Peroxisomal targeting signals in green algae |
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Authors: | Akiko Shinozaki Nagisa Sato Yasuko Hayashi |
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Affiliation: | 1. Graduate School of Science and Technology, Niigata University, 8050 Ikarashi, Ninotyou, Niigata city, Niigata, 950-2181, Japan 2. Faculty of Science, Niigata University, 8050 Ikarashi, Ninotyou, Niigata city, Niigata, 950-2181, Japan
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Abstract: | Peroxisomal enzymatic proteins contain targeting signals (PTS) to enable their import into peroxisomes. These targeting signals have been identified as PTS1 and PTS2 in mammalian, yeast, and higher plant cells; however, no PTS2-like amino acid sequences have been observed in enzymes from the genome database of Cyanidiochyzon merolae (Bangiophyceae), a primitive red algae. In studies on the evolution of PTS, it is important to know when their sequences came to be the peroxisomal targeting signals for all living organisms. To this end, we identified a number of genes in the genome database of the green algae Chlamydomonas reinhardtii, which contains amino acid sequences similar to those found in plant PTS. In order to determine whether these sequences function as PTS in green algae, we expressed modified green fluorescent proteins (GFP) fused to these putative PTS peptides under the cauliflower mosaic virus 35S promoter. To confirm whether granular structures containing GFP–PTS fusion proteins accumulated in the peroxisomes of Closterium ehrenbergii, we observed these cells after the peroxisomes were stained with 3, 3′-diaminobenzidine. Our results confirm that the GFP–PTS fusion proteins indeed accumulated in the peroxisomes of these green algae. These findings suggest that the peroxisomal transport system for PTS1 and PTS2 is conserved in green algal cells and that our fusion proteins can be used to visualize peroxisomes in live cells. |
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