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1.
Cytosolic fructose-1,6-biphosphatases (FBPase, EC 3.1.3.11) from pea (Pisum sativum L. cv Lincoln) and spinach (Spinacia oleracea L. cv Winter Giant) did not cross-react by double immunodiffusion and western blotting with either of the antisera raised against the chloroplast enzyme of both species; similarly, pea and spinach chloroplast FBPases did not react with the spinach cytosolic FBPase antiserum. On the other hand, spinach and pea chloroplast FBPases showed strong cross-reactions against the antisera to chloroplast FBPases, in the same way that the pea and spinach cytosolic enzymes displayed good cross-reactions against the antiserum to spinach cytosolic FBPase. Crude extracts from spinach and pea leaves, as well as the corresponding purified chloroplast enzymes, showed by western blotting only one band (44 and 43 kD, respectively) in reaction with either of the antisera against the chloroplast enzymes. A unique fraction of molecular mass 38 kD appeared when either of the crude extracts or the purified spinach cytosolic FBPase were analyzed against the spinach cytosolic FBPase antiserum. These molecular sizes are in accordance with those reported for the subunits of the photosynthetic and gluconeogenic FBPases. Chloroplast and cytosolic FBPases underwent increasing inactivation when increasing concentrations of chloroplast or cytosolic anti-FBPase immunoglobulin G (IgG), respectively, were added to the reaction mixture. However, inactivations were not observed when the photosynthetic enzyme was incubated with the IgG to cytosolic FBPase, or vice versa. Quantitative results obtained by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays (ELISA) showed 77% common antigenic determinants between the two chloroplast enzymes when tested against the spinach photosynthetic FBPase antiserum, which shifted to 64% when assayed against the pea antiserum. In contrast, common antigenic determinats between the spinach cytosolic FBPase and the two chloroplast enzymes were less than 10% when the ELISA test was carried out with either of the photosynthetic FBPase antisera, and only 5% when the assay was performed with the antiserum to the spinach cytosolic FBPase. These results were supported by sequencing data: the deduced amino acid sequence of a chloroplast FBPase clone isolated from a pea cDNA library indicated a 39,253 molecular weight protein, with a homology of 85% with the spinach chloroplast FBPase but only 48.5% with the cytosolic enzyme from spinach.  相似文献   

2.
3.
Sunlight provides the energy source for the assimilation of carbon dioxide by photosynthesis, but it also provides regulatory signals that switch on specific sets of enzymes involved in the alternation of light and dark metabolisms in chloroplasts. Capture of photons by chlorophyll pigments triggers redox cascades that ultimately activate target enzymes via the reduction of regulatory disulfide bridges by thioredoxins. Here we report the structure of the oxidized, low-activity form of chloroplastic fructose-1, 6-bisphosphate phosphatase (FBPase), one of the four enzymes of the Calvin cycle whose activity is redox-regulated by light. The regulation is of allosteric nature, with a disulfide bridge promoting the disruption of the catalytic site across a distance of 20 A. Unexpectedly, regulation of plant FBPases by thiol-disulfide interchange differs in every respect from the regulation of mammalian gluconeogenic FBPases by AMP. We also report a second crystal form of oxidized FBPase whose tetrameric structure departs markedly from D(2) symmetry, a rare event in oligomeric structures, and the structure of a constitutively active mutant that is unable to form the regulatory disulfide bridge. Altogether, these structures provide a structural basis for redox regulation in the chloroplast.  相似文献   

