Abstract
SummaryThousands of nuclear-encoded proteins are transported into chloroplasts through the TOC-TIC translocon spanning the chloroplast envelope membranes. A motor complex pulls the translocated proteins out of the TOC-TIC complex into the chloroplast stroma by hydrolyzing ATP. The Orf2971-FtsHi complex was suggested to serve as the ATP-hydrolyzing motor inChlamydomonas reinhardtii, but little is known about its architecture and assembly. Here, we report the 3.2-Å resolution structure of theChlamydomonasOrf2971-FtsHi complex. The 20-subunit complex spans the chloroplast inner envelope with two bulky modules protruding into the intermembrane space and stromal matrix. Six subunits form a hetero-hexamer potentially providing the pulling force through ATP hydrolysis. The remaining subunits, including potential enzymes/chaperones, likely facilitate the complex assembly and regulate its proper function. Our results provide the structural foundation for mechanistic understanding of chloroplast protein translocation.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory