thioredoxins were similar in their specificity (ability to activate NADP-malate dehydrogenase, and not fructose-1,6-bisphosphatase) and isoelectric points (ca. 4.8), but differed slightly in molecular mass (13.0 kDa for spinach vs 13.5 kDa for corn) and substantially in their immunological properties. Results obtained in conjunction with these studies demonstrated that the thioredoxin m-linked activation of NADP-malate dehydrogenase in selectively enhanced by the presence of halide ions (e.g., chloride) and by an organic solvent (e.g., 2-propanol). The results suggest that in vivo NADP-malate dehydrogenase interacts with thylakoid membranes and is regulated to a greater extent by thioredoxin m than thioredoxin f.  相似文献   

9.
We have taken advantage of the transformation properties of the cyanobacterium Anacystis nidulans R2 to investigate the importance of thioredoxin for photosynthetic growth. The gene encoding thioredoxin m, designated trxM, was cloned from A. nidulans using a synthetic oligonucleotide probe. Based on the nucleotide sequence, thioredoxin m of A. nidulans is composed of 107 amino acids and shares 84, 48, and 48% sequence identity with thioredoxins from Anabaena, spinach, and Escherichia coli, respectively. The trxM gene is single copy and is transcribed on a 510-nucleotide mRNA. We demonstrate that disruption of the trxM gene with a kanamycin resistance gene cartridge is a lethal mutation. Although dispensable in E. coli, thioredoxin is essential for the photosynthetic growth of A. nidulans.  相似文献   

10.
Isomers in thioredoxins of spinach chloroplasts   总被引:7,自引:0,他引:7  
We have developed a method for the concomitant purification of several components of the ferredoxin/thioredoxin system of spinach chloroplasts. By applying this method to spinach-leaf extract or spinach-chloroplast extract we separated and purified three thioredoxins indigenous to chloroplasts. The three thioredoxins, when reduced, will activate certain chloroplast enzymes such as fructose-1,6-bisphosphatase and NADP-dependent malate dehydrogenase. Fructose-1,6-bisphosphatase is activated by thioredoxin f exclusively. Malate dehydrogenase is activated by thioredoxin mb and thioredoxin mc in a similar way, and it is also activated by thioredoxin f but with different kinetics. All three thioredoxins have very similar relative molecular masses of about 12,000 but distinct isoelectric points of 6.1 (thioredoxin f), 5.2 (thioredoxin mb) and 5.0 (thioredoxin mc). The amino acid composition as well as the C-terminal and N-terminal sequences have been determined for each thioredoxin. Thioredoxin f exhibits clear differences in amino acid composition and terminal sequences when compared with the m-type thioredoxins. Thioredoxin mb and thioredoxin mc, however, are very similar, the only difference being an additional lysine residue at the N-terminus of thioredoxin mb. Amino acid analyses, terminal sequences, immunological tests and the activation properties of the thioredoxins support our conclusion that thioredoxins mb and mc are N-terminal redundant isomers coming from one gene whereas thioredoxin f is a different protein coded by a different gene.  相似文献   

11.
Redox regulation based on disulfide-dithiol conversion catalyzed by thioredoxins is an important component of chloroplast function. The reducing power is provided by ferredoxin reduced by the photosynthetic electron transport chain. In addition, chloroplasts are equipped with a peculiar NADPH-dependent thioredoxin reductase, termed NTRC, with a joint thioredoxin domain at the carboxyl terminus. Because NADPH can be produced by the oxidative pentose phosphate pathway during the night, NTRC is important to maintain the chloroplast redox homeostasis under light limitation. NTRC is exclusive for photosynthetic organisms such as plants, algae, and some, but not all, cyanobacteria. Phylogenetic analysis suggests that chloroplast NTRC originated from an ancestral cyanobacterial enzyme. While the biochemical properties of plant NTRC are well documented, little is known about the cyanobacterial enzyme. With the aim of comparing cyanobacterial and plant NTRCs, we have expressed the full-length enzyme from the cyanobacterium Anabaena species PCC 7120 as well as site-directed mutant variants and truncated polypeptides containing the NTR or the thioredoxin domains of the protein. Immunological and kinetic analysis showed a high similarity between NTRCs from plants and cyanobacteria. Both enzymes efficiently reduced 2-Cys peroxiredoxins from plants and from Anabaena but not from the cyanobacterium Synechocystis. Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) NTRC knockout plants were transformed with the Anabaena NTRC gene. Despite a lower content of NTRC than in wild-type plants, the transgenic plants showed significant recovery of growth and pigmentation. Therefore, the Anabaena enzyme fulfills functions of the plant enzyme in vivo, further emphasizing the similarity between cyanobacterial and plant NTRCs.  相似文献   