4.
Thioredoxins (Trxs) regulate the activity of various chloroplastic proteins in a light‐dependent manner. Five types of Trxs function in different physiological processes in the chloroplast of Arabidopsis thaliana. Previous in vitro experiments have suggested that the f‐type Trx (Trx f) is the main redox regulator of chloroplast enzymes, including Calvin cycle enzymes. To investigate the in vivo contribution of each Trx isoform to the redox regulatory system, we first quantified the protein concentration of each Trx isoform in the chloroplast stroma. The m‐type Trx (Trx m), which consists of four isoforms, was the most abundant type. Next, we analyzed several Arabidopsis Trx‐m‐deficient mutants to elucidate the physiological role of Trx m in vivo. Deficiency of Trx m impaired plant growth and decreased the CO2 assimilation rate. We also determined the redox state of Trx target enzymes to examine their photo‐reduction, which is essential for enzyme activation. In the Trx‐m‐deficient mutants, the reduction level of fructose‐1,6‐bisphosphatase and sedoheptulose‐1,7‐bisphosphatase was lower than that in the wild type. Inconsistently with the historical view, our in vivo study suggested that Trx m plays a more important role than Trx f in the activation of Calvin cycle enzymes.  相似文献   

5.
Two hybrid thioredoxins (Trx) have been constructed from cDNA clones coding for pea chloroplast Trxs m and f. The splitting point was the AvaII site situated between the two cysteines of the regulatory cluster. One hybrid, Trx m/f, was purified from Escherichia coli-expressed cell lysates as a high yielding 12 kDa protein. Western blot analysis showed a positive reaction with antibodies against pea Trxs m and f and, like the parenteral pea Trx m, displayed an acidic pI (5.0) and a high thermal stability. In contrast, the opposite hybrid Trx f/m appeared in E. coli lysates as inclusion bodies, where it was detected by Western blot against pea Trx f antibodies as a 40 kDa protein. Trx f/m was very unstable, sensitive to heat denaturation, and could not be purified. Trx m/f showed a higher affinity for pea chloroplast fructose-1,6-bisphosphatase (FBPase) and a smaller Trx/FBPase saturation ratio than both parenterals; however, the FBPase catalytic rate was lower than that with Trxs m and f. Surprisingly, the hybrid Trx m/f appeared to be incompetent in the activation of pea NADP-malate dehydrogenase. Computer-assisted models of pea Trxs m and f, and of the chimeric Trx m/f, showed a change in the orientation of the α4-helix in the hybrid, which could explain the kinetic modifications with respect to Trxs m and f. We conclude that the stability of Trxs lies on the N-side of the regulatory cluster, and is associated with the acidic character of this fragment and, as a consequence, with the acidic pI of the whole molecule. In contrast, the ability of FBPase binding and enzyme catalysis depends on the structure on the C-side of the regulatory cysteines.  相似文献   

6.
A cDNA clone encoding pea (Pisum sativum L.) chloroplast thioredoxin (Trx) m and its transit peptide were isolated from a pea cDNA library. Its deduced amino acid sequence showed 70% homology with spinach (Spinacia oleracea L.) Trx m and 25% homology with Trx f from pea and spinach. After subcloning in the Ndel-BamHI sites of pET-12a, the recombinant supplied 20 mg Trx m/L. Escherichia coli culture. This protein had 108 amino acids and was 12,000 D, which is identical to the pea leaf native protein. Unlike pea Trx f, pea Trx m showed a hyperbolic saturation of pea chloroplast fructose-1,6-bisphosphatase (FBPase), with a Trx m/ FBPase molar saturation ratio of about 60, compared with 4 for the Trx f/FBPase quotient. Cross-experiments have shown the ability of pea Trx m to activate the spinach chloroplast FBPase, results that are in contrast with those in spinach found by P. Schürmann, K. Maeda, and A. Tsugita ([1981] Eur J Biochem 116: 37-45), who did not find Trx m efficiency in FBPase activation. This higher efficiency of pea Trx m could be related to the presence of four basic residues (arginine-37, lysine-70, arginine-74, and lysine-97) flanking the regulatory cluster; spinach Trx m lacks the positive charge corresponding to lysine-70 of pea Trx m. This has been confirmed by K70E mutagenesis of pea Trx m, which leads to a 50% decrease in FBPase activation.  相似文献   

