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1.
2.
Kohorn BD 《Plant physiology》1990,93(1):339-342
Eukaryotic light harvesting proteins (LHCPs) bind pigments and assemble into complexes (LHCs) that channel light energy into photosynthetic reaction centers. The structures of several prokaryotic LHCPs are known and histidines are important for the binding of the associated pigments. It has been difficult to predict how the eukaryotic LHCPs associate with pigments as the structure of the major LHCP of photosystem II is not yet known. While each LHCPII binds approximately 13 chlorophylls the protein contains only three histidines, one in each putative transmembrane helix. Experiments that use isolated pea (Pisum sativum L.) chloroplasts and mutant LHCPII synthesized in vitro show that the substitution of either an alanine or an arginine for each histidine residue inhibits some aspect of LHCII assembly. The histidine of the first membrane helix, but not the second or third, may be involved in the transport across the chloroplast envelope. No histidine alone is essential for the insertion of LHCP into thylakoid membranes, yet arginine substitutions are more inhibitory than those of alanine. The histidine replacements have their most pronounced effect on the assembly of LHCP into LHCII.  相似文献   

3.
An Arabidopsis thaliana cDNA clone encoding a novel 110 amino acid thylakoid protein has been sequenced. The in vitro synthesized protein is taken up by intact chloroplasts, inserted into the thylakoid membrane and the transit peptide is cleaved off during this process. The mature protein is predicted to contain 69 amino acids, to form one membrane-spanning -helix and to have its N-terminus at the stromal side of the thylakoid membrane. The protein showed similarity to the LHC, ELIP and PsbS proteins of higher plants, but more pronounced to the high-light-inducible proteins (HLIPs) of cyanobacteria and red algae, to which no homologue previously has been detected in higher plants. As for HLIP and ELIP, high light increases the mRNA levels of the corresponding gene. Sequence comparisons indicate that the protein may bind chlorophyll and form dimers in the thylakoid membrane. The level of expression of the protein seems to be far lower than that of normal PSI and PSII subunits.  相似文献   

4.
Two mutant lines of Hordeum vulgare cv. Maris Mink (designated RChl 46 and 47) deficient in chlorophyll b have been isolated following azide mutagenesis. Two major thylakoid membrane proteins of molecular weight 25 and 26 k daltons are absent from the mutant plants following analysis by SDS gel electrophoresis, presumably due to a lack of the light harvesting chlorophyll a/b complex. The photosynthetic capabilities of the wild type and mutant lines were very similar.  相似文献   

5.
The major light-harvesting chlorophyll a/b-protein (LHCP) of higher plant chloroplasts is a nuclearencoded, integral thylakoid membrane protein that binds photosynthetic pigments and occurs in situ in an oligomeric form. We have previously examined structural and functional domains of the mature apoprotein by use of mutant LHCPs and in vitro assays for uptake and insertion. Results presented here demonstrate the effects of several mutations in the amino terminal domain of the mature apoprotein. Deletion of amino acid residues 12–58 greatly affected import into chloroplasts, while deletion or alteration of the hydrophobic region E65VIHARWAM73 led to rapid degradation of the mutant LHCP. We suggest that this amino-proximal region is essential for the stability of the LHCP and its ability to integrate into the thylakoid membranes. A structural/functional relationship of this region to a previously examined hydrophobic carboxy-proximal domain [Kohorn and Tobin (1989), The Plant Cell 1, 159–166] is proposed.Abbreviations BSA bovine serum albumin faction V - ELIPs early light-inducible proteins - Hepes 4-(2-hydroxyethyl)-1-piperazineethanesulfonic acid - LHCP light-harvesting chlorophyll a/b-protein - LHC IIb light-harvesting complex associated with Photosystem II - pLHCP precursor to LHCP - Rubisco ribulose 1,5-biphosphate carboxylase-oxygenase - SDS-PAGE sodium dodecyl sulfate-poly-acrylamide gel electrophoresis  相似文献   