12.
Chloroplast thioredoxin m from the green alga Chlamydomomas reinhardtii is very efficiently reduced in vitro and in vivo in the presence of photoreduced ferredoxin and a ferredoxin dependent ferredoxin-thioredoxin reductase. Once reduced, thioredoxin m has the capability to quickly activate the NADP malate dehydrogenase (EC 1.1.1.82) a regulatory enzyme involved in an energy-dependent assimilation of carbon dioxide in C4 plants. This activation is the result of the reduction of two disulfide bridges by thioredoxin m, that are located at the N- and C-terminii of the NADP malate dehydrogenase. The molecular structure of thioredoxin m was solved using NMR and compared to other known thioredoxins. Thioredoxin m belongs to the prokaryotic type of thioredoxin, which is divergent from the eukaryotic-type thioredoxins also represented in plants by the h (cytosolic) and f (chloroplastic) types of thioredoxins. The dynamics of the molecule have been assessed using (15)N relaxation data and are found to correlate well with regions of disorder found in the calculated NMR ensemble. The results obtained provide a novel basis to interpret the thioredoxin dependence of the activation of chloroplast NADP-malate dehydrogenase. The specific catalytic mechanism that takes place in the active site of thioredoxins is also discussed on the basis of the recent new understanding and especially in the light of the dual general acid-base catalysis exerted on the two cysteines of the redox active site. It is proposed that the two cysteines of the redox active site may insulate each other from solvent attack by specific packing of invariable hydrophobic amino acids.  相似文献   

13.
Methionine (Met) in proteins can be oxidized to two diastereoisomers of methionine sulfoxide, Met‐S‐O and Met‐R‐O, which are reduced back to Met by two types of methionine sulfoxide reductases (MSRs), A and B, respectively. MSRs are generally supplied with reducing power by thioredoxins. Plants are characterized by a large number of thioredoxin isoforms, but those providing electrons to MSRs in vivo are not known. Three MSR isoforms, MSRA4, MSRB1 and MSRB2, are present in Arabidopsis thaliana chloroplasts. Under conditions of high light and long photoperiod, plants knockdown for each plastidial MSR type or for both display reduced growth. In contrast, overexpression of plastidial MSRBs is not associated with beneficial effects in terms of growth under high light. To identify the physiological reductants for plastidial MSRs, we analyzed a series of mutants deficient for thioredoxins f, m, x or y. We show that mutant lines lacking both thioredoxins y1 and y2 or only thioredoxin y2 specifically display a significantly reduced leaf MSR capacity (–25%) and growth characteristics under high light, related to those of plants lacking plastidial MSRs. We propose that thioredoxin y2 plays a physiological function in protein repair mechanisms as an electron donor to plastidial MSRs in photosynthetic organs.  相似文献   

14.
Thioredoxin h has been purified to electrophoretic homogeneity from spinach roots using a procedure devised for leaves. The root thioredoxin (h2 form) differed from chloroplast and animal thioredoxins in showing an atypical active site (Cys-Ala-Pro-Cys) but otherwise resembled animal thioredoxin in structure. Sequence data for a total of 72 residues of spinach root thioredoxin h2 (about 69% of the primary structure) showed 43-44% identity with rabbit and rat thioredoxin. Analysis of cell fractions from the endosperm of germinating castor beans revealed that thioredoxin h occurs in the cytosol, endoplasmic reticulum, and mitochondria. The present findings demonstrate a similarity between plant thioredoxin h and animal thioredoxins in structure and intracellular location and raise the question of whether these proteins have similar functions.  相似文献   

