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1.
The incorporation of newly synthesized large subunits into ribulose bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (RuBisCO) in pea chloroplast extracts occurs at the expense of intermediate forms of the large subunit which are complexed with a binding protein. Most subunits of this binding protein are found in dodecameric complexes in chloroplast extracts. Addition of small subunits to these extracts results in approximately 40 to 60% increased incorporation of newly made large subunits into RuBisCO at low or zero concentrations of ATP, but is without significant effect at high concentrations of ATP, a condition in which the dodecameric binding protein complex is dissociated into subunits. Overall, these data support the assumption that the incorporation of large subunits into RuBisCO in chloroplast extracts reflects de novo assembly rather than `mere' exchange of subunits. The in vitro assembly of large subunits into RuBisCO is a function of the conditions under which the large subunits are synthesized in organello. When the large subunits are made in chloroplasts suspended in 188 millimolar sorbitol, they are approximately 2- to 3-fold better able to assemble into RuBisCO when subsequently incubated in vitro than when they are synthesized in chloroplasts suspended in 375 millimolar sorbitol. This observation indicates that mere synthesis of large subunits is not sufficient to confer maximal assembly competence on large subunits.  相似文献   

2.
We have developed an assay to monitor in vitro the posttranslational assembly of the chloroplast protein, ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (RuBisCO). Most of the newly synthesized 55-kD catalytic ("large") subunits of this enzyme occur in a 29S complex together with 60- and 61-kD "binding" proteins. When the 29S complex is incubated with ATP and MgCl2 it dissociates into subunits, and the formerly bound large subunits now sediment at 7S (still faster than expected for a monomer). Upon incubation at 24 degrees C, these large subunits assemble into RuBisCO. The minority of newly made large subunits which are not bound to the 29S complex also sediment at 7S. When endogenous ATP was removed by addition of hexokinase and glucose, the dissociation of the 29S complex was inhibited. Nevertheless, the 7S large subunits assembled into RuBisCO, and did so to a greater extent than in controls retaining endogenous ATP. Thus the 7S large subunits are also assembly competent, at least when ATP is removed. Apparently, in chloroplast extracts, ATP can have a dual effect on the assembly of RuBisCO: on the one hand, even at low concentrations it can inhibit incorporation of 7S large subunits RuBisCO; on the other hand, at higher concentrations it can lead to substantial buildup of the 7S large subunit pool by causing dissociation of the 29S complex, and stimulate overall assembly. At both high and zero concentrations of ATP, however, antibody to the binding protein inhibited the assembly of endogenous large subunits into RuBisCO. Thus it appears that all assembly-competent large subunits are associated with the binding protein, either in the 7S complex or in the 29S complex. The involvement of the binding protein in RuBisCO assembly may represent the first example of non-autonomous protein assembly in higher plants and may pose problems for the genetic engineering of RuBisCO from these organisms.  相似文献   

3.
The large subunit binding protein, an abundant plastid protein implicated in the assembly of ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase-oxygenase (RubisCO), has been highly purified from leaves of Pisum sativum. The 720 kilodaltons purified binding protein is composed of two types of subunits of 60 and 61 kilodaltons. Highly specific polyclonal antibodies have been raised against the binding protein. The antibodies do not cross-react with the large subunit nor do anti-RubisCO antibodies cross-react with the binding protein. A higher molecular weight form of the binding protein is immunoprecipitated from products of P. sativum polysomes translated in a wheat-germ system, indicating that the binding protein is synthesized by cytoplasmic ribosomes. Immunoblotting reveals the presence of binding protein in extracts of tobacco, wheat and barley leaves and castor bean endosperm.

The previously reported dissociation of the binding protein-large subunit complex upon addition of ATP in vitro has been confirmed and the fates of the dissociated subunits further investigated. The dissociated binding protein subunits are not phosphorylated or adenylated in vitro by added ATP.