6.
70 kDa heat shock proteins (Hsp70s) act as molecular chaperones involved in essential cellular processes such as protein folding and protein transport across membranes. They also play a role in the cell’s response to a wide range of stress conditions. The Arabidopsis family of Hsp70s homologues includes two highly conserved proteins, cpHsc70-1 and cpHsc70-2 which are both imported into chloroplasts (Su and Li in Plant Physiol 146:1231–1241, 2008). Here, we demonstrate that YFP-fusion proteins of both cpHsc70-1 and cpHsc70-2 are predominantly stromal, though low levels were detected in the thylakoid membrane. Both genes are ubiquitously expressed at high levels in both seedlings and adult plants. We further show that both cpHsc70-1 and cpHsc70-2 harbour ATPase activity which is essential for Hsp70 chaperone activity. A previously described T-DNA insertion line for cpHsc70-1 (ΔcpHsc70-1) has variegated cotyledons, malformed leaves, growth retardation, impaired root growth and sensitivity to heat shock treatment. In addition, under stress conditions, this mutant also exhibits unusual sepals, and malformed flowers and sucrose concentrations as low as 1% significantly impair growth. cpHsc70-1/cpHsc70-2 double-mutants are lethal. However, we demonstrate through co-suppression and artificial microRNA (amiRNA) approaches that transgenic plants with severely reduced levels of both genes have a white and stunted phenotype. Interestingly, chloroplasts in these plants have an unusual morphology and contain few or no thylakoid membranes. Our data show that cpHsc70-1 and cpHsc70-2 are essential ATPases, have overlapping roles and are required for normal plastid structure.  相似文献   

7.
We have monitored the accumulation of photosynthetic proteins in developing pigment-deficient mutants of Zea mays. The proteins examined are the CO2-fixing enzymes, phoshoenolpyruvate carboxylase (E.C. 4.1.1.31) and ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase (E.C.4.1.1.39), and three thylakoid membrane proteins, the light-harvesting chlorophyll a/b binding protein (LHCP) of photosystem II, the 65 kilodalton chlorophyll a binding protein of photosystem I and the alpha subunit polypeptide of coupling factor I. Using a sensitive protein-blot technique, we have compared the relative quantities of each protein in mutants and their normal siblings. Carboxylase accumulation was found to be independent of chlorophyll content, while the amounts of the thylakoid proteins increase at about the same time as chlorophyll in delayed-greening mutants. The relative quantity of LHCP is closely correlated with the relative quantity of chlorophyll at all stages of development in all mutants. Because pigment-deficient mutants are arrested at early stages in chloroplast development, these findings suggest that the processes of chloroplast development, chlorophyll synthesis and thylakoid protein accumulation are coordinated during leaf development but that carboxylase accumulation is controlled by different regulatory mechanisms. A white leaf mutant was found to contain low levels of LHCP mRNA, demonstrating that the accumulation of LHCP mRNA is not controlled exclusively by phytochrome.  相似文献   

8.
NaCl-induced changes in the thylakoid membrane of wild-type Anabaena variabilis and its NaClr mutant strain have been studied. Biochemical characterization of the thylakoid membrane was done by taking its absorption and fluorescence spectra at different wavelength. The thylakoid membranes of both strains were isolated by mechanical disruption of the freeze-dried and lysozyme-treated cells, followed by differential and density gradient centrifugation. The light absorption spectra of the thylakoid membrane showed three and two peaks in NaClr mutant strain and its wild-type counterpart respectively at wavelengths of 400–850 nm. These peaks revealed that the thylakoid membrane contains a large amount of carotenoid and chlorophyll a. Fluorescence emission spectra of thylakoid membrane of NaClr mutant and its wild-type strain at excitation wavelength of 335 nm showed two different peaks, one at 340 nm and the other at 663 nm respectively. The light absorption and fluorescence spectra of the thylakoid membrane also revealed that the membrane contained carotenoid pigment, chlorophyll (Chl) a, and a pigment with an emission peak at 335 nm. The HPLC analysis of the pigments of the thylakoid membrane indicates that the NaClr mutant strain under NaCl stress contained an additional peak for the carotenoid pigment, which was lacking in its wild-type counterpart. The major peak in thylakoid membrane was that of echinenone and β-carotene. Whereas the polypeptide composition of thylakoid membrane differed in the wild-type and its NaClr mutant strain, no difference in the cell wall protein pattern was observed in both strains. The thylakoid membrane of NaClr mutant strain contained two additional protein bands that were absent in its wild-type counterpart. The thylakoid membrane of the wild-type and its NaClr mutant strain also showed morphological variations under NaCl stress. Received: 14 April 2000 / Accepted: 23 May 2000  相似文献   

