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Transcript
trends in plant science
reviews
Glutamate synthase and nitrogen
assimilation Stephen J. Temple, Carroll P. Vance and J. Stephen Gantt
The assimilation of ammonia by a wide variety of organisms is the primary route for the introduction of nitrogen into the biosphere. The assimilatory enzymes glutamine synthetase and
glutamate synthase catalyze reactions that convert a-ketoglutarate and ammonia to glutamate, which is then used in a wide variety of biosynthetic reactions. These enzymes also
play a major role in the reassimilation of ammonia derived from photorespiration in C3 plants.
Recent biochemical, molecular and genetic studies are leading to a better understanding of
the factors that determine the activity and function of glutamate synthase.
N
itrogen is often the major limiting
nutrient for plant growth. Most
plants obtain their nitrogen from
soil nitrate, which is largely derived from
either fertilizers or the mineralization of
indigenous organic matter. The nitrate is
converted to NH4+ by the sequential reductive action of the plant enzymes nitrate
reductase and nitrite reductase. Some
plants, most notably many legumes, can
also obtain their nitrogen from atmospheric
N2. These legumes form a symbiotic
association with rhizobia, which are able to
reduce N2 to NH4+ by the action of nitrogenase (Fig. 1). Ammonia is then transferred
from the microbe to the plant. Plants also
produce significant amounts of NH4+ from
photorespiration, phenylpropanoid biosynthesis and amino acid catabolism. Consequently, the reduced form of nitrogen
ultimately available to higher plants for
assimilation is NH4+, irrespective of the primary nitrogen source1. However, because
NH4+ is toxic to plant cells, because of its
ability to uncouple respiration at low conFig. 1. Diagram showing nitrogen assimilation in legume root nodules and the cellular locentrations, it must be rapidly assimilated
cation of the enzymes involved. In the diagram, glutamine, asparagine and ureides derived
into non-toxic organic compounds. This
from purines are the primary nitrogenous compounds exported to other cells and provided
necessitates strict regulatory control of the
for transport throughout the plant. Photosynthate provides the carbon skeletons for amino
nitrogen-assimilation pathway.
acid biosynthesis via glycolysis and the tricarboxylic acid cycle. Substantial additional carPrior to 1970 it was generally assumed
bon can also be derived from non-photosynthetic CO2 fixation via phosphoenolpyruvate.
that ammonia was assimilated by the direct
The enzymes involved are: AAT, aspartate aminotransferase; AS, asparagine synthase;
GOGAT, glutamate synthase; GS, glutamine synthetase; MDH, malate dehydrogenase; Nit,
amination of a-ketoglutarate to produce
nitrogenase; PEPC, phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase.
glutamate in a single reaction catalyzed by
glutamate dehydrogenase. However, the
plant enzymeÕs high Km for NH4+ (>1 mM)
suggested that glutamate dehydrogenase did not have a major role route of nitrogen assimilation in plants (Fig. 2). The synthesized
in nitrogen assimilation2. Subsequent studies using radiolabeled glutamate can be used either to replenish the pool of glutamate for
(13N) and stable (15N) nitrogen isotopes, enzyme inhibitors and subsequent glutamine synthetase catalysis or to donate its amino
mutants of plant nitrogen metabolism indicated that the primary group to form other nitrogen-containing compounds. One imporassimilation of NH4+ into amino acids occurs via the joint action tant fate of glutamate and glutamine is the synthesis of aspartate
of glutamine synthetase and glutamate synthase [also termed glu- and asparagine, produced in reactions catalyzed by aspartate
tamate 2-oxoglutarate aminotransferase (GOGAT)] (Fig. 1)3. The aminotransferase and asparagine synthetase (Fig. 1). These amino
reaction catalyzed by glutamine synthetase involves the ATP- acids are important nitrogen-transport compounds in many plants.
dependent amination of glutamate to yield glutamine. GOGAT Carbon skeletons required for these initial NH4+-assimilatory
then catalyzes the transfer of the amide group from glutamine reactions are provided by a-ketoglutarate and oxaloacetate1. The
to a-ketoglutarate to yield two molecules of glutamate. These requirement for and metabolism of these tricarboxylic acid cycle
two reactions, collectively referred to as the glutamine syn- intermediates tightly link nitrogen assimilation and carbon
thetase/GOGAT cycle, are now generally agreed to be the primary metabolism.