7.
The light‐dependent regulation of stromal enzymes by thioredoxin (Trx)‐catalysed disulphide/dithiol exchange is known as a classical mechanism for control of chloroplast metabolism. Recent proteome studies show that Trx targets are present not only in the stroma but in all chloroplast compartments, from the envelope to the thylakoid lumen. Trx‐mediated redox control appears to be a common feature of important pathways, such as the Calvin cycle, starch synthesis and tetrapyrrole biosynthesis. However, the extent of thiol‐dependent redox regulation in the thylakoid lumen has not been previously systematically explored. In this study, we addressed Trx‐linked redox control in the chloroplast lumen of Arabidopsis thaliana. Using complementary proteomics approaches, we identified 19 Trx target proteins, thus covering more than 40% of the currently known lumenal chloroplast proteome. We show that the redox state of thiols is decisive for degradation of the extrinsic PsbO1 and PsbO2 subunits of photosystem II. Moreover, disulphide reduction inhibits activity of the xanthophyll cycle enzyme violaxanthin de‐epoxidase, which participates in thermal dissipation of excess absorbed light. Our results indicate that redox‐controlled reactions in the chloroplast lumen play essential roles in the function of photosystem II and the regulation of adaptation to light intensity.  相似文献   

8.
9.
One of the unsolved problems in plant biochemistry has been the identification of the regulatory cysteines in the reductively light-activated and -inactivated chloroplast enzymes. Homology modeling based on the sequences of these enzymes and the three-dimensional structures of homologous enzymes has now allowed tentative identification of the redox-sensitive Cys residues in four light-activated chloroplast enzymes. In each case the regulatory disulfides are not positioned in the active site but instead appear to be positioned so as to affect the flexibility or the conformation of the enzyme, and thereby to affect catalysis. In glyceraldehyde-3-P dehydrogenase and malate dehydrogenase inter-domain movement would be restricted. In fructose bisphosphatase and sedoheptulose bisphosphatase the regulatory Cys residues are located on the nucleotide binding domain in a region known to be sensitive to an allosteric effector of other fructose bisphosphatases. Results of site-directed mutagenesis experiments to date are in general agreement with the domain-locking hypothesis. The redox sensitivity of a number of cytosolic enzymes suggests that reductive modulation might occur outside of the chloroplast in leaves, and in the roots, stems and germinating seeds of green plants. Our better understanding of the mechanism of redox regulation may lead to new approaches for the regulation of enzyme activity with biotechnological applications.  相似文献   

10.
A positive clone against pea (Pisum sativum L.) chloroplast fructose-1,6-bisphosphatase (FBPase; EC 3.1.3.11) antibodies was obtained from a copy DNA (cDNA) library in λgt11. The insert was 1261 nucleotides long, and had an open reading frame of 1143 base pairs with coding capability for the whole FBPase subunit and a fragment of a putative processing peptide. An additional 115 base pairs corresponding to a 3′-untranslated region coding for an mRNA poly(A)+ tail were also found in the clone. The deduced sequence for the FBPase subunit was a 357-amino-acid protein of molecular mass 39253 daltons (Da), showing 82–88% absolute homology with four chloroplastic FBPases sequenced earlier. The 3.1-kilobase (kb)KpnI-SacI fragment of the λgt11 derivative was subcloned between theKpnI-SacI restriction sites of pTZ18R to yield plasmid pAMC100. Lysates ofEscherichia coli (pAMC100) showed FBPase activity; this was purified as a 170-kDa protein which, upon sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, displayed a 44-kDa band. As occurs with native FBPases, this indicates a homotetrameric structure for the expressed FBPase. When assayed under excess Mg2+ (10 mM), the expressed enzyme had a higher affinity for the substrate than the native pea leaf FBPase; this parameter appears to be substantiated by a tenfold higher specific activity than that of the native enzyme. However, when activated with dithiothreitol plus saturating concentrations of pea thioredoxin (Td) f, both FBPase had similar activities, with a 4:1 Td f-FBPase stoichiometry. In contrast to the native pea chloroplast FBPase, theE. coli-expressed enzyme did not react with the monoclonal antibody GR-PB5. It also had a higher heat sensitivity, with 42% residual activity after heating for 30 min at 60°C, conditions which preserved the native enzyme in a fully active state. These results show the existence of some difference(s) in the conformation of the two FBPases; this could be a consequence of a different expression of the genomic and cDNA clones, or be due to the need for some factor for the correct assembly of the oligomeric structure of the native chloroplast enzyme. Accession number for pea chloroplast FBPase coding sequence: X68826 in the European Molecular Biology Laboratory (EMBL)  相似文献   