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4.
ATP-released large subunits participate in the assembly of RuBP carboxylase   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
Preincubation of 35S-methionine-labeled chloroplast extracts with ATP at 0 degree C potentiates the subsequent assembly of labeled large subunits into RuBPCase . This is correlated with the dissociation of newly synthesized large subunits from the 29S large subunit binding protein complex. These released large subunits then assemble into RuBPCase in a second, nucleotide-stimulated reaction. The data demonstrate that the 29S complex can play an active role in the assembly of RuBPCase .  相似文献   

5.
The biogenesis of the major thylakoid protein complexes of the photosynthetic apparatus requires auxiliary proteins supporting individual assembly steps. Here, we identify a plant lineage specific gene, CGL160, whose homolog, atp1, co-occurs with ATP synthase subunits in an operon-like arrangement in many cyanobacteria. Arabidopsis thaliana T-DNA insertion mutants, which no longer accumulate the nucleus-encoded CGL160 protein, accumulate less than 25% of wild-type levels of the chloroplast ATP synthase. Severe cosmetic or growth phenotypes result under either short day or fluctuating light growth conditions, respectively, but this is ameliorated under long day constant light growth conditions where the growth, ATP synthase activity and photosynthetic electron transport of the mutants are less affected. Accumulation of other photosynthetic complexes is largely unaffected in cgl160 mutants, suggesting that CGL160 is a specific assembly or stability factor for the CF1CF0 complex. CGL160 is not found in the mature assembled complex but it does interact specifically with subunits of ATP synthase, predominantly those in the extrinsic CF1 sub-complex. We suggest therefore that it may facilitate the assembly of CF1 into the holocomplex.  相似文献   

6.
The large subunit of ribulose bisphosphate carboxylase from Anacystis nidulans 6301, and the β subunit of chloroplast ATP synthase from maize, were fused to the transit peptide of the small subunit of ribulose bisphosphate carboxylase from soybean. These proteins were assayed for post-translational import into isolated pea chloroplasts. Both proteins were imported into chloroplasts. Imported large subunits were associated with two distinct macromolecular structures. The smaller of these structures was a hybrid ribulose bisphosphate carboxylase holoenzyme, and the larger was the binding protein oligomer. Time-course experiments following import of the large subunit revealed that the amount of large subunit associated with the binding protein oligomer decreased over time, and that the amount of large subunit present in the assembled holoenzyme increased. We also observed that imported small subunits of ribulose bisphosphate carboxylase, although predominantly present in the holoenzyme, were also found associated with the binding protein oligomer. In contrast, the imported β subunit of chloroplast ATP synthase did not assemble into a thylakoid-bound coupling factor complex.  相似文献   

7.
Negm FB 《Plant physiology》1986,80(4):972-977
Intact chloroplasts isolated from Euglena gracilis exhibit high rates of light-driven protein synthesis, whereas protein synthesis by isolated proplastids is absolutely dependent upon the addition of an exogenous energy source in the form of equimolar ATP and Mg2+. ATP and Mg2+ also stimulate translation by chloroplasts. The greatly increased rates of protein synthesis obtained by supplementing proplastids with ATP and Mg2+ have allowed the first clear characterization of proplastid translation products. Two-dimensional polyacrylamide gel electrophoretic analysis of proteins synthesized in organello shows that, while many translation products are common to both plastid types, most are unique to either the proplastid or the chloroplast. Pulse-chase experiments using both proplastids and chloroplasts indicate similar rates of turnover of newly synthesized proteins in both types of plastids. Thus, the differences seen between proplastid and chloroplast translation products are apparently not due to turnover. Immunoprecipitation of large subunit of ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase (LS) from pulse-chase experiments indicates that LS is made in both proplastids and in chloroplasts and that the rate of LS turnover is similar in both types of plastids.  相似文献   

