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

2.
We isolated an Arabidopsis thaliana cDNA whose translated product shows sequence similarity to the FtsY, a bacterial homologue of SRP receptor protein. The Arabidopsis FtsY homologue contains a typical chloroplast transit peptide. The in vitro-synthesized 37 kDa FtsY homologue was imported into chloroplasts, and the processed 32 kDa polypeptide bound peripherally on the outer surface of thylakoids. Antibodies raised against the FtsY homologue also reacted with a thylakoid-bound 32 kDa protein. The antibodies inhibited the cpSRP-dependent insertion of the light-harvesting chlorophyll alb-binding protein into thylakoid membranes suggesting that the chloroplast FtsY homologue is involved in the cpSRP-dependent protein targeting to the thylakoid membranes.  相似文献   

3.
A new component of the chloroplast proteolytic machinery from Arabidopsis thaliana was identified as a SppA-type protease. The sequence of the mature protein, deduced from a full-length cDNA, displays 22% identity to the serine-type protease IV (SppA) from Escherichia coli and 27% identity to Synechocystis SppA1 (sll1703) but lacks the putative transmembrane spanning segments predicted from the E. coli sequence. The N-terminal sequence exhibits typical features of a cleavable chloroplast stroma-targeting sequence. The chloroplast localization of SppA was confirmed by in organello import experiments using an in vitro expression system and by immunodetection with antigen-specific antisera. Subfractionation of intact chloroplasts demonstrated that SppA is associated exclusively with thylakoid membranes, predominantly stroma lamellae, and is a part of some high molecular mass complex of about 270 kDa that exhibits proteolytic activity. Treatments with chaotropic salts and proteases showed that SppA is largely exposed to the stroma but that it behaves as an intrinsic membrane protein that may have an unusual monotopic arrangement in the thylakoids. We demonstrate that SppA is a light-inducible protease and discuss its possible involvement in the light-dependent degradation of antenna and photosystem II complexes that both involve serine-type proteases.  相似文献   

4.
Seven genes seem to encode for putative ClC chloride channels (AtClC-a to AtClC-g) in Arabidopsis thaliana. Their function and localization is still largely unknown. AtClC-f shares considerable sequence similarity with putative ClC channel proteins from Synechocystis, considered to represent the precursor of chloroplasts. We show by biochemical and mass spectrometry analysis that ClC-f is located in the outer envelope membrane of spinach chloroplasts. Consistent with the plastidial localization of ClC-f, p-chlorophenoxy-acetic acid (CPA) reduces photosynthetic activity and the protein is expressed in etioplasts and chloroplasts but not in root tissue. These findings may represent a step toward the molecular identification of ion channel activities in chloroplast membranes.  相似文献   

5.
Thylakoid membranes have a unique complement of proteins, most of which are nuclear encoded synthesized in the cytosol, imported into the stroma and translocated into thylakoid membranes by specific thylakoid translocases. Known thylakoid translocases contain core multi-spanning, membrane-integrated subunits that are also nuclear-encoded and imported into chloroplasts before being integrated into thylakoid membranes. Thylakoid translocases play a central role in determining the composition of thylakoids, yet the manner by which the core translocase subunits are integrated into the membrane is not known. We used biochemical and genetic approaches to investigate the integration of the core subunit of the chloroplast Tat translocase, cpTatC, into thylakoid membranes. In vitro import assays show that cpTatC correctly localizes to thylakoids if imported into intact chloroplasts, but that it does not integrate into isolated thylakoids. In vitro transit peptide processing and chimeric precursor import experiments suggest that cpTatC possesses a stroma-targeting transit peptide. Import time-course and chase assays confirmed that cpTatC targets to thylakoids via a stromal intermediate, suggesting that it might integrate through one of the known thylakoid translocation pathways. However, chemical inhibitors to the cpSecA-cpSecY and cpTat pathways did not impede cpTatC localization to thylakoids when used in import assays. Analysis of membranes isolated from Arabidopsis thaliana mutants lacking cpSecY or Alb3 showed that neither is necessary for cpTatC membrane integration or assembly into the cpTat receptor complex. These data suggest the existence of another translocase, possibly one dedicated to the integration of chloroplast translocases.  相似文献   

