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1.
2.
Summary The transit peptide of the waxy protein of maize which in the maize plant targets this protein only into amyloplasts was used for in vitro protein transport experiments with isolated amyloplasts from maize and chloroplasts from maize, pea and potato. In the presence of both intact and disrupted amyloplasts an artificial preprotein (TP30), consisting of the waxy transit peptide plus the first 34 amino acids of the mature waxy protein fused in-frame to the -glucuronidase of Escherichia coli, is processed to the size expected when the transit peptide is cleaved off. The chloroplasts studied show in vitro import and correct processing of both TP30 and the authentic waxy protein, but not of the -glucuronidase without the waxy transit peptide. The in vitro import of TP30 into chloroplasts is almost as efficient as that of the precursor of the small subunit of pea ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase, a nuclear-encoded chloroplast protein, whereas the waxy protein accumulates to a lesser extent in the chloroplasts. Since the amino-terminal transit peptides of TP30 and the waxy precursor are the same, this difference must be due to the mature part of the waxy protein. One possible explanation is the observed instability of the waxy protein in the presence of chloroplasts.  相似文献   

3.
A cDNA clone encoding a major chloroplast inner envelope membrane protein of 96 kDa (IEP96) was isolated and characterized. The protein is synthesized as a larger-molecular-weight precursor (pIEP96) which contains a cleavable N-terminal transit sequence of 50 amino acids. The transit peptide exhibits typical stromal targeting information. It is cleaved in vitro by the stromal processing peptidase, though the mature protein is clearly localized in the inner envelope membrane. Translocation of pIEP96 into chloroplasts is greatly stimulated in the presence of 80 mM potassium phosphate which results in an import efficiency of about 90%. This effect is specific for potassium and phosphate, but cannot be ascribed to a membrane potential across the inner envelope membrane. Protein sequence analysis reveals five stretches of repeats of 26 amino acids in length. The N-terminal 300 amino acids are 45% identical (76% similarity) to the 35 kDa -subunit of acetyl-CoA carboxyl-transferase from Escherichia coli. The C-terminal 500 amino acids share significant similarity (69%) with USOI, a component of the cytoskeleton in yeast.Abbreviations Pi phosphate - IEP inner envelope membrane protein - pIEP precursor form of IEP - SSU small subunit of ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase oxygenase - IEP96pep peptide specific antiserum to IEP96 - IEP96pol polyspecific antiserum to IEP96  相似文献   

4.
Protein targeting to plant mitochondria and chloroplasts is usually very specific and involves targeting sequences located at the amino terminus of the precursor. We challenged the system by using combinations of mitochondrial and chloroplast targeting sequences attached to reporter genes. The sequences coding for the presequence of the mitochondrial F1-ATPase -subunit and the transit peptide of the chloroplast chlorophyll a/b-binding protein, both from Nicotiana plumbaginifolia, were fused together in both combinations, then linked to the reporter genes, chloramphenicol acetyl transferase (CAT) and -glucuronidase (GUS), and introduced into tobacco. Analysis of CAT and GUS activities and proteins in the subcellular fractions revealed that the chloroplast transit peptide alone was not sufficient to target the reporter proteins to chloroplasts. However, when the mitochondrial -presequence was inserted downstream of the chloroplast sequence, import of CAT and GUS into chloroplasts was observed. Using the reciprocal system, the mitochondrial presequence alone was able to direct transport of CAT and, to a lesser extent, GUS to mitochondria; the GUS targeting to mitochondria was increased when the chloroplast targeting sequence was linked downstream of the mitochondrial presequence. Immuno-detection experiments using subcellular fractions confirmed the results observed by enzymatic assays. These results indicate the importance of the amino-terminal position of the targeting sequence in determining protein import specificity and are considered within the hypothesis of a co-translational protein import.  相似文献   

5.
Protein import into chloroplasts requires a transit peptide, which interacts with the chloroplast transport apparatus and leads to translocation of the protein across the chloroplast envelope. While the amino acid sequences of many transit peptides are known, functional domains have been difficult to identify. Previous studies suggest that the carboxyl terminus of the transit peptide for ribulose bisphosphate carboxylase small subunit is important for both translocation across the chloroplast envelope and proper processing of the precursor protein. We dissected this region using in vitro mutagenesis, creating a set of mutants with small changes in primary structure predicted to cause alterations in secondary structure. The import behavior of the mutant proteins was assessed using isolated chloroplasts. Our results show that removal of a conserved arginine residue in this region results in impaired processing, but does not necessarily affect import rates. In contrast, substituting amino acids with low reverse turn or amphiphilic potential for other original residues affected import rate but not processing.  相似文献   