8.
9.
10.
The chloroplast protein synthesizing factor responsible for the binding of aminoacyl-tRNA to ribosomes (EF-Tuchl) has been identified in extracts of Euglena gracilis. This factor is present in low levels when Euglena is grown in the dark and can be induced more than 10-fold when the organism is exposed to light. The induction of the chloroplast EF-Tu by light is inhibited by streptomycin, an inhibitor of protein synthesis on chloroplast ribosomes, indicating that protein synthesis within the chloroplast itself is required for the induction of this factor. The induction of the chloroplast EF-Tu by light is also inhibited by cycloheximide, a specific inhibitor of protein synthesis on cytoplasmic ribosomes. The effect of cycloheximide probably results from the inhibition of chloroplast ribosome synthesis which requires the synthesis of many proteins by the cytoplasmic translational system. Chloroplast EF-Tu cannot be induced by light in an aplastidic mutant (strain W3BUL) of Euglena which has neither significant plastid structure nor detectable chloroplast DNA. These data strongly suggest that the genetic information for chloroplast EF-Tu resides in the chloroplast genome and that this protein is synthesized within the organelle itself.  相似文献   

11.
Replicative helicases are essential ATPases that unwind DNA to initiate chromosomal replication. While bacterial replicative DnaB helicases are hexameric, Helicobacter pylori DnaB (HpDnaB) was found to form double hexamers, similar to some archaeal and eukaryotic replicative helicases. Here we present a structural and functional analysis of HpDnaB protein during primosome formation. The crystal structure of the HpDnaB at 6.7 Å resolution reveals a dodecameric organization consisting of two hexamers assembled via their N-terminal rings in a stack-twisted mode. Using fluorescence anisotropy we show that HpDnaB dodecamer interacts with single-stranded DNA in the presence of ATP but has a low DNA unwinding activity. Multi-angle light scattering and small angle X-ray scattering demonstrate that interaction with the DnaG primase helicase-binding domain dissociates the helicase dodecamer into single ringed primosomes. Functional assays on the proteins and associated complexes indicate that these single ringed primosomes are the most active form of the helicase for ATP hydrolysis, DNA binding and unwinding. These findings shed light onto an activation mechanism of HpDnaB by the primase that might be relevant in other bacteria and possibly other organisms exploiting dodecameric helicases for DNA replication.  相似文献   

12.
13.
Chaudhari P  Roy H 《Plant physiology》1989,89(4):1366-1371
Higher plant ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (RuBisCO) cannot reassociate after dissociation, and its subunits do not assemble into active RuBisCO when synthesized in Escherichia coli. Newly synthesized subunits of RuBisCO are associated with a high molecular weight binding protein complex in pea chloroplasts. The immediate donor for large subunits which assemble into RuBisCO is a low molecular weight complex which may be derived from the high molecular weight binding protein complex. When the high molecular weight binding protein complex is diluted, it tends to dissociate, forming low molecular weight complexes. When the large subunit-binding protein complexes were examined after in organello protein synthesis, it was found that the low molecular weight complexes were more abundant when protein synthesis was carried out under hypotonic conditions. This increase in the assembly competent population of low molecular weight large subunit complexes can account for the increased amount of in vitro RuBisCO assembly which occurs under these conditions. The data indicate that the assembly of large subunits into RuBisCO is a function of the aggregation state of the large subunit binding protein complex during protein synthesis. This implies that the binding protein exerts its effects during or shortly after large subunit synthesis.  相似文献   

14.
C.J. Arntzen  C.L. Ditto 《BBA》1976,449(2):259-274
When isolated chloroplasts from mature pea (Pisum sativum) leaves were treated with digitonin under “low salt” conditions, the membranes were extensively solubilized into small subunits (as evidenced by analysis with small pore ultrafilters). From this solubilized preparation, a photochemically inactive chlorophyll · protein complex (chlorophyll ab ratio, 1.3) was isolated. We suggest that the detergent-derived membrane fragment from mature membranes is a structural complex within the membrane which contains the light-harvesting chlorophyll ab protein and which acts as a light-harvesting antenna primarily for Photosystem II.Cations dramatically alter the structural interaction of the light-harvesting complex with the photochemically active system II complex. This interaction has been measured by determining the amount of protein-bound chlorophyll b and Photosystem II activity which can be released into dispersed subunits by digitonin treatment of chloroplast lamellae. When cations are present to cause interaction between the Photosystem II complex and the light-harvesting pigment · protein, the combined complexes pellet as a “heavy” membranous fraction during differential centrifugation of detergent treated lamellae. In the absence of cations, the two complexes dissociate and can be isolated in a “light” submembrane preparation from which the light-harvesting complex can be purified by sucrose gradient centrifugation.Cation effects on excitation energy distribution between Photosystems I and II have been monitored by following Photosystem II fluorescence changes under chloroplast incubation conditions identical to those used for detergent treatment (with the exception of chlorophyll concentration differences and omission of detergents). The cation dependency of the pigment · protein complex and Photosystem II reaction center interactions measured by detergent fractionation, and regulation of excitation energy distribution as measured by fluorescence changes, were identical. We conclude that changes in substructural organization of intact membranes, involving cation induced changes in the interaction of intramembranous subunits, are the primary factors regulating the distribution of excitation energy between Photosystems II and I.  相似文献   