6.
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   

7.
In plants the chloroplast thylakoid membrane is the site of light-dependent photosynthetic reactions coupled to ATP synthesis. The ability of the plant cell to build and alter this membrane system is essential for efficient photosynthesis. A nucleotide translocator homologous to the bovine mitochondrial ADP/ATP carrier (AAC) was previously found in spinach thylakoids. Here we have identified and characterized a thylakoid ATP/ADP carrier (TAAC) from Arabidopsis.(i) Sequence homology with the bovine AAC and the prediction of chloroplast transit peptides indicated a putative carrier encoded by the At5g01500 gene, as a TAAC. (ii) Transiently expressed TAAC-green fluorescent protein fusion construct was targeted to the chloroplast. Western blotting using a peptide-specific antibody together with immunogold electron microscopy revealed a major location of TAAC in the thylakoid membrane. Previous proteomic analyses identified this protein in chloroplast envelope preparations. (iii) Recombinant TAAC protein specifically imports ATP in exchange for ADP across the cytoplasmic membrane of Escherichia coli. Studies on isolated thylakoids from Arabidopsis confirmed these observations. (iv) The lack of TAAC in an Arabidopsis T-DNA insertion mutant caused a 30-40% reduction in the thylakoid ATP transport and metabolism. (v) TAAC is readily expressed in dark-grown Arabidopsis seedlings, and its level remains stable throughout the greening process. Its expression is highest in developing green tissues and in leaves undergoing senescence or abiotic stress. We propose that the TAAC protein supplies ATP for energy-dependent reactions during thylakoid biogenesis and turnover in plants.  相似文献   

8.
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   

9.
Tic20 is a central, membrane-embedded component of the precursor protein translocon of the inner envelope of chloroplasts (TIC). In Arabidopsis thaliana, four different isoforms of Tic20 exist. They are annotated as atTic20-I, -II, -IV and -V and form two distinct phylogenetic subfamilies in embryophyta. Consistent with atTic20-I being the only essential isoform for chloroplast development, we show that the protein is exclusively targeted to the chloroplasts inner envelope. The same result is observed for atTic20-II. In contrast, atTic20-V is localized in thylakoids and atTic20-IV dually localizes to chloroplasts and mitochondria. These results together with the previously established expression profiles explain the recently described phenotypes of Tic20 knockout plants and point towards a functional diversification of these proteins within the family. For all Tic20 proteins a 4-helix topology is proposed irrespective of the targeted membrane, which in part could be confirmed in vivo by application of a self-assembling GFP-based topology approach. By the same approach we show that the inner envelope localized Tic20 proteins expose their C-termini to the chloroplast stroma. This localization would be consistent with the positive inside rule considering a stromal translocation intermediate as discussed.  相似文献   

10.
Non-canonical transit peptide for import into the chloroplast   总被引:11,自引:0,他引:11  
The large majority of plastid proteins are nuclear-encoded and, thus, must be imported within these organelles. Unlike most of the outer envelope proteins, targeting of proteins to all other plastid compartments (inner envelope membrane, stroma, and thylakoid) is strictly dependent on the presence of a cleavable transit sequence in the precursor N-terminal region. In this paper, we describe the identification of a new envelope protein component (ceQORH) and demonstrate that its subcellular localization is limited to the inner membrane of the chloroplast envelope. Immunopurification, microsequencing of the natural envelope protein and cloning of the corresponding full-length cDNA demonstrated that this protein is not processed in the N-terminal region during its targeting to the inner envelope membrane. Transient expression experiments in plant cells were performed with truncated forms of the ceQORH protein fused to the green fluorescent protein. These experiments suggest that neither the N-terminal nor the C-terminal are essential for chloroplastic localization of the ceQORH protein. These observations are discussed in the frame of the endosymbiotic theory of chloroplast evolution and suggest that a domain of the ceQORH bacterial ancestor may have evolved so as to exclude the general requirement of an N-terminal plastid transit sequence.  相似文献   

11.
Thylakoid biogenesis is a crucial step for plant development involving the combined action of many cellular actors. CPSAR1 is shown here to be required for the normal organization of mature thylakoid stacks, and ultimately for embryo development. CPSAR1 is a chloroplast protein that has a dual localization in the stroma and the inner envelope membrane, according to microscopy studies and subfractionation analysis. CPSAR1 is close to the Obg nucleotide binding protein subfamily and displays GTPase activity, as demonstrated by in vitro assays. Disruption of the CPSAR1 gene via T‐DNA insertion results in the arrest of embryo development. In addition, transmission electron microscopy analysis indicates that mutant embryos are unable to develop thylakoid membranes, and remain white. Unstacked membrane structures resembling single lamellae accumulate in the stroma, and do not assemble into mature thylakoid stacks. CPSAR1 RNA interference induces partially developed thylakoids leading to pale‐green embryos. Altogether, the presented data demonstrate that CPSAR1 is a protein essential for the formation of normal thylakoid membranes, and suggest a possible involvement in the initiation of vesicles from the inner envelope membrane for the transfer of lipids to the thylakoids.  相似文献   