9.
A mutant strain of the cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. PCC (Pasteur Culture Collection) 6803 has been developed in which psbB, the gene coding for the chlorophyl a-binding protein CP47 in Photosystem II (PSII), has been deleted. This deletion mutant can be used for the reintroduction of modified psbB into the cyanobacterium. To study the role of a large hydrophilic region in CP47, presumably located on the lumenal side of the thylakoid membrane between the fifth and sixth membrane-spanning regions, specific deletions have been introduced in psbB coding for regions within this domain. One psbB mutation leads to deletion of Gly-351 to Thr-365 in CP47, another psbB mutation was targeted towards deletion of Arg-384 to Val-392 in this protein. The deletion from Gly-351 to Thr-365 results in a loss of PSII activity and of photoautotrophic growth of the mutant, but the deletion between Arg-384 and Val-392 retains PSII activity and the ability to grow photoautotrophically. The mutant strain with the deletion from Gly-351 to Thr-365 does not assemble a stable PSII reaction center complex in its thylakoid membranes, and exhibits diminished levels of CP47 and of the reaction center proteins D1 and D2. In contrast to the Arg-384 to Val-392 portion of this domain, the region between Gly-351 and Thr-365 appears essential for the normal structure and function of photosystem II.  相似文献   

10.
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   

11.
Summary cDNA clones encoding three photosystem I subunits of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii with apparent molecular masses 13, 5 and 3 kDa (thylakoid polypeptides 28, 35 and 37; P28, P35 and P37, respectively) were isolated using gene specific oligonucleotides as probes. The sequences of these oligonucleotides were deduced from the N-terminal amino acid sequences of the proteins. The cDNAs were sequenced and used to probe Southern and Northern blots. The Southern blot analysis indicates that the proteins are encoded by single-copy genes. The mRNA sizes of the three components are 960 (P28), 1120 (P35) and 790 (P37) nucleotides. Comparison between the open reading frames of the cDNAs and the N-terminal amino acid sequences of the proteins indicates that the nascent polypeptides possess N-terminal transit sequences that are removed to give mature proteins of 11.0 (P28), 10.0 (P35) and 8.4 (P37) kDa. Analysis of the deduced protein sequences suggests that P28 and P35 are extrinsic membrane proteins and that P37 spans the thylakoid membrane. All three proteins have short transit peptides that probably route them to the stromal side of the thylakoid membrane.Abbreviations OEE1, 2 and 3 oxygen evolution enhancer proteins 1, 2 and 3 - RuBisCO ribulose bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase - PS photosystem - P28, P35 and P37 Chlamydomonas reinhardtii thylakoid polypeptides 28, 35 and 37 The nucleotide sequences presented here will appear in the EMBL/Genbank/DDBJ Nucleotide Sequence Databases under the accession numbers X15164 (11.0 kDa subunit; P28), X15165 (10.0 kDa subunit; P35) and X15166 (8.4 kDa subunit; P37)  相似文献   