6.
A genetic screen in Arabidopsis was developed to explore the regulation of chloroplast protein import in vivo using two independent reporters representing housekeeping and photosynthetic pre‐proteins. We first used 5‐enolpyruvylshikimate 3‐phosphate synthase (EPSP synthase*), a key enzyme in the shikimic acid pathway, with a mutation that confers tolerance to the herbicide glyphosate. Because the EPSP synthase* pre‐protein must be imported for its function, the loss of glyphosate tolerance provided an initial indication of an import deficiency. Second, the fate of GFP fused to a ferredoxin transit peptide (FD5–GFP) was determined. A class of altered chloroplast import (aci) mutants showed both glyphosate sensitivity and FD5–GFP mislocalized to nuclei. aci2‐1 was selected for further study. Yellow fluorescent protein (YFP) fused to the transit peptide of EPSP synthase* or the small subunit of Rubisco was not imported into chloroplasts, but also localized to nuclei during protoplast transient expression. Isolated aci2‐1 chloroplasts showed a 50% reduction in pre‐protein import efficiency in an in vitro assay. Mutants did not grow photoautotrophically on media without sucrose and were small and dark green in soil. aci2‐1 and two alleles code for Moco‐sulfurase, which activates the aldehyde oxidases required for the biosynthesis of the plant hormones abscisic acid (ABA) and indole‐acetic acid (IAA) and controls purine nucleotide (ATP and GTP) turnover and nitrogen recycling via xanthine dehydrogenase. These enzyme activities were not detected in aci2‐1. ABA, IAA and/or purine turnover may play previously unrecognized roles in the regulation of chloroplast protein import in response to developmental, metabolic and environmental cues.  相似文献   

