The conversion of light to chemical energy by the process of photosynthesis is localized to the thylakoid membrane network in plant chloroplasts. Although several pathways have been described that target proteins into and across the thylakoids, little is known about the origin of this membrane system or how the lipid backbone of the thylakoids is transported and fused with the target membrane. Thylakoid biogenesis and maintenance seem to involve the flow of membrane elements via vesicular transport. Here we show by mutational analysis that deletion of a single gene called VIPP1 (vesicle-inducing protein in plastids 1) is deleterious to thylakoid membrane formation. Although VIPP1 is a hydrophilic protein it is found in both the inner envelope and the thylakoid membranes. In VIPP1 deletion mutants vesicle formation is abolished. We propose that VIPP1 is essential for the maintenance of thylakoids by a transport pathway not previously recognized.
The psbB-psbT-psbH-petB-petD operon of higher plant chloroplasts is a heterogeneously composed transcriptional unit that undergoes complex RNA processing events until the mature oligocistronic RNAs are formed. To identify the nucleusencoded factors required for the processing and expression of psbB-psbT-psbH-petB-petD transcripts, we performed mutational analysis using Arabidopsis. The allelic nuclear mutants hcf152-1 and hcf152-2 were identified that are affected specifically in the accumulation of the plastidial cytochrome b 6 f complex. In both mutants, reduced amounts of spliced petB RNAs (encoding the cytochrome b 6 subunit) were detected, thus explaining the observed protein deficiencies. Additionally, mutant hcf152-1 is affected in the accumulation of transcripts cleaved between the genes psbH and petB . As a result of a close T-DNA insertion, the HCF152 gene was cloned and its identity confirmed by complementation of homozygous mutant plants. HCF152 encodes a pentatricopeptide repeat (PPR) protein with 12 putative PPR motifs that is located inside the chloroplast. The protein shows a significant structural, but not primary, sequence similarity to the maize protein CRP1, which is involved in the processing and translation of the chloroplast petD and petA RNAs. In addition, we found that HCF152 is an RNA binding protein that binds certain areas of the petB transcript. The protein possibly exists in the chloroplast as a homodimer and is not associated with other proteins to form a high molecular mass complex.
Thirty-four recessive photosynthetic mutants of the high-chlorophyll-fluorescence (hcf) phenotype have been isolated by screening 7700 M2 progenies of ethyl methane sulfonate-treated seeds of Arabidopsis thaliana. Most of the mutants isolated were found to be seedling-lethal, but could be grown on sucrose-supplemented media. Chlorophyll (Chl) fluorescence induction, absorption changes in the reaction-centre chlorophyll of PS I (P700) at 830 nm and Chl a/Chl b ratios were recorded in order to probe the photosynthetic functions and to define the mutational lesion. These studies were complemented by immunoblot and Northern analyses which finally led to the classification of the mutants into six different groups. Four classes of mutants were affected in PS I, PS II (two different classes) or the intersystem electron-transport chain, respectively. A fifth mutant class was of pleiotropic nature and the sixth class comprised a Chl b-deficient mutant. Several of the mutants showed severe deficiencies in the levels of subunits of PS I, PS II or the cytochrome b6/f complex. Thus the mutational lesions could be located precisely. Only one mutant was defective in the transcript patterns of some plastid-encoded photosynthesis genes. Hence most of the mutants isolated appear to be affected in translational and post-translational regulatory processes of thylakoid membrane biogenesis or in structural genes encoding constituent subunits of the thylakoid protein complexes.
To gain insight into the biogenesis of photosystem II (PSII) and to identify auxiliary factors required for this process, we characterized the mutant hcf173 of Arabidopsis thaliana. The mutant shows a high chlorophyll fluorescence phenotype (hcf) and is severely affected in the accumulation of PSII subunits. In vivo labeling experiments revealed a drastically decreased synthesis of the reaction center protein D1. Polysome association experiments suggest that this is primarily caused by reduced translation initiation of the corresponding psbA mRNA. Comparison of mRNA steady state levels indicated that the psbA mRNA is significantly reduced in hcf173. Furthermore, the determination of the psbA mRNA half-life revealed an impaired RNA stability. The HCF173 gene was identified by map-based cloning, and its identity was confirmed by complementation of the hcf phenotype. HCF173 encodes a protein with weak similarities to the superfamily of the short-chain dehydrogenases/reductases. The protein HCF173 is localized in the chloroplast, where it is mainly associated with the membrane system and is part of a higher molecular weight complex. Affinity chromatography of an HCF173 fusion protein uncovered the psbA mRNA as a component of this complex.