12.
Lee YJ  Kim DH  Kim YW  Hwang I 《The Plant cell》2001,13(10):2175-2190
Certain small outer envelope membrane proteins of chloroplasts are encoded by the nuclear genome without a cleavable N-terminal transit peptide. We investigated in vivo the targeting mechanism of AtOEP7, an Arabidopsis homolog of the small outer envelope membrane protein. AtOEP7 was expressed as a fusion protein with the green fluorescent protein (GFP) either transiently in protoplasts or stably in transgenic plants. In either case, fluorescence microscopy of transformed cells and protein gel blot analysis of fractionated proteins confirmed that the AtOEP7:GFP fusion protein was targeted to the chloroplast outer envelope membrane. In vivo targeting experiments revealed that two regions, the transmembrane domain (TMD) and its C-terminal neighboring seven-amino acid region, were necessary and sufficient for targeting to the chloroplast outer membrane. Substitution of aspartic acid or lysine residues with glycine residues or scrambling of the amino acid sequence of the seven-amino acid region caused mistargeting to the plasma membrane. Although the amino acid sequence of the TMD is not important for targeting, amino acid residues with large side chains inhibited targeting to the chloroplasts and resulted in the formation of large aggregates in the protoplasts. In addition, introduction of a proline residue within the TMD resulted in inhibition of targeting. Finally, a fusion protein, AtOEP7:NLS:GFP, was targeted efficiently to the chloroplast envelope membranes despite the presence of a nuclear localization signal. On the basis of these results, we conclude that the seven-amino acid region and the TMD are determinants for targeting to the chloroplast outer envelope membrane. The seven-amino acid region plays a critical role in AtOEP7 evading the endomembrane system and entering the chloroplast pathway, and the TMD plays critical roles in migration to the chloroplasts and/or subsequent insertion into the membrane.  相似文献   

13.
Early seedling development in plants depends on the biogenesis of chloroplasts from proplastids, accompanied by the formation of thylakoid membranes. An Arabidopsis thaliana gene, AtTerC , whose gene product shares sequence similarity with bacterial tellurite resistance C (TerC), is shown to be involved in a critical step required for the normal organization of prothylakoids and transition into mature thylakoid stacks. The AtTerC gene encodes an integral membrane protein, which contains eight putative transmembrane helices, localized in the thylakoid of the chloroplast, as shown by localization of an AtTerC–GFP fusion product in protoplasts and by immunoblot analysis of subfractions of chloroplasts. T-DNA insertional mutation of AtTerC resulted in a pigment-deficient and seedling-lethal phenotype under normal light conditions. Transmission electron microscopic analysis revealed that mutant etioplasts had normal prolamellar bodies (PLBs), although the prothylakoids had ring-like shapes surrounding the PLBs. In addition, the ultrastructures of mutant chloroplasts lacked thylakoids, did not have grana stacks, and showed numerous globular structures of varying sizes. Also, the accumulation of thylakoid membrane proteins was severely defective in this mutant. These results suggest that the AtTerC protein plays a crucial role in prothylakoid membrane biogenesis and thylakoid formation in early chloroplast development.  相似文献   

14.
Plastocyanin is a nuclear-encoded chloroplast thylakoid lumen protein that is synthesized in the cytoplasm with a large N-terminal extension (66 amino acids). Transport of plastocyanin involves two steps: import across the chloroplast envelope into the stroma, followed by transfer across the thylakoid membrane into the lumen. During transport the N-terminal extension is removed in two parts by two different processing proteases. In this study we examined the functions of the two cleaved parts, C1 and C2, in the transport pathway of plastocyanin. The results show that C1 mediates import into the chloroplast. C1 is sufficient to direct chloroplast import of mutant proteins that lack C2. It is also sufficient to direct import of a nonplastid protein and can be replaced functionally by the transit peptide of an imported stromal protein. C2 is a prerequisite for intraorganellar routing but is not required for chloroplast import. Deletions in C2 result in accumulation of intermediates in the stroma or on the outside of the thylakoids. The fact that C1 is functionally equivalent to a stromal-targeting transit peptide shows that plastocyanin is imported into the chloroplast by way of the same mechanism as stromal proteins, and that import into and routing inside the chloroplasts are independent processes.  相似文献   