15.
Hubbs AE  Roy H 《Plant physiology》1993,101(2):523-533
In higher plants, ribulose bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (Rubisco) consists of eight large "L" subunits, synthesized in chloroplasts, and eight small "S" subunits, synthesized as precursors in the cytosol. Assembly of these into holoenzyme occurs in the chloroplast stroma after import and processing of the S subunits. A chloroplast chaperonin interacts with the L subunits, which dissociate from the chaperonin before they assemble into holoenzyme. Our laboratory has reported L subunit assembly into Rubisco in chloroplast extracts after protein synthesis in leaves, intact chloroplasts, and most recently in membrane-free chloroplast extracts. We report here that the incorporation of in vitro-synthesized L subunits into holoenzyme depends on the conditions of L subunit synthesis. Rubisco assembly did not occur after L subunit synthesis at 160 mM KCI. When L subunit synthesis occurred at approximately 70 mM KCI, assembly depended on the temperature at which L subunit synthesis took place. These phenomena were the result of postsynthetic events taking place during incubation for protein synthesis. We separated these events from protein synthesis by lowering the temperature during protein synthesis. Lower temperatures supported the synthesis of full-length Rubisco L subunits. The assembly of these completed L subunits into Rubisco required intervening incubation with ATP, before addition of S subunits. ATP treatment mobilized L subunits from a complex with the chloroplast chaperonin 60 oligomer. Addition of 130 mM KCI at the beginning of the intervening incubation with ATP blocked the incorporation of L subunits into Rubisco. The inhibitory effect of high KCI was due to CI- and came after association of newly synthesized L subunits with chaperonin 60, but before S subunit addition. It is interesting that L subunits synthesized at [greater than or equal to]32[deg]C failed to assemble into Rubisco under any conditions. These results agree with previous results obtained in this laboratory using newly synthesized L subunits made in intact chloroplasts. They also show that assembly of in vitro-synthesized L subunits into Rubisco requires ATP, that CI- inhibits Rubisco assembly, and that synthesis temperature affects subsequent assembly competence of L subunits.  相似文献   

16.
Chloroplasts contain an abundant soluble protein that binds non-covalently newly synthesized large and small subunits of the enzyme ribulose bisphosphate carboxylase-oxygenase. This binding protein has been purified from Pisum sativum and Hordeum vulgare in the form of a dodecamer consisting of equal amounts of two types of subunit. These subunits are synthesized as higher molecular mass precursors by cytoplasmic ribosomes before import into the chloroplast. Antibodies raised against the purified binding protein from Pisum sativum detect polypeptides not only in extracts of plastids from several plant species but also in cell extracts of several bacterial species. The oligomeric binding protein dissociates reversibly into monomeric subunits in the presence of 1–5 mmol/liter MgATP. For one type of subunit the cDNA sequence has been isolated and determined and reveals homology with certain bacterial proteins.These observations are discussed in relation to the idea that the binding protein is an example of a general class of proteins termed "molecular chaperones" which are required for the correct assembly of certain oligomeric proteins such as the carboxylase from their subunits.Abbreviations BP Binding protein - Rubisco Ribulose bisphosphate carboxylase-oxygenase  相似文献   