15.
Oxidation-reduction midpoint potentials were determined, as a function of pH, for the disulfide/dithiol couples of spinach and pea thioredoxins f, for spinach and Chlamydomonas reinhardtii thioredoxins m, for spinach ferredoxin:thioredoxin reductase (FTR), and for two enzymes regulated by thioredoxin f, spinach phosphoribulokinase (PRK) and the fructose-1,6-bisphosphatases (FBPase) from pea and spinach. Midpoint oxidation-reduction potential (Em) values at pH 7.0 of -290 mV for both spinach and pea thioredoxin f, -300 mV for both C. reinhardtii and spinach thioredoxin m, -320 mV for spinach FTR, -290 mV for spinach PRK, -315 mV for pea FBPase, and -330 mV for spinach FBPase were obtained. With the exception of spinach FBPase, titrations showed a single two-electron component at all pH values tested. Spinach FBPase exhibited a more complicated behavior, with a single two-electron component being observed at pH values >/= 7.0, but with two components being present at pH values <7.0. The slopes of plots of Em versus pH were close to the -60 mV/pH unit value expected for a process that involves the uptake of two protons per two electrons (i. e., the reduction of a disulfide to two fully protonated thiols) for thioredoxins f and m, for FTR, and for pea FBPase. The slope of the Em versus pH profile for PRK shows three regions, consistent with the presence of pKa values for the two regulatory cysteines in the region between pH 7.5 and 9.0.  相似文献   

16.
Screening of cDNA libraries at low stringency and complete sequencing of EST clones with homology to thioredoxins allowed us to characterize five new prokaryotic type Arabidopsis thaliana thioredoxins. All present N-terminal extensions with characteristics of transit peptides. Four are clustered in a phylogenetic tree with the chloroplastic thioredoxin m from red and green algae and higher plants, and their transit peptides have typical characteristics of chloroplastic transit peptides. One is clearly divergent and defines a new prokaryotic thioredoxin type that we have named thioredoxin x. Its transit peptide sequence presents characteristics of both chloroplastic and mitochondrial transit peptides. The five corresponding genes are expressed at different levels, but mostly in green tissues and in in-vitro cultivated cells.  相似文献   

17.
Two thioredoxin fractions had previously been reported to occur in Anabaena 7119 by Buchanan and co-workers (Yee, B. C., dela Torre, A., Crawford, N. A., Lara, C., Carlson, D. E., and Buchanan, B. B. (1981) Arch. Microbiol. 130, 14-18). These proteins were detected by their ability to activate spinach fructose-1,6-bisphosphatase (Fru-P2-ase). The partially purified proteins resembled similar thioredoxins found in spinach chloroplasts and were designated thioredoxin f (Tf) for the fraction most effective in activating spinach Fru-P2-ase and thioredoxin m (Tm) for the fraction most effective in activating spinach NADPH-malate dehydrogenase. Using the assay system of Yee and co-workers, we were able to separate and purify to homogeneity two thioredoxin fractions from Anabaena extracts. Tm corresponded to the thioredoxin fraction we had isolated and studied previously (Gleason, F. K., and Holmgren, A. (1981) J. Biol. Chem. 256, 8301-8309). The other fraction, Tf, was characterized further. Unlike the thioredoxins found in higher plants, the cyanobacterial thioredoxins do not appear to be related. Anabaena thioredoxin f has a Mr = 25,500 as compared to the more usual Mr = 12,000 for Tm. From a comparison of the amino acid composition, Tf is not obviously a dimer or otherwise related to Tm. Tf has one active center cystine disulfide. Anabaena Tf activates spinach Fru-P2-ase very efficiently but has very little activity with spinach malate dehydrogenase. Anabaena Tf, unlike Tm, does not reduce the homologous ribonucleotide reductase. Anabaena Tf also does not activate a partially purified preparation of Anabaena Fru-P2-ase. We conclude that the cyanobacterial Tf is a unique protein with no structural or functional properties in common with other thioredoxins.  相似文献   