11.
It has been proposed that a hydrophobic groove surrounded by positively charged amino acids on thioredoxin (Trx) serves as the recognition and docking site for the interaction of Trx with target proteins. This model for Trx-protein interactions fits well with the Trx-mediated fructose-1,6-bisphosphatase (FBPase) activation, where a protruding negatively charged loop of FBPase would bind to this Trx groove, in a process involving both electrostatic and hydrophobic interactions. This model facilitates the prediction of Trx amino acid residues likely to be involved in enzyme binding. Site-directed mutagenesis of some of these amino acids, in conjunction with measurements of the FBPase activation capacity of the wild type and mutated Trxs, was used to check the model and provided evidence that lysine-70 and arginine-74 of pea Trx m play an essential role in FBPase binding. The binding parameters for the interaction between chloroplast FBPase and the wild type pea Trxs f and m, as well as mutated pea Trx m, determined by equilibrium dialysis in accordance with the Koshland-Nemethy-Filmer model of saturation kinetics, provided additional support for the role of these basic Trx residues in the interaction with FBPase. These data, in conjunction with the midpoint redox potential (E(m)) determinations of Trxs, support the hydrophobic groove model for the interaction between chloroplast FBPase and Trx. This model predicts that differences in the FBPase activation capacity of Trxs arise from their different binding abilities.  相似文献   

12.
Chimeric molecules between human lipoprotein lipase (LPL) and rat hepatic lipase (HL) were used to identify structural elements responsible for functional differences. Based on the close sequence homology with pancreatic lipase, both LPL and HL are believed to have a two-domain structure composed of an amino-terminal (NH2-terminal) domain containing the catalytic Ser-His-Asp triad and a smaller carboxyl-terminal (COOH-terminal) domain. Experiments with chimeric lipases containing the HL NH2-terminal domain and the LPL COOH-terminal domain (HL/LPL) or the reverse chimera (LPL/HL) showed that the NH2-terminal domain is responsible for the catalytic efficiency (Vmax/Km) of these enzymes. Furthermore, it was demonstrated that the stimulation of LPL activity by apolipoprotein C-II and the inhibition of activity by 1 M NaCl originate in structural features within the NH2-terminal domain. HL and LPL bind to vascular endothelium, presumably by interaction with cell surface heparan sulfate proteoglycans. However, the two enzymes differ significantly in their heparin affinity. Experiments with the chimeric lipases indicated that heparin binding avidity was primarily associated with the COOH-terminal domain. Specifically, both HL and the LPL/HL chimera were eluted from immobilized heparin by 0.75 M NaCl, whereas 1.1 M NaCl was required to elute LPL and the HL/LPL chimera. Finally, HL is more active than LPL in the hydrolysis of phospholipid substrates. However, the ratio of phospholipase to neutral lipase activity in both chimeric lipases was enhanced by the presence of the heterologous COOH-terminal domain, demonstrating that this domain strongly influences substrate specificity. The NH2-terminal domain thus controls the kinetic parameters of these lipases, whereas the COOH-terminal domain modulates substrate specificity and heparin binding.  相似文献   