7.
Three stromal chaperone ATPases, cpHsc70, Hsp90C, and Hsp93, are present in the chloroplast translocon, but none has been shown to directly bind preproteins in vivo during import, so it remains unclear whether any function as a preprotein-translocating motor and whether they have different functions during the import process. Here, using protein crosslinking followed by ionic detergent solubilization, we show that Hsp93 directly binds to the transit peptides of various preproteins undergoing active import into chloroplasts. Hsp93 also binds to the mature region of a preprotein. A time course study of import, followed by coimmunoprecipitation experiments, confirmed that Hsp93 is present in the same complexes as preproteins at an early stage when preproteins are being processed to the mature size. In contrast, cpHsc70 is present in the same complexes as preproteins at both the early stage and a later stage after the transit peptide has been removed, suggesting that cpHsc70, but not Hsp93, is important in translocating processed mature proteins across the envelope.Most chloroplast proteins are encoded by the nuclear genome as higher Mr preproteins that are fully synthesized in the cytosol before being imported into the chloroplast. The import process is initiated by binding of the N-terminal transit peptide of the preprotein to the translocon at the outer envelope membrane of chloroplasts (TOC) complex, in which Toc159 and Toc34 function as receptors and Toc75 is the outer membrane channel. This step is followed by binding of the transit peptide to the translocon at the inner envelope membrane of chloroplasts (TIC) machinery, the central components of which include the Tic20/Tic56/Tic100/Tic214 channel complex and Tic110. Tic110 functions as the stromal receptor for transit peptides and also as a scaffold for tethering other translocon components (for reviews, see Li and Chiu, 2010; Shi and Theg, 2013; Paila et al., 2015). The actual translocation of the bound preproteins across the envelope is powered by hydrolysis of ATP in the stroma (Pain and Blobel, 1987; Theg et al., 1989), and it is therefore assumed that some stromal ATPase motor proteins bind the preproteins as they emerge from the inner membrane and use the energy of ATP hydrolysis to translocate the preproteins across the envelope into the stroma.Three stromal ATPases have been identified in the translocon complex: cpHsc70 (chloroplast heat shock cognate protein 70 kD), Hsp90C (chloroplast heat shock protein 90), and Hsp93/ClpC (93-kD heat shock protein). Hsp93, the first to be identified, belongs to the Hsp100 subfamily of AAA+ proteins (ATPases associated with various cellular activities) and was detected in coimmunoprecipitation experiments in complexes containing other translocon components and preproteins undergoing import (Akita et al., 1997; Nielsen et al., 1997; Chou et al., 2003; Rosano et al., 2011). In Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana), Hsp93 exists as two isoforms encoded by the genes HSP93III and HSP93V. Removal of the more abundant Hsp93V results in protein import defects, while double knockout of the two genes causes lethality (Constan et al., 2004; Kovacheva et al., 2007; Chu and Li, 2012; Lee et al., 2015). Purified recombinant Hsp93III can bind to the transit peptide of pea (Pisum sativum) ferredoxin-NADP+ reductase in vitro (Rosano et al., 2011). In addition, the N-terminal domain of Hsp93 is critical both for its in vivo functions and its association with chloroplast membranes and Tic110, suggesting that one of the major functions of Hsp93 requires it to be localized at the envelope with Tic110 (Chu and Li, 2012). However, because many prokaryotic Hsp100 family proteins function as the regulatory components of the Clp proteases (Kress et al., 2009; Nishimura and van Wijk, 2015), and, in Arabidopsis, some Clp proteolytic core components have also been found at the envelope fraction, it has been proposed that Hsp93 is involved in degradation of misfolded or damaged proteins at the envelope (Sjögren et al., 2014). However, whether the Clp proteolytic core can form a stable complex with Hsp93 in higher plant chloroplasts remains to be shown.In mitochondria and the endoplasmic reticulum, protein import is driven by the Hsp70 family of proteins. In chloroplasts, accumulating evidence also supports that Hsp70 is important for chloroplast protein import. Purified recombinant Hsp70 can bind in vitro to the transit peptide of the small subunit of RuBP carboxylase preprotein (prRBCS; Ivey et al., 2000). Stromal Hsp70 can be coimmunoprecipitated with preproteins undergoing import and with other translocon components, and mutations resulting in reduced or altered stromal Hsp70 activity cause protein import defects (Shi and Theg, 2010; Su and Li, 2010). Recently, it has been shown, in moss, that increasing the Km for Hsp70 ATP hydrolysis results in an increased Km for ATP usage in chloroplast protein import, indicating that stromal Hsp70 is indeed one of the proteins supplying ATP-derived energy to power import (Liu et al., 2014). Finally, stromal Hsp90C has been shown to be part of active translocon complexes in coimmunoprecipitation experiments (Inoue et al., 2013). As further evidence that Hsp90 is important for protein import into chloroplasts, the Hsp90 ATPase activity inhibitor radicicol reversibly inhibits the import of preproteins into chloroplasts (Inoue et al., 2013).Presence of the three ATPases in the translocon was demonstrated by coimmunoprecipitation after solubilization of chloroplast membranes under conditions that preserve the large membrane protein complexes, either by solubilization with nonionic detergents or by treating chloroplasts with crosslinkers that link all proteins in a complex together (Akita et al., 1997; Nielsen et al., 1997; Shi and Theg, 2010; Su and Li, 2010; Inoue et al., 2013). These complexes contain translocon components that directly bind to preproteins, and also other proteins that are associated with these translocon components but have no direct contacts with the preproteins. For example, Nielsen et al. (1997) demonstrated the presence of Hsp93 in the translocon by binding of prRBCS to isolated pea chloroplasts and then solubilization of chloroplast membranes with the nonionic detergent decylmaltoside. Under these conditions, an anti-Hsp93 antibody specifically immunoprecipitated Hsp93 together with Toc159, Toc75, Toc34, Tic110, and prRBCS (Nielsen et al., 1997). The result showed that Hsp93 is in the same complexes with these proteins but did not provide information whether Hsp93 directly binds to them. It is possible that Hsp93 only has direct contacts with, for example, Tic110, which then binds to prRBCS. Direct binding, in particular to the transit peptide region, would provide strong evidence that an ATPase functions as a protein translocating motor, rather than in assisting the assembly of other translocon components or in the folding or degradation of imported proteins. Furthermore, if all three ATPases were found to be involved in preprotein translocation, it would be important to understand how they work together; for example, whether they preferentially bind different preproteins, bind to different regions of a preprotein, or act at different stages of the import process.Here, we examined whether Hsp93 can directly bind to preproteins undergoing import into chloroplasts, and compared the timing of the binding of Hsp93 and cpHsc70 to the preproteins. We used isolated pea chloroplasts, rather than isolated Arabidopsis chloroplasts, because pea chloroplasts exhibit more robust import ability (Fitzpatrick and Keegstra, 2001). Various crosslinkers that react with cysteines were then used to achieve more specific crosslinkings, followed by solubilization with the ionic detergent lithium dodecyl sulfate (LDS) to thoroughly solubilize chloroplast membranes and to disrupt noncovalent protein-protein interactions. Our results show that Hsp93 directly binds to preproteins undergoing import. Import time course experiments further revealed that Hsp93 functions primarily during the early stage of import, whereas cpHsc70 associates with substrates being imported at both the early stage and a later stage after transit peptide removal.  相似文献   