12.
The chlorina-f2 mutant of barley (Hordeum vulgare L.) contains no chlorophyll b in its light-harvesting antenna, whereas the chlorina-103 mutant contains approximately 10% of the chlorophyll b found in wild-type. The absolute chlorophyll antenna size for Photosystem-II in wild-type, chlorina-103 and chlorina-f2 mutant was 250, 58 and 50 chlorophyll molecules, respectively. The absolute chlorophyll antenna size for Photosystem-I in wild-type, chlorina-103 and chlorina-f2 mutant was 210, 137 and 150 chlorophyll molecules, respoectively. In spite of the smaller PS I antenna size in the chlorina mutants, immunochemical analysis showed the presence of polypeptide components of the LHC-I auxiliary antenna with molecular masses of 25, 19.5 and 19 kDa. The chlorophyll a-b-binding LHC-II auxiliary antenna of PS II contained five polypeptide subunits in wild-type barley, termed a, b, c, d and e, with molecular masses of 30, 28, 27, 24 and 21 kDa, respectively. The polypeptide composition of the LHC-II auxiliary antenna of PS II was found to be identical in the two mutants, with only the 24 kDa subunit d present at an equal copy number per PS II in each of the mutants and in the wild-type barley. This d subunit assembles stably in the thylakoid membrane even in the absence of chlorophyll b and exhibits flexibility in its complement of bound chlorophylls. We suggest that polypeptide subunit d binds most of the chlorophyll associated with the residual PS II antenna in the chlorina mutants and that is proximal to the PS II-core complex.Abbreviations CP chlorophyll-protein - LHC the chlorophyll a-b binding light-harvesting complex - LHC-II subunit a the Lhcb4/5 gene product - subunit b the Lhcb1 gene product - subunit c Lhcb2 the gene product - subunit d the Lhcb3 gene product - subunit e the Lhcb6 gene product - PMSF phenylmethane sulphonyl fluoride - RC reaction center - QA the primary quinone electron acceptor of Photosystem-II - P700 the reaction center of PS I  相似文献   

13.
Phosphorylation of the light-harvesting chlorophyll a/b complex II (LHC II) proteins is induced in light via activation of the LHC II kinase by reduction of cytochrome b6f complex in thylakoid membranes. We have recently shown that, besides this activation, the LHC II kinase can be regulated in vitro by a thioredoxin-like component, and H2O2 that inserts an inhibitory loop in the regulation of LHC II protein phosphorylation in the chloroplast. In order to disclose the complex network for LHC II protein phosphorylation in vivo, we studied phosphorylation of LHC II proteins in the leaves of npq1-2 and npq4-1 mutants of Arabidopis thaliana. In comparison to wild-type, these mutants showed reduced non-photochemical quenching and increased excitation pressure of Photosystem II (PS II) under physiological light intensities. Peculiar regulation of LHC II protein phosphorylation was observed in mutant leaves under illumination. The npq4-1 mutant was able to maintain a high amount of phosphorylated LHC II proteins in thylakoid membranes at light intensities that induced inhibition of phosphorylation in wild-type leaves. Light intensity-dependent changes in the level of LHC II protein phosphorylation were smaller in the npq1-2 mutant compared to the wild-type. No significant differences in leaf thickness, dry weight, chlorophyll content, or the amount of LHC II proteins were observed between the two mutant and wild-type lines. We propose that the reduced capacity of the mutant lines to dissipate excess excitation energy induces changes in the production of reactive oxygen species in chloroplasts, which consequently affects the regulation of LHC II protein phosphorylation.  相似文献   

14.
A recent proteomic analysis of the thylakoid lumen of Arabidopsis thaliana revealed the presence of several PsbP-like proteins, and a homologue to this gene family was detected in the genome of the cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 (Schubert M, Petersson UA, Haas BJ, Funk C, Schröder WP, Kieselbach T (2002) J Biol Chem 277, 8354–8365). Using a peptide-directed antibody against this cyanobacterial PsbP-like protein (sll1418) we could show that it was localized in the thylakoid membrane and associated with Photosystem II. While salt washes did not remove the PsbP-like protein from the thylakoid membrane, it was partially lost during the detergent-based isolation of PSII membrane fractions. In total cell extracts this protein is present in the same amount as the extrinsic PsbO protein. We did not see any significant functional difference between the wild-type and a PsbP-like insertion mutant.  相似文献   