13.
Fructose-1,6-bisphosphatase (FBPase; EC 3.1.3.11) binds its putative physiological activator thioredoxin f (Trx f ) at pH 7.9, the pH in the stroma of the illuminated chloroplast. Since Trx m , described as specific in NADP+-malate dehydrogenase (NADPMDH) activation, appears in pea (Pisum sativum L.) also to be functional in FBPase modulation, we have here analyzed the effect of pH and the redox status of the chloroplast stroma in the pea FBPase binding of homologous Trx f and m . Both pea Trx were strongly bound by purified FBPase when they were preincubated at pH 7.9 with 2.5 m M dithiothreitol (DTT), but not when the reductant was omitted. As occurs with Trx f the Trx m /FBPase ratio of the complex was 4, but this was only observed with a Trx m /FBPase concentration ratio > 10 in the preincubation mixture. The FBPase-Trx m binding disappeared in the presence of 100 m M NaCl, even with 2.5 m M DTT at pH 7.9, with a concomitant appearance of different aggregation states of the FBPase subunit. A similar FBPase-Trx m complex was detected in the stromal solution when pea chloroplasts were lysed at pH 7.9 in the presence of DTT. No interaction was observed between NADP-MDH and Trx f or m , either in the presence or in the absence of DTT. Pea FBPase showed sigmoidal activation kinetics with pea Trx m , and an S0.5 of 133 n M versus 6.6 n M with pea Trx f . About 10-fold higher concentration of the former than that of the latter was required for obtaining maximum activity; however, the Vmax with Trx f was only 2-fold higher than that with Trx m . We conclude that pea FBPase binds and is activated by the homologous Trx m , even though to a lesser extent than with Trx f . We also deduce that in the light the conditions in the chloroplast stroma are optimal for forming an FBPase-Trx complex.  相似文献   

14.
We previously demonstrated that a cluster in the available 150 Asn-170Glu region of pea chloroplast fructose-1,6-bisphosphatase (FBPase) could be involved in its interaction with the physiological modulator thioredoxin (Trx). Using as template a cDNA coding for pea chloroplast FBPase, a DNA insert coding for a 19 amino acid fragment ( 149 Pro-167Gly) was amplified by PCR. After insertion in the pGEX-4T vector-1, it was expressed in Escherichia coli as a fusion protein (GST-19) with the vector-coded glutathione transferase (GST). This protein appears in the supernatant of cell lysates, and was purified to homogeneity. After thrombin digestion, the 19 amino acid insert was isolated as a polypeptide which displayed a positive reaction against pea chloroplast FBPase antibodies. GST-19 linked to glutathione-Sepharose beads, but not the GST, strongly interacts with pea Trx f , suggesting that this binding depends on the 19 amino acid insert. ELISA and Western blot experiments also demonstrate the existence of a GST-19-Trx f interaction, as well as a negligible quantity of Trx f bound by the vector-coded GST. Putative competitive inhibition assays of FBPase activity carried out in the presence of increasing concentrations of the 19 amino acid insert do not demonstrate any enzyme inhibition. On the contrary, this protein fragment enhances the enzyme activity proportionally to its concentration in the assay mixture. This indicates that the FBPase-Trx f binding promotes some type of structural modification of the Trx molecule, or of the FBPase-Trx docking site, thus facilitating the reductive modulation of FBPase.  相似文献   