8.
A cDNA was isolated from pea leaf RNA which encodes a phospholipid hydroperoxide glutathione peroxidase (PHGPX; E.C. 1.1.1.1.9). The N-terminal section of this PHGPX encodes a recognisable chloroplast transit peptide. Efficient import in vitro of the pre-PHGPX protein into the stroma of isolated pea chloroplasts confirmed that the PHGPX is a chloroplast-located enzyme. The pea PHGPX has highly conserved homologues in Arabidopsis, citrus and Nicotiana sylvestris and the authors suggest that these proteins are also localised in the chloroplast and not in the cytosol as previously supposed.  相似文献   

9.
Zhao  Yongli  Williams  Roxanne  Prakash  C S  He  Guohao 《BMC plant biology》2012,12(1):1-8

Background

Clp/Hsp100 chaperones are involved in protein quality control. They act as independent units or in conjunction with a proteolytic core to degrade irreversibly damaged proteins. Clp chaperones from plant chloroplasts have been also implicated in the process of precursor import, along with Hsp70 chaperones. They are thought to pull the precursors in as the transit peptides enter the organelle. How Clp chaperones identify their substrates and engage in their processing is not known. This information may lie in the position, sequence or structure of the Clp recognition motifs.

Results

We tested the influence of the position of the transit peptide on the interaction with two chloroplastic Clp chaperones, ClpC2 and ClpD from Arabidopsis thaliana (AtClpC2 and AtClpD). The transit peptide of ferredoxin-NADP+ reductase was fused to either the N- or C-terminal end of glutathione S-transferase. Another fusion with the transit peptide interleaved between two folded proteins was used to probe if AtClpC2 and AtClpD could recognize tags located in the interior of a polypeptide. We also used a mutated transit peptide that is not targeted by Hsp70 chaperones (TP1234), yet it is imported at a normal rate. The fusions were immobilized on resins and the purified recombinant chaperones were added. After a washing protocol, the amount of bound chaperone was assessed. Both AtClpC2 and AtClpD interacted with the transit peptides when they were located at the N-terminal position of a protein, but not when they were allocated to the C-terminal end or at the interior of a polypeptide.

Conclusions

AtClpC2 and AtClpD have a positional preference for interacting with a transit peptide. In particular, the localization of the signal sequence at the N-terminal end of a protein seems mandatory for interaction to take place. Our results have implications for the understanding of protein quality control and precursor import in chloroplasts.  相似文献   

10.
Protein import into chloroplasts is postulated to occur with the involvement of molecular chaperones. We have determined that the transit peptide of ferredoxin-NADP(H) reductase precursor binds preferentially to an Hsp70 from chloroplast stroma. To investigate the role of Hsp70 molecular chaperones in chloroplast protein import, we analyzed the import into pea chloroplasts of preproteins with decreased Hsp70 binding affinity in their transit peptides. Our results indicate that the precursor with the lowest affinity for Hsp70 molecular chaperones in its transit peptide was imported to chloroplasts with similar apparent Km as the wild type precursor and a 2-fold increase in Vmax. Thus, a strong interaction between chloroplast stromal Hsp70 and the transit peptide seems not to be essential for protein import. These results indicate that in chloroplasts the main unfolding force during protein import may be applied by molecular chaperones other than Hsp70s. Although stromal Hsp70s undoubtedly participate in chloroplast biogenesis, the role of these molecular chaperones in chloroplast protein translocation differs from the one proposed in the mechanisms postulated up to date.  相似文献   

11.
The precursors of the F1-ATPase -subunits fromNicotiana plumbaginifolia andNeurospora crassa were imported into isolated spinach (Spinacia oleracea L.) leaf mitochondria. Both F1 precursors were imported and processed to mature size products. No import of the mitochondrial precursor proteins into isolated intact spinach chloroplasts was seen. Moreover, the precursor of the 33 kDa protein of photosynthetic water-splitting enzyme was not imported into the leaf mitochondria. This study provides the first experimental report ofin vitro import of precursor proteins into plant mitochondria isolated from photosynthetic tissue and enables studies of protein sorting between mitochondria and chloroplasts in a system which is homologous with respect to organelles. The results suggest a high organellar specificity in the plant cell for the cytoplasmically synthesized precursor proteins.  相似文献   