Copyright © 1998 Elsevier Science Ltd. All rights reserved. 1360 - 1385/98/$19.00 PII: S1360-1385(97)01159-X
February 1998, Vol. 3, No. 2
51
trends in plant science
reviews
range from 7.5 to 8.5; and apparent Km
values for NADH, glutamine and aketoglutarate of 4Ð13, 400Ð1000 and 39Ð
960 mM, respectively6. In root nodules, NH4+
is exported from the nitrogen-fixing bacteroids to the host-plant cytoplasm, where
it is rapidly assimilated via NADHGOGAT and cytosolic glutamine synthetase into amino acids (Fig. 1). There
is negligible NADH-GOGAT mRNA,
enzyme activity or immunoreactive protein
in alfalfa leaves and roots1. In bean nodules, NADH-GOGAT appears to occur as
two isoforms (I and II), with the observed
increase in GOGAT activity during nodule
development resulting primarily from an
increase in activity of isozyme II (Ref. 12).
The expression patterns of the genes
encoding cytosolic glutamine synthetase
and NADH-GOGAT appear to be coordinated in non-legumes, where the proteins
function together in processes such as the
primary assimilation of NH4+ derived from
soil NO32, the reassimilation of NH4+
released during amino acid catabolism,
Fig. 2. The glutamate synthase cycle. The first reaction is catalyzed by glutamine synthetase
and/or the reassimilation of NH4+ released
L-glutamate: ammonia ligase (ADP-forming) (EC 6.3.1.2). The second reaction is catalyzed
+
during seed germination3,8. In a study with
by glutamate synthase (GOGAT), which can exist in two forms: L-glutamate: NAD oxidorice, NADH-GOGAT protein and activity
reductase (transaminating) (EC 1.4.1.14); and L-glutamate: ferredoxin oxidoreductase
increased four- and sixfold, respectively, in
(transaminating) (EC 1.4.7.1). Reaction 3 shows the net metabolic balance and energy costs
the apical spikelets during the first 15 d
of the glutamine synthetase/GOGAT cycle.
after flowering; the levels reached a maximum when seed storage protein accumulation was initiated13. The majority of the
Biochemistry and enzymology of glutamate synthase
NADH-GOGAT protein was found to be associated with the
In higher plants, GOGAT occurs as two distinct isoforms, NADH- young grain tissue. Although changes in Fd-GOGAT activity parGOGAT (EC 1.4.1.14) and ferredoxin-dependent GOGAT (Fd- alleled the changes in NADH-GOGAT activity, the relative abunGOGAT) (EC 1.2.7.1); these differ in molecular mass, subunit dance of NADH-GOGAT was about threefold higher than that of
composition, enzyme kinetics, antigenic and reductant specificity, Fd-GOGAT (Ref. 13). These results suggest that in rice NADHand metabolic function4,5. Fd-GOGAT is an ironÐsulphur flavo- GOGAT is responsible for the synthesis of glutamate from the
protein with a subunit molecular mass of 130Ð180 kDa that is gen- glutamine that is transported from senescing tissues to the
erally considered to function as a monomer. The enzyme has a pH spikelets.
optimum of 6.9Ð7.5 and apparent Km values for ferredoxin, glutamine and a-ketoglutarate of 2Ð6, 100Ð1000 and 7Ð70 mM, Evolutionary and structural relationships among diverse
respectively6. In combination with the plastid-localized isoform of glutamate synthase proteins
glutamine synthetase, Fd-GOGAT catalyzes the assimilation of GOGAT is found in all types of organisms, and its amino acid
NH4+ derived from both the light-dependent reduction of NO32 sequence is remarkably well conserved. To examine the evoluand the NH4+ generated during photorespiration5. Maize roots tionary relationships among the eubacterial and eukaryotic
contain an Fd-GOGAT isoform that is immunologically distinct GOGAT proteins, a phylogenetic tree can be constructed based on
from the enzyme found in leaves, suggesting that the two forms the amino acid sequences of regions common to all eubacterial
are encoded by distinct genes. The root isoform has been impli- and eukaryotic GOGAT proteins (Fig. 3). With the exception of
cated in the assimilation of NH4+ derived from soil NO32 (Ref. 7). the Synechocystis sp. gltB gene product, all of the Fd-GOGAT
Recent studies indicate that Arabidopsis also contains two distinct proteins cluster together. This group contains Fd-GOGATs from
and apparently functional Fd-GOGAT genes (GLU1 and GLU2). higher plants (maize, rice and Arabidopsis), two red alga species
The GLU1 gene is expressed predominantly in leaves, and GLU2 (Porphyra purpurea and Antithamnion sp.) and two cyanobacteria
expression is more abundant in roots8,9.