The nonphotosynthetic mutant of Arabidopsis hcf152 is impaired in the processing of the chloroplast polycistronic transcript, psbB-psbT-psbH-petB-petD, resulting in nonproduction of the essential photosynthetic cytochrome b 6 f complex. The nucleus-encoded HCF152 gene was identified to encode a pentatricopeptide repeat (PPR) protein composed primarily of 12 PPR motifs, similar to other proteins of this family that were identified in mutants defected in chloroplast gene expression. To understand the molecular mechanism of how HCF152 modulates chloroplast gene expression, the molecular and biochemical properties should be revealed. To this end, HCF152 and several truncated versions were produced in bacteria and analyzed for RNAbinding and protein-protein interaction. It was found that two HCF152 polypeptides bind to form a homodimer, and that this binding is impaired by a single amino acid substitute near the carboxyl terminus, replacing leucine with proline. Recombinant HCF152 bound with higher affinity RNA molecules, resembling the petB exon-intron junctions, as well as several other molecules. The highest affinity was found to RNA composed of the poly(A) sequence. When truncated proteins composed of different numbers of PPR motifs were analyzed for RNA-binding, it was found that two PPR motifs were required for RNA-binding, but had very low affinity. The affinity to RNA increased significantly when proteins composed of more PPR motifs were analyzed, displaying the highest affinity with the full-length protein composed of 12 PPR motifs. Together, our data characterized the nuclear-encoded HCF152 to be a chloroplast RNAbinding protein that may be involved in the processing or stabilization of the petB transcript by binding to the exonintron junctions.
To understand the biogenesis of the plastid cytochrome b(6)f complex and to identify the underlying auxiliary factors, we have characterized the nuclear mutant hcf164 of Arabidopsis and isolated the affected gene. The mutant shows a high chlorophyll fluorescence phenotype and is severely deficient in the accumulation of the cytochrome b(6)f complex subunits. In vivo protein labeling experiments indicated that the mutation acts post-translationally by interfering with the assembly of the complex. Because of its T-DNA tag, the corresponding gene was cloned and its identity confirmed by complementation of homozygous mutant plants. HCF164 encodes a thioredoxin-like protein that possesses disulfide reductase activity. The protein was found in the chloroplast, where it is anchored to the thylakoid membrane at its lumenal side. HCF164 is closely related to the thioredoxin-like protein TxlA of Synechocystis sp PCC6803, most probably reflecting its evolutionary origin. The protein also shows a limited similarity to the eubacterial CcsX and CcmG proteins, which are required for the maturation of periplasmic c-type cytochromes. The putative roles of HCF164 for the assembly of the cytochrome b(6)f complex are discussed.
To understand the functional significance of RNA processing for the expression of plastome-encoded photosynthesis genes, we investigated the nuclear mutation hcf107 of Arabidopsis. The mutation is represented by two alleles, both of which lead to a defective photosystem II (PSII). In vivo protein labeling, in vitro phosphorylation, and immunoblot experiments revealed that the psbB gene product (CP47) and an 8-kD phosphoprotein, the psbH gene product (PsbH), are absent in mutant plants. PsbH and PsbB are essential requirements for PSII assembly in photosynthetic eukaryotes, and their absence in hcf107 is consistent with the PSII-less mutant phenotype. RNA gel blot hybridizations showed that the hcf107 mutation specifically impairs the accumulation of some but not all oligocistronic psbH transcripts that are released from the pentacistronic psbB-psbT-psbH-petB-petD precursor RNA by intergenic endonucleolytic cleavage. In contrast, neither the levels nor the sizes of psbB-containing RNAs are affected. S1 nuclease protection analyses revealed that psbH RNAs are lacking only where psbH is the leading cistron and that they are processed at position -45 in the 5' leader segment of psbH. These data and additional experiments with the cytochrome b(6)f complex mutant hcf152, which is defective in 3' psbH processing, suggest that only those psbH-containing transcripts that are processed at their -45 5' ends can be translated. Secondary structure analysis of the 5' psbH leader predicted the formation of stable stem loops in the nonprocessed transcripts, which are unfolded by processing at the -45 site. We propose that this unfolding of the psbH leader segment as a result of RNA processing is essential for the translation of the psbH reading frame. We suggest further that HCF107 has dual functions: it is involved in intercistronic processing of the psbH 5' untranslated region or the stabilization of 5' processed psbH RNAs, and concomitantly, it is required for the synthesis of CP47.
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