15.
A single general import pathway in vascular plants mediates the transport of precursor proteins across the two membranes of the chloroplast envelope, and at least four pathways are responsible for thylakoid protein targeting. While the transport systems in the thylakoid are related to bacterial secretion systems, the envelope machinery is thought to have arisen with the endosymbiotic event and to be derived, at least in part, from proteins present in the original endosymbiont. Recently the moss Physcomitrella patens has gained worldwide attention for its ability to undergo homologous recombination in the nuclear genome at rates unseen in any other land plants. Because of this, we were interested to know whether it would be a useful model system for studying chloroplast protein transport. We searched the large database of P. patens expressed sequence tags for chloroplast transport components and found many putative homologues. We obtained full-length sequences for homologues of three Toc components from moss. To our knowledge, this is the first sequence information for these proteins from non-vascular plants. In addition to identifying components of the transport machinery from moss, we isolated plastids and tested their activity in protein import assays. Our data indicate that moss and pea (Pisum sativum) plastid transport systems are functionally similar. These findings identify P. patens as a potentially useful tool for combining genetic and biochemical approaches for the study of chloroplast protein targeting. Abbreviations: EST, expressed sequence tag; LHCP, light-harvesting chlorophyll-binding protein; NIBB, National Institute for Basic Biology; OE17, 17 kDa subunit of the oxygen-evolving complex; PC, plastocyanin; PEP, Physcomitrella EST Programme; SPP, stromal processing peptidase; SRP, signal recognition particle; Tat, twin-arginine translocation; Tic, translocon at the inner membrane of the chloroplast envelope; Toc, translocon at the outer membrane of the chloroplast envelope; TPP, thylakoid processing peptidase; TPR, tetratricopeptide repeatSupplementary material to this paper is available in electronic form at .This revised version was opublished online in July 2005 with corrected page numbers.  相似文献   

16.
Most proteins found in the thylakoid lumen are synthesized in the cytosol with an N–terminal extension consisting of transient signals for chloroplast import and thylakoid transfer in tandem. The thylakoid‐transfer signal is required for protein sorting from the stroma to thylakoids, mainly via the cpSEC or cpTAT pathway, and is removed by the thylakoidal processing peptidase in the lumen. An Arabidopsis mutant lacking one of the thylakoidal processing peptidase homologs, Plsp1, contains plastids with anomalous thylakoids and is seedling‐lethal. Furthermore, the mutant plastids accumulate two cpSEC substrates (PsbO and PetE) and one cpTAT substrate (PsbP) as intermediate forms. These properties of plsp1‐null plastids suggest that complete maturation of lumenal proteins is a critical step for proper thylakoid assembly. Here we tested the effects of inhibition of thylakoid‐transfer signal removal on protein targeting and accumulation by examining the localization of non‐mature lumenal proteins in the Arabidopsis plsp1‐null mutant and performing a protein import assay using pea chloroplasts. In plsp1‐null plastids, the two cpSEC substrates were shown to be tightly associated with the membrane, while non‐mature PsbP was found in the stroma. The import assay revealed that inhibition of thylakoid‐transfer signal removal did not disrupt cpSEC‐ and cpTAT‐dependent translocation, but prevented release of proteins from the membrane. Interestingly, non‐mature PetE2 was quickly degraded under light, and unprocessed PsbO1 and PsbP1 were found in a 440‐kDa complex and as a monomer, respectively. These results indicate that the cpTAT pathway may be disrupted in the plsp1‐null mutant, and that there are multiple mechanisms to control unprocessed lumenal proteins in thylakoids.  相似文献   

17.
The GreenCut encompasses a suite of nucleus‐encoded proteins with orthologs among green lineage organisms (plants, green algae), but that are absent or poorly conserved in non‐photosynthetic/heterotrophic organisms. In Chlamydomonas reinhardtii, CPLD49 (C onserved in P lant L ineage and D iatoms49 ) is an uncharacterized GreenCut protein that is critical for maintaining normal photosynthetic function. We demonstrate that a cpld49 mutant has impaired photoautotrophic growth under high‐light conditions. The mutant exhibits a nearly 90% reduction in the level of the cytochrome b6f complex (Cytb6f), which impacts linear and cyclic electron transport, but does not compromise the ability of the strain to perform state transitions. Furthermore, CPLD49 strongly associates with thylakoid membranes where it may be part of a membrane protein complex with another GreenCut protein, CPLD38; a mutant null for CPLD38 also impacts Cytb6f complex accumulation. We investigated several potential functions of CPLD49, with some suggested by protein homology. Our findings are congruent with the hypothesis that CPLD38 and CPLD49 are part of a novel thylakoid membrane complex that primarily modulates accumulation, but also impacts the activity of the Cytb6f complex. Based on motifs of CPLD49 and the activities of other CPLD49‐like proteins, we suggest a role for this putative dehydrogenase in the synthesis of a lipophilic thylakoid membrane molecule or cofactor that influences the assembly and activity of Cytb6f.  相似文献   