(Synechocystis sp. and Plectonema boryanum). This analysis
Although NADH-GOGAT, like Fd-GOGAT, is also an shows that eukaryotic Fd-GOGAT is closely related to bacterial
ironÐsulphur flavoprotein, this enzyme is found primarily in non- Fd-GOGATs, and suggests that the genes encoding these enzymes
green tissues. NADH-GOGAT has been purified and character- are derived from the eubacterial precursors of chloroplasts. These
ized from legume root nodules and rice cell cultures4,10,11. In data are consistent with an endosymbiotic origin of plastids. Addinitrogen-fixing legume nodules, NADH-GOGAT activity has tional support for this conclusion comes from the finding that the
been found to increase markedly during nodule development, and Fd-GOGAT gene is found in the plastid genomes of red algae14.
this activity is associated with a single form of the enzyme4. In Higher plant GOGAT genes are all located in the nuclear genome,
higher plants, NADH-GOGAT exists as monomers with a native into which they were presumably transferred from the endosymsubunit mass of approximately 225Ð230 kDa; has a pH-optimum biont genome15. The phylogenetic analysis also suggests that the
52
February 1998, Vol. 3, No. 2
trends in plant science
reviews
gltB gene, which has been found in all
cyanobacteria examined, is generally more
similar to eukaryotic and eubacterial
NAD(P)H-GOGATs than to Fd-GOGATs,
and did not functionally replace the
NADH-GOGAT genes found in higher
plants.
The structural relationships among the
various GOGAT proteins are quite
diverse16 (Fig. 4). In general, the enzyme
found in non-photosynthetic eubacteria
uses NADPH as a cofactor and is composed of two subunits. The large subunit,
encoded by gltB, contains a PurF-type
amidotransferase domain near its N-terminus and a 3Fe/4S center. The small subunit
may contain additional ironÐsulphur centers and an NADPH-binding region17. In
eukaryotes, which contain a single
ironÐsulphur center18, sequences similar to
both of these subunits, separated by a short
hydrophilic region, are found in the single
NADH-GOGAT polypeptide. Fd-GOGAT
is structurally similar only to the large subunit of the eubacterial NADPH-GOGAT
Fig. 3. An unrooted phylogenetic tree of NAD(P)H- and Fd-glutamate synthase (GOGAT)
protein. These data suggest that the
proteins. The neighbor-joining method32 found in the CLUSTAL W suite of programs33 was
NADPH-GOGAT small subunit serves priused to calculate the tree. The numbers correspond to ÔbootstrapÕ percentages. The length of
the bar represents 0.1 substitutions per site. GOGAT protein sequence information was
marily to couple the oxidation of NADPH
obtained either from the GenBank protein database or from conceptual translations of
to the reductive transfer of the amido group
GOGAT-encoding genes found in the GenBank nucleotide database. The accession numof glutamine to the a-keto position of 2bers used were: Maize-Fd, M59190; Arabidopsis-Fd, Y09667; Porphyra-Fd (P. purpurea),
oxoglutarate.
U38804; Antithamnion-Fd, Z21705; Plectonema-Fd (P. boryanum), 085735;
The consensus view of GOGAT strucSynechocystis-GltS, X92480; Azospirillum-NADP (A. brasilense), L04300; Escherichiature and function has recently been chalNADP (E. coli), AE000400; Pseudomonas-NADP (P. aeruginosae), U81261;
lenged. Two GOGAT genes, gltB and gltS,
Mycobacterium-NAD (M. tuberculosis), Z83864; Plectonema-NAD (P. boryanum),
have been isolated and characterized from
D85230; Synechocystis-GltB, X80485; Alfalfa-NAD, L01660; Rice-NAD, AB0011916;
a Synechocystis sp.19. Both of these genes
Saccharomyces-NAD (S. cerevisiae), X89221; and Caenorhabditis-NAD (C. elegans),
are similar to the large subunit gene of nonZ49868 and Z49889.
photosynthetic eubacteria, but one is much
more similar to plant NADH-GOGAT than
it is to any other Fd-GOGAT protein. This
indicates that cyanobacteria might, like plants, have both Fd- and result is reminiscent of evidence obtained with E. coli NADPHNAD(P)H-GOGAT enzymes. However, significant Synecho- GOGAT showing that the gltA-encoded subunit alone can catacystis Fd-GOGAT activity was retained in mutants that contained lyze the ammonia-dependent synthesis of glutamate21. It is not
insertionally mutagenized gltB and gltS genes. Additionally, known whether Pyrococcus contains a gltB-like gene.