12.
Heterokont algae such as diatoms and the raphidophyte Heterosigma akashiwo and peridinin-containing dinoflagellates such as Heterocapsa triquetra originally acquired their chloroplasts via secondary endosymbiosis involving a red algal endosymbiont and a eukaryote host, resulting in complex chloroplasts surrounded by four and three membranes, respectively. The precursors of both heterokont and dinoflagellate chloroplast-targeted proteins are first inserted into the ER with removal of an N-terminal signal peptide, but how they traverse the remaining membranes is unclear. Using a nuclear-encoded thylakoid lumen protein, PsbO, from the heterokont alga Heterosigma akashiwo, the dinoflagellate Heterocapsa triquetra and the red alga Porphyra yezoensis we show that precursors without the ER signal peptide can be imported into pea chloroplasts. In the case of the H. triquetra and Porphyra PsbO, the precursors were processed to their predicted mature size and localized within the thylakoid lumen, using the Sec-dependent pathway. We report for the first time a stromal processing peptidase (SPP) activity from an alga of the red lineage. The enzyme processes the Heterosigma PsbO precursor at a single site and appears to have different substrate and reaction specificities from the plant SPP. In spite of the fact that we could not find convincing homologs of the plant chloroplast import machinery in heterokont (diatom) and red algal genomes, it is clear that these three very different lines of algae use similar mechanisms to import chloroplast precursors.  相似文献   

13.
It has previously been shown that presequences of nuclear-encoded chloroplast proteins from the green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii contain a region that may form an amphiphilic -helix, a structure characteristic of mitochondrial presequences. We have tested two precursors of chloroplast proteins (the PsaF and PsaK photosystem I subunits) from C. reinhardtii for the ability to be imported into spinach leaf mitochondria in vitro. Both precursors bound to spinach mitochondria. The PsaF protein was converted into a protease-protected form with high efficiency in a membrane potential-dependent manner, indicating that the protein had been imported, whereas the PsaK protein was not protease protected. The protease protection of PsaF was not inhibited by a synthetic peptide derived from the presequence of the N. plumbaginifolia mitochondrial F1 subunit. Furthermore, if the presequence of PsaF was truncated or deleted by in vitro mutagenesis, the protein was still protease-protected with approximately the same efficiency as the full-length precursor. These results indicate that PsaF can be imported by spinach mitochondria in a presequence-independent manner. However, even in the absence of the presequence, this process was membrane potential-dependent. Interestingly, the presequence-truncated PsaF proteins were also protease-protected upon incubation with C. reinhardtii chloroplasts. Our results indicate that the C. reinhardtii chloroplast PsaF protein has peculiar properties and may be imported not only into chloroplasts but also into higher-plant mitochondria. This finding indicates that additional control mechanisms in the cytosol that are independent of the presequence are required to achieve sorting between chloroplasts and mitochondria in vivo.Abbreviations cTP chloroplast transit peptide - mTP mitochondrial targeting peptide - Rubisco ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase - pF1(1,25) a synthetic peptide derived from the first 25 residues of the Nicotiana plumbaginifolia mitochondrial ATP synthase F1 subunit - PsaF(2–30) and PsaF(2–61) mutant proteins lacking regions corresponding to residues 2–30 and 2–61 in the PsaF precursor protein, respectively  相似文献   

14.
The NADPH-protochlorophyllide oxidoreductase (pchlide reductase, EC 1.6.99.1) is the major protein in the prolamellar bodies (PLBs) of etioplasts, where it catalyzes the light-dependent reduction of protochlorophyllide to chlorophyllide during chlorophyll synthesis in higher plants. The suborganellar location in chloroplasts of light-grown plants is less clear. In vitro assays were performed to characterize the assembly process of the pchlide reductase protein in pea chloroplasts. Import reactions employing radiolabelled precursor protein of the pchlide reductase showed that the protein was efficiently imported into fully matured green chloroplasts of pea. Fractionation assays following an import reaction revealed that imported protein was targeted to the thylakoid membranes. No radiolabelled protein could be detected in the stromal or envelope compartments upon import. Assembly reactions performed in chloroplast lysates showed that maximum amount of radiolabelled protein was associated to the thylakoid membranes in a thermolysin-resistant conformation when the assays were performed in the presence of hydrolyzable ATP and NADPH, but not in the presence of NADH. Furthermore, membrane assembly was optimal at pH 7.5 and at 25°C. However, further treatment of the thylakoids with NaOH after an assembly reaction removed most of the membrane-associated protein. Assembly assays performed with the mature form of the pchlide reductase, lacking the transit peptide, showed that the pre-sequence was not required for membrane assembly. These results indicate that the pchlide reductase is a peripheral protein located on the stromal side of the membrane, and that both the precursor and the mature form of the protein can act as substrates for membrane assembly.  相似文献   