18.
The activity of the NiFe-hydrogenase from the green alga Scenedesmus obliquus is inhibited by both algal thioredoxins f and I+II, and by Escherichia coli thioredoxin. The strongest inhibition was observed with homologous chloroplastic thioredoxin f (I50 = 21 nM) and E. coli thioredoxin (I50 = 83 nM). For the homologous cytoplasmic thioredoxins I+II an I50 of 667 nM was determined. Glutathione shows a similar but much less pronounced inhibitory effect whereas dithiothreitol had no effect. In addition to glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase, NiFe-hydrogenase is only the second enzyme known to be inhibited by reduced thioredoxin.  相似文献   

19.
The components of the ferredoxin-thioredoxin (FT) system of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii have been purified and characterized. The system resembled that of higher plants in consisting of a ferredoxin-thioredoxin reductase (FTR) and two types of thioredoxin, a single f and two m species, m1 and m2. The Chlamydomonas m and f thioredoxins were antigenically similar to their higher-plant counterparts, but not to one another. The m thioredoxins were recognized by antibodies to both higher-plant m and bacterial thioredoxins, whereas the thioredoxin f was not. Chlamydomonas thioredoxin f reacted, although weakly, with the antibody to spinach thioredoxin f. The algal thioredoxin f differed from thioredoxins studied previously in behaving as a basic protein on ion-exchange columns. Purification revealed that the algal thioredoxins had molecular masses (Mrs) typical of thioredoxins from other sources, m1 and m2 being 10700 and f 11 500. Chlamydomonas FTR had two dissimilar subunits, a feature common to all FTRs studied thus far. One, the 13-kDa (similar) subunit, resembled its counterpart from other sources in both size and antigenicity. The other, 10-kDa (variable) sub-unit was not recognized by antibodies to any FTR tested. When combined with spinach, (Spinacia oleracea L.) thylakoid membranes, the components of the FT system functioned in the light activation of the standard target enzymes from chloroplasts, corn (Zea mays L.) NADP-malate dehydrogenase (EC 1.1.1.82) and spinach fructose 1,6-bisphosphatase (EC 3.1.3.11) as well as the chloroplast-type fructose 1,6-bisphosphatase from Chlamydomonas. Activity was greatest if ferredoxin and other components of the FT system were from Chlamydomonas. The capacity of the Chlamydomonas FT system to activate autologous FBPase indicates that light regulates the photosynthetic carbon metabolism of green algae as in other oxygenic photosynthetic organisms.Abbreviations DEAE diethylaminoethyl - ELISA enzyme-linked immunosorption assay - FBPase fructose 1,6-bisphosphatase - Fd ferredoxin - FPLC fast protein liquid chromatography - FTR ferredoxin-thioredoxin reductase - FT system ferredoxin-thioredoxin system - kDa kilodaltons - Mr relative molecular mass - NADP-MDH NADP-malate dehydrogenase - SDS-PAGE sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis This work was supported in part by a grant from the National Aeronautics and Space Administration. We would like to thank Don Carlson and Jacqueline Girard for their assistance with cell cultures.  相似文献   

20.
Mestres-Ortega D  Meyer Y 《Gene》1999,240(2):307-316
Screening of cDNA libraries at low stringency and complete sequencing of EST clones with homology to thioredoxins allowed us to characterize five new prokaryotic type Arabidopsis thaliana thioredoxins. All present N-terminal extensions with characteristics of transit peptides. Four are clustered in a phylogenetic tree with the chloroplastic thioredoxin m from red and green algae and higher plants, and their transit peptides have typical characteristics of chloroplastic transit peptides. One is clearly divergent and defines a new prokaryotic thioredoxin type that we have named thioredoxin x. Its transit peptide sequence presents characteristics of both chloroplastic and mitochondrial transit peptides. The five corresponding genes are expressed at different levels, but mostly in green tissues and in in-vitro cultivated cells.  相似文献   

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