Navarro et al.19 and other researchers have been unable to detect
In contrast to the findings of Jongsareejit et al.20, examination
any NAD(P)H-GOGAT activity in this organism. Thus, based on of the recently sequenced Methanococcus jannaschii genome
both biochemical and mutational analyses, it appears that the two revealed that this archaebacterium may not contain a gene encodSynechocystis genes encode Fd-GOGAT. However, recent analy- ing a gltA subunit. Although several genes are similar to gltA, all
sis of the complete Synechocystis genomic sequence suggests that have been assigned other functions, and none is nearly as similar
this organism contains a gene similar to gltA, which encodes the to E. coli gltA as E. coli gltA is to Pyrococcus gltA. Furthermore,
small subunit of all eubacterial NAD(P)H-GOGAT proteins.
the structure of the protein encoded by the M. jannaschii gltB-like
Another test of the consensus view of GOGAT structure and gene is unusual. Comparisons of eubacterial and eukaryotic
function comes from comparisons of eubacterial and eukaryotic GOGAT large subunits show that their deduced amino acid
GOGAT sequences with those of archaebacteria. All examined sequences are similar throughout most of the protein, with genereubacteria and eukaryotes contain genes encoding NAD(P)H- ally more than 40% amino acid identity. This relationship does
GOGAT proteins similar to E. coli gltA and gltB gene products. A not hold true when the product of the M. jannaschii gltB-like gene
recent report20 describes the isolation and characterization of a is examined. Compared with the corresponding eubacterial and
GOGAT gene from the archaebacterium Pyrococcus sp. KOD1. eukaryotic proteins, this protein is very small. Additionally, comThis gene encodes a protein that is very similar to the eubacterial parison of this 510 amino acid (55 kDa) protein with other
gltA-encoded GOGAT small subunits. However, unlike the gltA GOGAT proteins shows that it is composed of two distinct regions
gene in eubacteria, it is not linked to the gltB gene. Furthermore, that are similar to the eubacterial GltB subunit (Fig. 4). The region
when the Pyrococcus gltA gene was expressed in E. coli, the puri- from approximately amino acids 90 to 160 of the archaebacterium
fied product was capable of catalyzing both glutamine- and GltB-like protein is similar to a region from about 500 to 580 of the
ammonia-dependent, NADPH-coupled glutamate synthesis. This eukaryotic GOGATs, and contains no known functional properties.
February 1998, Vol. 3, No. 2
53
trends in plant science
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photorespiratory carbon and nitrogen
cycles. This pioneering work confirmed the
existence of the photorespiratory cycle;
established the importance of Fd-GOGAT
in photorespiratory NH4+ reassimilation;
and was instrumental in establishing
Arabidopsis as a model plant system. Subsequent analysis of one of these FdGOGAT mutants indicated that it contains
undetectable Fd-GOGAT protein in either
leaf or root tissue, although it does retain a
low level of activity and transcript24. This
apparent conflict between genetic and molecular data is at least partly resolved by the
recent finding that Arabidopsis has a second Fd-GOGAT gene8. The GLU2 gene9 is
Fig. 4. Regions of sequence similarity among eukaryotic, eubacterial and archaebacterial
expressed predominantly in roots, and has
glutamate synthase (GOGAT) proteins. The black boxes represent sequences that are not
very low levels of expression in leaves;
found in the mature protein and that have little sequence similarity; open boxes show
GLU1 is expressed predominantly in
regions of sequence similarity among the alfalfa, Arabidopsis and E. coli GOGAT proteins;
leaves. Presumably, GLU1 expression, but
boxes filled with horizontal or diagonal lines represent locations of similarities found
among all the proteins; lightly shaded boxes are regions that have little or no sequence siminot GLU2 expression, was affected in the
larity with other proteins; and the box filled with vertical lines represents a region that is
photorespiratory mutants.
extremely hydrophilic and separates GltB- and GltA-like domains of eukaryotic NADHUsing a similar screening strategy, FdGOGAT.