15.
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   

16.
Toc12 is a novel J domain-containing protein identified in pea (Pisum sativum) chloroplasts. It was shown to be an integral outer membrane protein localizing in the intermembrane space of the chloroplast envelope. Furthermore, Toc12 was shown to associate with an intermembrane space Hsp70, suggesting that Toc12 is important for protein translocation across the chloroplast envelope. Toc12 shares a high degree of sequence similarity with Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) DnaJ-J8, which has been suggested to be a soluble protein of the chloroplast stroma. Here, we isolated genes encoding DnaJ-J8 from pea and found that Toc12 is a truncated clone of one of the pea DnaJ-J8s. Protein import analyses indicate that Toc12 and DnaJ-J8s possess a cleavable transit peptide and are localized in the stroma. Arabidopsis mutants with T-DNA insertions in the DnaJ-J8 gene show no defect in chloroplast protein import. Implications of these results in the energetics and mechanisms of chloroplast protein import are discussed.Most chloroplast proteins are encoded by the nuclear genome and synthesized in the cytosol as higher molecular mass precursors with an N-terminal extension known as the transit peptide. Precursor proteins are imported into chloroplasts through a translocon complex located at the chloroplast envelope. Translocon components associated with the outer membrane are called Toc (for translocon of the outer envelope membrane of chloroplast) proteins, and those associated with the inner membrane are called Tic (for translocon of the inner envelope membrane of chloroplast) proteins. Cleavage of the transit peptide from the precursor by a specific stromal processing peptidase during translocation results in the production of the lower molecular mass mature protein. Various translocon components have been assigned functions in the basic steps of the import process (for review, see Inaba and Schnell, 2008; Jarvis, 2008; Li and Chiu, 2010). For example, Toc159 (the no. indicates the calculated molecular mass of the protein) and Toc34 are receptors for the transit peptides, and Toc75 is the protein-translocating channel across the outer membrane. Toc64, on the other hand, has a dual function: it serves as a docking site for the cytosolic Hsp90 through its cytosolic domain and as a scaffold for translocon components located in the intermembrane space through its intermembrane space domain (Qbadou et al., 2007).Protein import into chloroplasts involves at least two distinct ATP-consuming steps. The first step is called “early import intermediate” or “docking,” in which less than 100 μm ATP is required and precursors are translocated across the outer membrane and come into contact with translocon components in the inner membrane (Olsen et al., 1989; Kouranov and Schnell, 1997; Inaba et al., 2003; Inoue and Akita, 2008). It has been shown that the ATP is used in the intermembrane space (Olsen and Keegstra, 1992), most likely by a yet unidentified intermembrane space Hsp70 called imsHsp70 or Hsp70-IAP (ims for “intermembrane space” and IAP for “import intermediate-associated protein”; Marshall et al., 1990; Schnell et al., 1994; Qbadou et al., 2007). The second ATP-consuming step is the complete translocation of precursors across the two envelope membranes into the stroma. This step requires about 1 mm ATP. The ATP is most likely used by the stromal Hsp93 and chloroplast Hsc70 associated with the translocon to drive protein translocation into the stroma (Nielsen et al., 1997; Shi and Theg, 2010; Su and Li, 2010).Hsp70 family proteins are involved in many cellular processes, including protein folding, protein translocation across membranes, and regulation of protein degradation. Hsp70 proteins are often recruited to perform a certain function by specifically localized J domain-containing proteins. The J domain-containing proteins interact with Hsp70 when Hsp70 is bound to ATP and stimulate ATP hydrolysis by Hsp70. The specific J domain-containing cochaperone that recruits the stromal chloroplast Hsc70 to the inner envelope membrane to assist in protein translocation has not been identified. The specific J domain-containing cochaperone for imsHsp70 for its function in protein import into chloroplasts is proposed to be a protein named Toc12 (Becker et al., 2004).Toc12 was identified as a novel J domain-containing protein from pea (Pisum sativum) chloroplasts. It belongs to the type III J domain proteins containing only the J domain without the Gly- and Phe-rich domain (G/F domain) and the zinc-finger domain originally found in Escherichia coli DnaJ. It has been shown that the protein is synthesized at its mature size of 103 amino acids without a cleavable transit peptide. After import, the protein has been shown to anchor in the outer membrane by its N-terminal part, which has been suggested to form a β-barrel-type domain. Its C-terminal part, composed of the J domain, has been shown to localize in the intermembrane space. Toc12 has been shown to associate with imsHsp70. Toc12 and imsHsp70 interact with the intermembrane space domain of Toc64, which in turn associates with another intermembrane space translocon component, Tic22. It is proposed that the Toc12-imsHsp70-Toc64-Tic22 complex mediates protein translocation across the intermembrane space through specific precursor binding and ATP hydrolysis (Becker et al., 2004; Qbadou et al., 2007). However, the existence of imsHsp70 has only been shown on immunoblots by its reactivity to the monoclonal antibody SPA820 raised against human Hsp70. Its encoding gene has never been identified. The Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) Hsp70 gene family has 14 members. Only two of them are localized in chloroplasts, and both have been shown to locate in the stroma (Ratnayake et al., 2008; Su and Li, 2008). A recent study has further shown that the major protein recognized by the SPA820 antibody in pea chloroplasts is located in the stroma, indicating that imsHsp70 is most likely a stromal protein (Ratnayake et al., 2008).Most translocon components were originally identified from pea chloroplasts. While all translocon components identified from pea have easily recognizable Arabidopsis homologs, Toc12 seems to be an exception. The Arabidopsis gene suggested to be the pea TOC12 homolog, At1g80920 (Inoue, 2007; Jarvis, 2008), encodes a protein that is much larger than pea Toc12 and is annotated as J8 (referred to as AtJ8 herein). The entire pea Toc12 has a high sequence similarity to the N-terminal two-thirds of AtJ8. AtJ8 contains an extra C-terminal domain of 60 amino acids that is highly conserved among J8 proteins from other higher plants. However, in contrast to pea Toc12, AtJ8 is predicted to locate in the stroma (Miernyk, 2001; www.arabidopsis.org). Indeed, a fusion protein consisting of the first 80 amino acids of AtJ8 fused at the N terminus of GFP was imported into the chloroplast stroma, and approximately 46 amino acids from the N terminus were processed after import (Lee et al., 2008), indicating that the first 46 amino acids of AtJ8 function as a cleavable stroma-targeting transit peptide. A T-DNA insertion in the AtJ8 gene that causes the truncation of the last three amino acids results in no visible phenotype. However, detailed analyses indicate that the mutant has lower CO2 assimilation and Rubisco activity than the wild type (Chen et al., 2010).We are interested in identifying J domain-containing proteins interacting with stromal Hsp70. As part of the initial effort, we investigated the suborganellar location of J8 and examined the relationship between Toc12 and J8. We found that, in pea, there are at least two genes encoding J8, which we named PsJ8a and PsJ8b. TOC12 represents part of PsJ8b. Toc12, AtJ8, and the two PsJ8 proteins could be imported into chloroplasts and processed to stromally localized soluble mature proteins. Four alleles of AtJ8 mutants were analyzed, but none of them showed any defect in the import of various chloroplast precursor proteins.  相似文献   