15.
C-terminally truncated precursors of wheat light-harvesting chlorophyll a/b binding protein (LHCP) were synthesized to investigate the origin of the two forms (about 25 kD and 26 kD) of the mature protein observed upon in vitro import into the chloroplast. Precursors p delta 13 and p delta 27, lacking 13 and 27 amino acids, respectively, were successfully imported, and both gave rise to two smaller forms proportional to the size of their deletions. These results demonstrate that there are two N-terminal sites that are cleaved during import of the LHCP precursor, undoubtedly contributing to the heterogeneity of LHCP found in vivo. Significantly, p delta 27 yielded only 50% of mature LHCP when compared with wild type. Although the products of p delta 27 import were localized to the thylakoids, in contrast to p delta 13 they were not correctly inserted into the membranes, indicating that residues essential for this step are missing. p delta 27 is distinguished from p delta 13 by lacking the carboxy end of a domain highly conserved between LHCP of photosystems II and I. Other specific precursor mutants with larger C-terminal deletions were not efficiently transported into the organelle in time course experiments, nor did they insert directly into the thylakoids using chloroplast lysates, in an assay independent of translocation across the envelope. In addition, the mutant p delta 18n, lacking the first 18 amino acids of mature LHCP, was only found bound to the chloroplast envelope. However, both p delta 18n and the mature protein, i.e., LHCP, synthesized in vitro without its 34-amino acid transit peptide inserted into the thylakoids in chloroplast lysates. The overall conformation of the mutant precursor polypeptides was probed using the chloroplast soluble processing enzyme in an organelle-free reaction optimized for the LHCP precursor and the more general protease trypsin. A tightly folded, protease-resistant conformation was not apparent to explain the loss of efficient import.  相似文献   

16.
17.
Envelope membranes were prepared from mature pea chloroplasts. The tetrapyrrole contents of envelope membranes were analysed. The envelope membranes of pea chloroplasts contained substantial amounts of protoporphyrin IX and trace amounts of Mg-protoporphyrin IX and its monoester in addition to protochlorophyllide. The protoporphyrin IX content of envelope membranes was 89.25 pmol (mg protein)(-1). Its content in pea envelope membrane was higher than that of protochlorophyllide. The proportion of monovinyl and divinyl forms of protochlorophyllide present in pea chloroplast envelope membrane was 3:7. The significance of the presence of protoporphyrin IX in the envelope membrane is discussed in relation to plastidic Chl biosynthesis.  相似文献   

18.
The role of the transit peptide in the routing of imported proteins inside the chloroplast was investigated with chimeric proteins in which the transit peptides for the nuclear-encoded ferredoxin and plastocyanin precursors were exchanged. Import and localization experiments with a reconstituted chloroplast system show that the ferredoxin transit peptide directs mature plastocyanin away from its correct location, the thylakoid lumen, to the stroma. With the plastocyanin transit peptide-mature ferredoxin chimera, a processing intermediate is arrested on its way to the lumen. We propose a two domain hypothesis for the plastocyanin transit peptide: the first domain functions in the chloroplast import process, whereas the second is responsible for transport across the thylakoid membrane. Thus, the transit peptide not only targets proteins to the chloroplast, but also is a major determinant in their subsequent localization within the organelle.  相似文献   

19.
20.
Methotrexate does not block import of a DHFR fusion protein into chloroplasts   总被引:10,自引:0,他引:10  
Protein import into chloroplasts requires the movement of a precursor protein across the envelope membranes. The conformation of a precursor as it passes from the aqueous medium across the hydrophobic membranes is not known in detail. To address this problem we examined precursor conformation during translocation using the chimeric precursor PCDHFR, which contains the plastocyanin (PC) transit peptide in front of mouse cytosolic dihydrofolate reductase (DHFR). The chimeric protein is targeted to chloroplasts and is competent for import. The conformation of PCDHFR can be stabilized by complexing with methotrexate, an analogue of the substrate of DHFR. Methotrexate strongly inhibits DHFR import into yeast mitochondria (M. Eilers and G. Schatz, Nature 322 (1986) 228–232), presumably because the precursor must unfold to cross the membrane and it cannot do so when complexed with methotrexate. We show here that methotrexate does not block PCDHFR import into chloroplasts. Methotrexate does slow the rate of import, and protects DHFR from degradation once inside chloroplasts. The processed protein is localized in the stroma, indicating that import into thylakoids is impeded. Protease sensitivity assays indicate that the complex of precursor protein with methotrexate changes in conformation during the translocation across the envelope.  相似文献   

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