15.
To understand the regulatory function of the gamma and epsilon subunits of chloroplast ATP synthase in the membrane integrated complex, we constructed a chimeric FoF1 complex of thermophilic bacteria. When a part of the chloroplast F1 gamma subunit was introduced into the bacterial FoF1 complex, the inverted membrane vesicles with this chimeric FoF1 did not exhibit the redox sensitive ATP hydrolysis activity, which is a common property of the chloroplast ATP synthase. However, when the whole part or the C-terminal alpha-helices region of the epsilon subunit was substituted with the corresponding region from CF1-epsilon together with the mutation of gamma, the redox regulation property emerged. In contrast, ATP synthesis activity did not become redox sensitive even if both the regulatory region of CF1-gamma and the entire epsilon subunit from CF1 were introduced. These results provide important features for the regulation of FoF1 by these subunits: (1) the interaction between gamma and epsilon is important for the redox regulation of FoF1 complex by the gamma subunit, and (2) a certain structural matching between these regulatory subunits and the catalytic core of the enzyme must be required to confer the complete redox regulation mechanism to the bacterial FoF1. In addition, a structural requirement for the redox regulation of ATP hydrolysis activity might be different from that for the ATP synthesis activity.  相似文献   

16.
Yoo KS  Ok SH  Jeong BC  Jung KW  Cui MH  Hyoung S  Lee MR  Song HK  Shin JS 《The Plant cell》2011,23(10):3577-3594
Plant thioredoxins (Trxs) participate in two redox systems found in different cellular compartments: the NADP-Trx system (NTS) in the cytosol and mitochondria and the ferredoxin-Trx system (FTS) in the chloroplast, where they function as redox regulators by regulating the activity of various target enzymes. The identities of the master regulators that maintain cellular homeostasis and modulate timed development through redox regulating systems have remained completely unknown. Here, we show that proteins consisting of a single cystathionine β-synthase (CBS) domain pair stabilize cellular redox homeostasis and modulate plant development via regulation of Trx systems by sensing changes in adenosine-containing ligands. We identified two CBS domain-containing proteins in Arabidopsis thaliana, CBSX1 and CBSX2, which are localized to the chloroplast, where they activate all four Trxs in the FTS. CBSX3 was found to regulate mitochondrial Trx members in the NTS. CBSX1 directly regulates Trxs and thereby controls H(2)O(2) levels and regulates lignin polymerization in the anther endothecium. It also affects plant growth by regulating photosynthesis-related [corrected] enzymes, such as malate dehydrogenase, via homeostatic regulation of Trxs. Based on our findings, we suggest that the CBSX proteins (or a CBS pair) are ubiquitous redox regulators that regulate Trxs in the FTS and NTS to modulate development and maintain homeostasis under conditions that are threatening to the cell.  相似文献   

17.
Thioredoxin reductase (TR) and thioredoxin (Trx) define a major cellular redox system that maintains cysteine residues in numerous proteins in the reduced state. Both cytosolic (TR1 and Trx1) and mitochondrial (TR3 and Trx2) enzymes are essential in mammals, but the function of the mitochondrial system is less understood. In this study, we characterized subcellular localization of three TR3 forms that are generated by alternative first exon splicing and that differ in their N-terminal sequences. Only one of these forms resides in mitochondria, whereas the two other isoforms are cytosolic. Consistent with this finding, TR3 did not have catalytic preferences for mitochondrial Trx2 versus cytosolic Trx1, both of which could serve as TR3 substrates. Similarly, TR1 was equally active with Trx1, Trx2, or a bacterial Trx. We generated recombinant selenoprotein forms of TR1 and TR3 and found that these enzymes were inhibited by zinc, but not by calcium or cobalt ions. We further developed a proteomic method for identification of targets of TRs in mammalian cells utilizing affinity columns containing recombinant TR3 forms differing in C-terminal sequences. Using this procedure, we found that Trx1 was the major target of TR3 in both rat and mouse liver cytosol. The truncated form of TR3 lacking selenocysteine was particularly efficient in binding Trx1, consistent with the previously observed role of truncated TR1 in apoptosis. Overall, these data establish that the function of TR3 is not limited to its role in Trx2 reduction.  相似文献   