17.
The 20 kDa polypeptide, the apoprotein of the chlorophyll a/b antenna complex CP24 associated with photosystem II, is a remote relative of light-harvesting complex (LHC) apoproteins and thus a member of the extended cab gene family. LHC apoproteins are poly-topic integral components of the thylakoid membrane with probably three transmembrane segments which originate in nuclear genes and are made in the cytosol as precursors. They possess exclusively stroma-targeting transit peptides for import into the organelle and integrate into the thylakoid membrane via uncleaved hydrophobic domains of the mature protein. The CP24 apoprotein displays intriguing structural differences to LHC apoproteins with a potential impact on the routing and targeting processes during biogenesis. In particular, it lacks a pronounced second hydrophobic segment in the mature polypeptide chain found in LHCPs, and carries a transit peptide that is reminiscent of thylakoid-targeting transit peptides. We have used in organello assays with isolated intact chloroplasts and the authentic precursor of the 20 kDa apoprotein from spinach, or appropriate chimaeric polypeptides consisting of a transit peptide and the mature part of various nuclear-encoded thylakoid proteins of known location and targeting epitopes, in order to resolve the characteristics of its targeting properties, as well as to determine the contribution of the individual parts of the precursor molecule to its import and subsequent intra-organellar routing. Our experiments demonstrate that the transit peptide of the CP24 apoprotein is required only for the import of the protein into the organelle. All subsequent steps, such as the integration of the protein into the thylakoid membrane, binding of chlorophyll, assembly into the CP24 complex and migration to the grana lamellae, still take place if the authentic transit peptide is replaced by a targeting signal of a nuclear-encoded stromal protein.  相似文献   