GOGAT mutants have been isolated from
barley and pea25. Fd-GOGAT activity is
virtually undetectable in the leaves of the
The C-terminal 350 amino acids of the archaebacterium GOGAT barley mutants. However, levels of NADH-GOGAT are present at
are similar to amino acids 880 to 1240 of eukaryotic GOGATs. This wild-type levels, indicating that no compensatory mechanisms
region binds flavin mononucleotide and contains the 3Fe/4S center. exist and confirming the distinct roles proposed for the two
Further research is needed to elucidate the structure and function of GOGAT isoforms. Immunoblot analysis of four barley FdGOGAT in these ÔprimitiveÕ organisms.
GOGAT mutant lines indicated that three had no detectable crossreacting Fd-GOGAT protein and that the fourth had significantly
Post-translational processing and intracellular localization of
reduced levels of this protein26. Photosynthetic CO2 assimilation
glutamate synthase
in the barley Fd-GOGAT mutants is reduced on transfer from
Fd-GOGAT proteins from Arabidopsis and maize contain a pre- elevated CO2 to air. This effect on photosynthesis is unlikely to be
sequence with many of the characteristics of plastid transit pep- caused solely by the accumulation of NH4+ and may result from the
tides, including a net positive charge and high proportion of unusual and complex interaction of carbon and nitrogen metabthreonine and/or serine residues. Consistent with the projected olism that occurs in these mutants as a result of photorespiration27.
plastid localization of the plant enzyme is the plastid localization
Genetic engineering techniques have recently been used to genof its cofactor, ferredoxin, and the plastid location of the Fd- erate transgenic tobacco plants that express an Fd-GOGAT cDNA
GOGAT genes in red algae. Similarly, both rice and alfalfa4 fragment in the antisense orientation under the control of the
NADH-GOGATs contain presequences that are thought to be CaMV-35S promoter. The five transgenic tobacco lines recovered
involved in plastid targeting. Interestingly, presequences are were found to contain between 40 and 100% of wild-type levels of
found in all characterized eukaryotic GOGAT proteins, including Fd-GOGAT activity and protein. Under ambient growth conditions,
yeasts22 and nematodes, and all eubacterial GltB and cyanobac- severe symptoms of ammonia toxicity were seen in the two lines
terial Fd-GOGAT proteins. The yeast and nematode presequences that contain less than 60% of wild-type Fd-GOGAT activity28.
do not have the appearance of mitochondrial transit peptides22,
In contrast to the multiplicity of mutants for Fd-GOGAT, there
and thus their function is unknown. The N-terminus of all charac- are no plant mutants for NADH-GOGAT activity. The phenotype
terized GltB-like proteins is a cysteine, which is thought to be a of such mutants is difficult to predict, but one might expect a subcritical component of the glutamine amidotransferase activity of stantial reduction in growth and nitrogen content, particularly in
the enzyme16. It is possible that one of the functions of the pre- nodulated legumes and in those plant species that reduce NO32 in
sequence is to ensure the proper proteolytic processing needed to their roots.
generate this N-terminal cysteine and activate the enzyme.
Regulation of GOGAT in the plant
Mutants of glutamate synthase
Understanding of plant nitrogen metabolism has been greatly
aided by the isolation and study of mutants defective in their
ability to catalyze defined biochemical reactions. Arabidopsis
mutants that contained only 1Ð2% of wild-type Fd-GOGAT activity in leaves were isolated in 198023. These mutants exhibited
severe stress symptoms in normal air, but grew normally when
placed in an atmosphere that minimized photorespiration [0.7%
(v/v) CO2]. The Fd-GOGAT mutants were part of a wide range of
mutant lines that were deficient in key enzymes of the
54
February 1998, Vol. 3, No. 2
Light and a variety of metabolites have been shown to exert major
regulatory controls over many metabolic pathways. It is well
established that light, mediated via phytochrome, has a positive
effect on the expression of the chloroplast-localized isoform of
glutamine synthetase29. Recent evidence indicates that light also
exerts a positive regulatory effect on the expression of FdGOGAT (GLU1) (Ref. 24). GLU2 expression is also induced by
light, although the induction of this gene by sucrose in the dark
indicates that the light-induced expression may in part be caused
by an increase in the concentration of carbon metabolites9. A
trends in plant science
reviews
comparison, cytosolic glutamine synthetase transcript abundance
in ineffective nodules is only slightly reduced (15%) as compared
to effective nodules, and aspartate aminotransferase-1 is expressed at high levels in roots and both effective and ineffective
nodules. Thus, unlike other key plant genes encoding proteins
involved in nitrogen assimilation, increased levels of NADHGOGAT expression were associated only with effective nodules31. These experiments show that active nitrogen fixation, and
perhaps NH4+ itself or a downstream product of its metabolism, is
required for maximum NADH-GOGAT gene expression.