18.
Thioredoxins are small ubiquitous proteins which act as general protein disulfide reductases in living cells. Chloroplasts contain two distinct thioredoxins ( f and m) with different phylogenetic origin. Both act as enzyme regulatory proteins but have different specificities towards target enzymes. Thioredoxin f (Trx f), which shares only low sequence identity with thioredoxin m (Trx m) and with all other known thioredoxins, activates enzymes of the Calvin cycle and other photosynthetic processes. Trx m shows high sequence similarity with bacterial thioredoxins and activates other chloroplast enzymes. The here described structural studies of the two chloroplast thioredoxins were carried out in order to gain insight into the structure/function relationships of these proteins. Crystal structures were determined for oxidized, recombinant thioredoxin f (Trx f-L) and at the N terminus truncated form of it (Trx f-S), as well as for oxidized and reduced thioredoxin m (at 2.1 and 2.3 A resolution, respectively). Whereas thioredoxin f crystallized as a monomer, both truncated thioredoxin f and thioredoxin m crystallized as non-covalent dimers. The structures of thioredoxins f and m exhibit the typical thioredoxin fold consisting of a central twisted five-stranded beta-sheet surrounded by four alpha-helices. Thioredoxin f contains an additional alpha-helix at the N terminus and an exposed third cysteine close to the active site. The overall three-dimensional structures of the two chloroplast thioredoxins are quite similar. However, the two proteins have a significantly different surface topology and charge distribution around the active site. An interesting feature which might significantly contribute to the specificity of thioredoxin f is an inherent flexibility of its active site, which has expressed itself crystallographically in two different crystal forms.  相似文献   

19.
Sedoheptulose-1,7-bisphosphatase (SBPase) is a Calvin Cycle enzyme exclusive to chloroplasts and is involved in photosynthetic carbon fixation. The two cysteine residues involved in its redox regulation have been identified by site-directed mutagenesis. They are four residues apart in a predicted loop between two alpha helices and probably form a disulphide bond when oxidised. Three-dimensional modelling of SBPase has been performed using crystallographic data from the structurally homologous pig fructose-1,6-bisphosphatase (FBPase). The results suggest that formation of the disulphide bridge in SBPase is directly analogous to the allosteric regulation of pig FBPase by AMP in terms of the resulting structural changes. Similar changes are thought to occur in chloroplast FBPase, which like SBPase, is also redox regulated and involved in carbon fixation. From the results presented here it appears that the same basic mechanism for the allosteric regulation of enzymic activity operates in the FBPases and SBPase but that the sites at which the regulatory ligands (AMP or thioredoxin) exert their effects are different in each  相似文献   

20.
Redox regulation based on the thioredoxin (Trx) system is believed to ensure light-responsive control of various functions in chloroplasts. Five Trx subtypes have been reported to reside in chloroplasts, but their functional diversity in the redox regulation of Trx target proteins remains poorly clarified. To directly address this issue, we studied the Trx-dependent redox shifts of several chloroplast thiol-modulated enzymes in vitro and in vivo. In vitro assays using a series of Arabidopsis recombinant proteins provided new insights into Trx selectivity for the redox regulation as well as the underpinning for previous suggestions. Most notably, by combining the discrimination of thiol status with mass spectrometry and activity measurement, we identified an uncharacterized aspect of the reductive activation of NADP-malate dehydrogenase; two redox-active Cys pairs harbored in this enzyme were reduced via distinct utilization of Trxs even within a single polypeptide. In our in vitro assays, Trx-f was effective in reducing all thiol-modulated enzymes analyzed here. We then investigated the in vivo physiological relevance of these in vitro findings, using Arabidopsis wild-type and Trx-f-deficient plants. Photoreduction of fructose-1,6-bisphosphatase was partially impaired in Trx-f-deficient plants, but the global impact of Trx-f deficiency on the redox behaviors of thiol-modulated enzymes was not as striking as expected from the in vitro data. Our results provide support for the in vivo functionality of the Trx system and also highlight the complexity and plasticity of the chloroplast redox network.  相似文献   

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