18.
Using the expression vector gt11 and immunochemical detection, six cDNA clones that encode the entire precursor polypeptides for spinach thioredoxin m were isolated and characterized. The ca. 1.0 kb cDNA sequence of the largest clone hybridizes to an RNA species of 1.1 kb. In each instance the cDNA sequences display single open reading frames encoding polypeptides of 181 amino acid residues corresponding to a molecular mass of 19.8 kDa. The sequences of the independently selected cDNAs fall into two classes that are indicative of at least two (closely related) genes for this protein. The amino acid sequences deduced from the cDNA sequences differ to some extent from the amino acid sequence published for spinach thioredoxin m. The sequences predict identical mature proteins of 112–114 amino acids corresponding to a polypeptide molecular mass of ca. 12.4–12.6 kDa, and include stroma-targeting N-terminal transit peptides of 67 residues which are removed during or after import into the organelle. Precursor protein was made in vitro from each of the different cDNA clones and imported into isolated intact chloroplasts. Independent of the cDNA clone used, two isoforms were detected in the chloroplasts after import in each instance. They comigrated with authentic thioredoxin mb and mc. These results indicate that the size variants observed for this protein in vivo result from post-translational modification and do not originate in different genes.  相似文献   

19.
We have begun to take a genetic approach to study chloroplast protein import in Chlamydomonas reinhardtii by creating deletions in the transit peptide of the γ-subunit of chloroplast ATPase-coupling factor 1 (CF1-γ, encoded by AtpC) and testing their effects in vivo by transforming the altered genes into an atpC mutant, and in vitro by importing mutant precursors into isolated C. reinhardtii chloroplasts. Deletions that removed 20 or 23 amino acid residues from the center of the transit peptide reduced in vitro import to an undetectable level but did not affect CF1-γ accumulation in vivo. The CF1-γ transit peptide does have an in vivo stroma-targeting function, since chimeric genes in which the stroma-targeting domain of the plastocyanin transit peptide was replaced by the AtpC transit peptide-coding region allowed plastocyanin to accumulate in vivo. To determine whether the transit peptide deletions were impaired in in vivo stroma targeting, mutant and wild-type AtpC transit peptide-coding regions were fused to the bacterial ble gene, which confers bleomycin resistance. Although 25% of the wild-type fusion protein was associated with chloroplasts, proteins with transit peptide deletions remained almost entirely cytosolic. These results suggest that even severely impaired in vivo chloroplast protein import probably does not limit the accumulation of CF1-γ.  相似文献   

20.
Toc75 is an outer envelope membrane protein of chloroplasts. It is unusual among the outer membrane proteins in that its precursor form has a bipartite transit peptide. The N-terminal portion of the Toc75 transit peptide is sufficient to target the protein to the stromal space of chloroplasts. We prepared a 45 amino-acid peptide containing the stromal targeting domain of the Toc75 transit peptide in Escherichia coli, using the intein-mediated system, and purified it by reverse-phase HPLC. Its identity was confirmed by N-terminal amino-acid sequencing and matrix assisted laser desorption ionization mass spectrometry. In monolayer experiments, the peptide inserted into the chloroplastic membrane lipids sulfoquinovosyl diacylglycerol and phosphatidylglycerol and into a nonchloroplastic lipid phosphatidylethanolamine. However, it did not insert into other chloroplastic lipids, such as mono- and digalactosyl diacylglycerol, and phosphatidylcholine. Furthermore, the peptide significantly inhibited binding of radiolabeled precursors of Toc75 and the small subunit of ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase to intact chloroplasts as effectively as did a bacterially produced precursor of the small subunit of 1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase. The peptide also inhibited import of radiolabeled precursors into isolated chloroplasts, however, to a lesser extent than did nonlabeled precursor of the small subunit of 1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase.  相似文献   

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