18.
Caleosins: Ca2+-binding proteins associated with lipid bodies   总被引:8,自引:0,他引:8  
We have previously identified a rice gene encoding a 27 kDa protein with a single Ca2+-binding EF-hand and a putative membrane anchor. We report here similar genes termed caleosins, CLO, in other plants and fungi; they comprise a multigene family of at least five members in Arabidopsis (AtClo1–5). Northern hybridization demonstrated that AtClo2–4 mRNAs levels were low in various tissues, while AtClo1 mRNA levels were high in developing embryos and mature seeds. Analysis of transgenic Arabidopsis plants expressing the GUS reporter under control of the AtClo1 promoter showed strong levels of expression in developing embryos and also in root tip cells. Antibodies raised against AtCLO1 were used to detect caleosin in cellular fractions of Arabidopsis and rapeseed. This indicated that caleosins are a novel class of lipid body proteins, which may also be associated with an ER subdomain.  相似文献   

19.
The senescence of leaves is characterized by yellowing as chlorophyll pigments are degraded. Proteins of the chloroplasts also decline during this phase of development. There exists a non-yellowing mutant genotype of Festuca pratensis Huds. which does not suffer a loss of chlorophyll during senescence. The fate of chloroplast membrane proteins was studied in mutant and wild-type plants by immune blotting and immuno-electron microscopy. Intrinsic proteins of photosystem II, exemplified by the light-harvesting chlorophyll a/b-binding protein (LHCP-2) and D1, were shown to be unusually stable in the mutant during senescence, whereas the extrinsic 33-kilodalton protein of the oxygen-evolving complex was equally lable in both genotypes. An ultrastructural study revealed that while the intrinsic proteins remained in the internal membranes of the chloroplasts, they ceased to display the heterogenous lateral distribution within the lamellae which was characteristic of nonsenescent chloroplasts. These observations are discussed in the light of possible mechanisms of protein turnover in chloroplasts.Abbreviations kDa kilodalton - LHCP-2 light-harvesting chlorophyll a/b-binding protein - Mr relative molecular mass - PSII photosystem II - SDS sodium dodecyl sulphate  相似文献   

20.
Summary The characterization of mutants that are resistant to the herbicide chlorate has greatly increased our understanding of the structure and function of the genes required for the assimilation of nitrate. Hundreds of chlorate-resistant mutants have been identified in plants, and almost all have been found to be defective in nitrate reduction due to mutations in either nitrate reductase (NR) structural genes or genes required for the synthesis of the NR cofactor molybdenum-pterin (MoCo). The chlorate-resistant mutant ofArabidopsis thaliana, ch12, is also impaired in nitrate reduction, but the defect responsible for this phenotype has yet to be explained.chl2 plants have low levels of NR activity, yet the map position of thechl2 mutation is clearly distinct from that of the two NR structural genes that have been identified inArabidopsis. In addition,chl2 plants are not thought to be defective in MoCo, as they have near wild-type levels of xanthine dehydrogenase activity, which has been used as a measure of MoCo in other organisms. These results suggest thatchl2 may be a NR regulatory mutant. We have examinedchl2 plants and have found that they have as much NR (NIA2) mRNA as wild type a variable but often reduced level of NR protein, and one-eighth the NR activity of wild-type plants. It is difficult to explain these results by a simple regulatory model; therefore, we reexamined the MoCo levels inchl2 plants using a sensitive, specific assay for MoCo: complementation ofNeurospora MoCo mutant extracts. We found thatchl2 has low levels of MoCo — about one-eighth the wild-type level and less than the level in anotherArabidopsis MoCo mutantchl6 (B73). To confirm this result we developed a new diagnostic assay for MoCo mutants, growth inhibition by tungstate. Bothchl2 andchl6 are sensitive to tungstate at concentrations that have no effect on wildtype plants. The tungstate sensitivity as well as the chlorate resistance, low NR activity and low MoCo levels all cosegregate, indicating that all are due to a single mutation that maps to thechl2 locus, 10 centimorgans fromerecta on chromosome 2. We also report on the isolation of a new chlorate-resistant mutant ofArabidopsis, ch17, which is a MoCo mutant with the same phenotypes aschl2 andchl6.  相似文献   

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