Although substantial progress has been made with the molecular genetics of primary acquisition and assimilation of nitrogen,
elucidating which genes are most crucial to enhancing nitrogenuse efficiency remains an important goal. A previously poorly
studied area that may assist with this effort is the signal-transduction pathway involved in the activation of the genes involved
in primary nitrogen assimilation, and the associated generation of
carbon skeletons.
c vFig. 5. An example of the analysis of glutamate synthetase
(GOGAT), glutamine synthetase (GS) and aspartate aminotransferase transcripts (AAT-1) in alfalfa roots and root nodules
induced by effective and ineffective Rhizobium meliloti strains.
RNA was isolated from the roots and root nodules collected 12 d
after the plants were inoculated with either effective wild-type
R. meliloti strain 102F51 or with ineffective strain 7154 (Nif2). A
northern blot was probed for the presence of transcripts encoding
GOGAT, GS and AAT-1. Following hybridization, the gel was
subjected to radioanalytic analysis to provide a quantitative measure of the hybridization signal for each probe. The 100% expression values from 12 d old, wild-type nodules were 1064 cpm for
GOGAT; 1988 cpm for glutamine synthetase; and 680 cpm for
aspartate aminotransferase-1.
recently proposed model suggests that the regulation of nitrogenassimilatory enzymes in Arabidopsis is related to light- and darkmediated stimuli interconnected to levels of organic carbon and
nitrogen8,9. In another recent study, tobacco transformants with
very low nitrate reductase activity were used to investigate possible coordinated regulatory signals that influence carbon and
nitrogen metabolism30. Nitrate was shown to act as a signal,
resulting in widespread changes in the expression of key genes in
the pathways of nitrogen and carbon metabolism, including FdGOGAT. The induction of organic acid metabolism and repression in starch metabolism by nitrate could increase the availability
of carbon skeletons for nitrogen assimilation30.
Despite the results from many biochemical studies, and the
availability of cDNA clones and antibodies to all of the enzymes
involved in plant nitrogen assimilation, the question as to which
enzymes are limiting and thus restricting the effectiveness of
efforts to enhance nitrogen-use efficiency remains unresolved.
However, studies of plant gene expression in developing alfalfa
nodules suggest that NADH-GOGAT is uniquely regulated as
compared to the other genes involved in nitrogen and carbon
metabolism4,11. Although cytosolic glutamine synthetase, aspartate aminotransferase, phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase and
malate dehydrogenase transcripts readily accumulate in ineffective (non-N2-fixing) nodules, NADH-GOGAT transcript accumulation remains low at root background levels. It is clear that
NADH-GOGAT expression is strikingly different to that of either
cytosolic glutamine synthetase or aspartate aminotransferase-1
(Refs 4 and 11) (Fig. 5). Although maximum expression of
NADH-GOGAT occurred in effective nodules, that in ineffective
nodules and roots was only 12Ð20% of the maximum. By
Acknowledgements
We wish to thank many colleagues for providing reprints and
communicating recent results. The work was supported by
National Science Foundation Grant No. IBN-9206890. This paper
is a joint contribution from the Plant Sciences Research Unit,
United States Dept of Agriculture, Agricultural Research Service,
and the Minnesota Agriculture Experiment Station (Paper No.
971130039, Scientific Journal Series).
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Stephen J. Temple is at the Dept of Agronomy and Plant
Genetics, University of Minnesota, St Paul, MN 55108, USA;
Carroll P. Vance is at the US Dept of Agriculture, Agricultural
Research Service, Plant Science Research Unit and the Dept
of Agronomy and Plant Genetics, University of Minnesota, St
Paul, MN 55108, USA; and J. Stephen Gantt* is at the Dept of
Plant Biology, University of Minnesota, St. Paul, MN 55108,
USA.
*Author for correspondence (tel +1 612 625 4763;
fax +1 612 625 1738; e-mail [email protected]).
The protein translocation apparatus
of chloroplast envelopes Lisa Heins, