Mutations in a signal sequence for the thylakoid membrane identify multiple protein transport pathways and nuclear suppressors.

Author:

Smith T A1,Kohorn B D1

Affiliation:

1. Botany Department, Duke University, Durham, North Carolina 27708.

Abstract

The apparatus that permits protein translocation across the internal thylakoid membranes of chloroplasts is completely unknown, even though these membranes have been the subject of extensive biochemical analysis. We have used a genetic approach to characterize the translocation of Chlamydomonas cytochrome f, a chloroplast-encoded protein that spans the thylakoid once. Mutations in the hydrophobic core of the cytochrome f signal sequence inhibit the accumulation of cytochrome f, lead to an accumulation of precursor, and impair the ability of Chlamydomonas cells to grow photosynthetically. One hydrophobic core mutant also reduces the accumulation of other thylakoid membrane proteins, but not those that translocate completely across the membrane. These results suggest that the signal sequence of cytochrome f is required and is involved in one of multiple insertion pathways. Suppressors of two signal peptide mutations describe at least two nuclear genes whose products likely describe the translocation apparatus, and selected second-site chloroplast suppressors further define regions of the cytochrome f signal peptide.

Publisher

Rockefeller University Press

Subject

Cell Biology

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1. Bibliography;Plant Cell Biology;2019

2. Control of the maximal chlorophyll fluorescence yield by the QB binding site;Photosynthetica;2018-03-01

3. Understanding Photosynthetic Electron Transport Using Chlamydomonas: The Path from Classical Genetics to High Throughput Genomics;Functional Genomics and Evolution of Photosynthetic Systems;2011-08-29

4. References;Plant Cell Biology;2010

5. References to Volume 1;The Chlamydomonas Sourcebook;2009

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