Affiliation:
1. Department of Cell Biology and Molecular Genetics, University of Maryland, College Park, Maryland 20742
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Plastoglobulins (PGL) are the predominant proteins of lipid globules in the plastids of flowering plants. Genes encoding proteins similar to plant PGL are also present in algae and cyanobacteria but in no other organisms, suggesting an important role for these proteins in oxygenic photosynthesis. To gain an understanding of the core and fundamental function of PGL, the two genes that encode PGL-like polypeptides in the cyanobacterium
Synechocystis
sp. PCC 6803 (
pgl1
and
pgl2
) were inactivated individually and in combination. The resulting mutants were able to grow under photoautotrophic conditions, dividing at rates that were comparable to that of the wild-type (WT) under low-light (LL) conditions (10 microeinsteins·m
−2
·s
−1
) but lower than that of the WT under moderately high-irradiance (HL) conditions (150 microeinsteins·m
−2
·s
−1
). Under HL, each Δ
pgl
mutant had less chlorophyll, a lower photosystem I (PSI)/PSII ratio, more carotenoid per unit of chlorophyll, and very much more myxoxanthophyll (a carotenoid symptomatic of high light stress) per unit of chlorophyll than the WT. Large, heterogeneous inclusion bodies were observed in cells of mutants inactivated in
pgl2
or both
pgl2
and
pgl1
under both LL and HL conditions. The mutant inactivated in both
pgl
genes was especially sensitive to the light environment, with alterations in pigmentation, heterogeneous inclusion bodies, and a lower PSI/PSII ratio than the WT even for cultures grown under LL conditions. The WT cultures grown under HL contained 2- to 3-fold more PGL1 and PGL2 per cell than cultures grown under LL conditions. These and other observations led us to conclude that the PGL-like polypeptides of
Synechocystis
play similar but not identical roles in some process relevant to the repair of photooxidative damage.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology
Cited by
28 articles.
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