We describe the identification of the first immunophilin associated with the photosynthetic membrane of chloroplasts. This complex 40 kDa immunophilin, designated TLP40 (thylakoid lumen PPIase), located in the lumen of the thylakoids, was found to play a dual role in photosynthesis involving both biogenesis and intraorganelle signalling. It originates in a single-copy nuclear gene, is made as a precursor of 49.2 kDa with a bipartite lumenal targeting transit peptide, and is characterized by a structure including a cyclophilin-like C-terminal segment of 20 kDa, a predicted N-terminal leucine zipper and a potential phosphatase-binding domain. It can exist in different oligomeric conformations and attach to the inner membrane surface. It is confined predominantly to the non-appressed thylakoid regions, the site of protein integration into the photosynthetic membrane. The isolated protein possesses peptidyl-prolyl cis-trans isomerase protein folding activity characteristic of immunophilins, but is not inhibited by cyclosporin A. TLP40 also exerts an effect on dephosphorylation of several key proteins of photosystem II, probably as a constituent of a transmembrane signal transduction chain. This first evidence for a direct role of immunophilins in a photoautotrophic process suggests that light-mediated protein phosphorylation in photosynthetic membranes and the role of the thylakoid lumen are substantially more complex than anticipated.
Chloroplast sensor kinase (CSK) is a bacterial-type sensor histidine kinase found in chloroplasts—photosynthetic plastids—in eukaryotic plants and algae. Using a yeast two-hybrid screen, we demonstrate recognition and interactions between: CSK, plastid transcription kinase (PTK), and a bacterial-type RNA polymerase sigma factor-1 (SIG-1). CSK interacts with itself, with SIG-1, and with PTK. PTK also interacts directly with SIG-1. PTK has previously been shown to catalyze phosphorylation of plastid-encoded RNA polymerase (PEP), suppressing plastid transcription nonspecifically. Phospho-PTK is inactive as a PEP kinase. Here, we propose that phospho-CSK acts as a PTK kinase, releasing PTK repression of chloroplast transcription, while CSK also acts as a SIG-1 kinase, blocking transcription specifically at the gene promoter of chloroplast photosystem I. Oxidation of the photosynthetic electron carrier plastoquinone triggers phosphorylation of CSK, inducing chloroplast photosystem II while suppressing photosystem I. CSK places photosystem gene transcription under the control of photosynthetic electron transport. This redox signaling pathway has its origin in cyanobacteria, photosynthetic prokaryotes from which chloroplasts evolved. The persistence of this mechanism in cytoplasmic organelles of photosynthetic eukaryotes is in precise agreement with the CoRR hypothesis for the function of organellar genomes: the plastid genome and its primary gene products are Co-located for Redox Regulation. Genes are retained in plastids primarily in order for their expression to be subject to this rapid and robust redox regulatory transcriptional control mechanism, whereas plastid genes also encode genetic system components, such as some ribosomal proteins and RNAs, that exist in order to support this primary, redox regulatory control of photosynthesis genes. Plastid genome function permits adaptation of the photosynthetic apparatus to changing environmental conditions of light quantity and quality.
Dephosphorylation of central photosynthetic proteins regulates their turnover in plant thylakoid membranes. A membrane protein phosphatase from spinach thylakoids was purified 13000-fold using detergent-engaged FPLC. The purified enzyme exhibited characteristics typical of eukaryotic Ser/Thr phosphatases of the PP2A family in that it was inhibited by okadaic acid (IC(50) = 0.4 nM) and tautomycin (IC(50) = 25 nM), irreversibly bound to microcystin-agarose, and recognized by a polyclonal antibody raised against a recombinant catalytic subunit of human PP2A. Furthermore, the anti-PP2A antibody inhibited protein dephosphorylation in isolated thylakoids. The phosphatase copurified with TLP40, a cyclophilin-like peptidyl-prolyl isomerase located in the thylakoid lumen. TLP40 could be released from the phosphatase immobilized on microcystin-agarose by high-salt treatment. Binding of cyclosporin A (CsA) to TLP40 led to thylakoid phosphatase activation, while cyclophilin substrates, prolyl-containing oligopeptides, inhibited protein dephosphorylation. This dephosphorylation could be modulated by CsA or oligopeptides only after the thylakoids had been ruptured to expose the lumenal membrane surface where the TLP40 is located. Regulation of the PP2A-like phosphatase at the outer thylakoid surface is likely to operate via reversible binding of TLP40 to the inner membrane surface. This is a first example of transmembrane regulation in which the activity of phosphatase is altered by the binding of a cyclophilin to a site other than the active one. We propose that signaling from TLP40 to the protein phosphatase coordinates dephosphorylation and protein folding, two processes required for protein turnover during the repair of photoinhibited photosystem II reaction centers.
Chloroplasts are endosymbiotic organelles of cyanobacterial origin. It seems reasonable to assume that cell division and organelle division still share general principles, as shown for the FtsZ proteins. However, further components involved in this process are largely unknown. Here we describe ARTEMIS, a nuclear-encoded protein of chloroplast inner envelope membranes that is required for organelle division.
Voltage-dependent anion channels (VDACs) are porin-type beta-barrel diffusion pores. They are prominent in the outer membrane of mitochondria and facilitate metabolite exchange between the organelle and the cytosol. Here we studied the subcellular distribution of a plant VDAC-like protein between plastids and mitochondria in green and non-green tissue. Using in vitro studies of dual-import into mitochondria and chloroplasts as well as transient expression of fluorescence-labeled polypeptides, it could be clearly demonstrated that this VDAC isoform targets exclusively to mitochondria and not to plastids. Our results support the idea that plastids evolved a concept of solute exchange with the cytosol different from that of mitochondria.
The molecular composition of chloroplast outer and inner envelope translocons is fairly well established, but little is known about mechanisms and elements involved in import regulation. After synthesis in the cytosol, chloroplast targeted precursor proteins are recognized by outer envelope receptors Toc34 and Toc159. Phosphorylation plays an important role in regulation of Toc34 activity and preprotein binding. Using kinase renaturation assays, we have identified an ATP-dependent 98-kDa outer envelope kinase which is able to selectively phosphorylate Toc34 at a specific site. A 70-kDa outer envelope polypeptide phosphorylating Toc159 was identified by the same strategy. Antiserum against the 98-kDa kinase inhibits phosphorylation of Toc34, whereas labeling of Toc159 remains unaffected. Both kinases do not autophosphorylate in vitro and are unable to utilize myelin basic protein as substrate. We propose that distinct kinases are involved in regulation of chloroplast import via desensitization of preprotein receptors.
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