17.
Y I Henis  T M Jenkins 《FEBS letters》1983,151(1):134-138
The subunit stoichiometry of the ATP synthetase (CF1-CF0) immunoprecipitated from Triton X-100 extracts of chloroplast thylakoid membranes was determined to be α3, β3, γ, δ, ? (CF1) and I0.3, II0.6–0.9, III4(6) (CF0). Antibodies against the polypeptides α, β, γ, δ, I, II and ? combined specifically with the isolated subunits as analysed by the protein blotting method. Applying this technique, antibodies against the CF1 subunits were found to form complexes with the corresponding polypeptides of thylakoids, whereas those against I (Mr 20 000) and II (Mr 17 000) combined with Mr 26 000 and Mr 24 500 membrane polypeptides, respectively. The Mr 26 000 polypeptide was identified as the major subunits of the light-harvesting chlorophyll a/b-protein (LHCP) complex and the Mr 24 500 component seems to be functionally connected with this complex. From the results it is concluded that the chloroplast ATP synthetase consists of the subunit of the α, β, γ, δ, ? and III (proteolipid only and that proteolytically altered LHCP polypeptides bind artifically to the protein complex during isolation.  相似文献   

18.
During maturation and ripening of tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum, cv Tamar) fruits, there are differential changes in the steady state levels of chloroplast proteins. Western blot analysis indicated that with the exception of the core polypeptide of photosystem I (PSI) (subunit I) the whole complex disappears during the transition of chloroplast to chromoplast. The amounts of the core polypeptide of photosystem II (PSII) (43 kilodaltons) and the light harvesting chlorophyll protein complex increase during maturation and decrease thereafter. In contrast, the 33 kilodalton subunit of PSII is found at the highest levels from the early recorded stages and decreases gradually until late stages of ripening. The level of cytochrome f decreases slowly during the maturation and ripening process, whereas the Rieske protein of the same complex disappears at a faster rate. There are also differential changes in the subunits of the chloroplast coupling factor·ATPase complex; α and β subunits increase during maturation, whereas the level of the γ subunit is already maximal at the earliest recorded stage of development and depleted thereafter. The two subunits of the ribulose-1,5 bisphosphate carboxylase increase in abundance during chloroplast maturation and gradually disappear after the transition from chloroplast to chromoplast. However, there are substantial differences in the rates of increase and disappearance of the large and small subunits of this enzyme. This imbalance is attributed to different regulation of nuclear and chloroplast gene expression. In addition, the steady state levels of chloroplastic superoxide dismutase and phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase have been followed. Both enzymes reach their maxima at the final stages of ripening. This increase coincides with the climacteric rise of CO2 release.  相似文献   

19.
In organello starch biosynthesis was studied using intact chloroplasts isolated from spinach leaves (Spinacia oleracea). Immunoblot analysis using a specific antiserum against the mitochondrial adenylate (ADP/ATP) translocator of Neurospora crassa shows the presence of an adenylate translocator protein in the chloroplast envelope membranes, similar to that existing in mitochondria and amyloplasts from cultured cells of sycamore (Acer pseudoplatanus). The double silicone oil layer-filtering centrifugation technique was employed to study the kinetic properties of adenylate transport in the purified chloroplasts; ATP, ADP, AMP, and most importantly ADP-Glc were shown to be recognized by the adenylate translocator. Similar to the situation with sycamore amyloplasts, only ATP and ADP-Glc uptake was inhibited by carboxyatractyloside, an inhibitor of the mitochondrial adenylate translocator. Evidence is presented to show that the ADP-Glc transported into the chloroplast stroma is utilized for starch synthesis catalyzed by starch synthase (ADP-Glc:1,4-α-d-glucan 4-α-d-glucosyltransferase). The high activity of sucrose synthase producing ADP-Glc observed in the extrachloroplastic fractions suggests that starch biosynthesis in chloroplasts may be coupled with the direct import of ADP-Glc from the cytosol.  相似文献   

20.
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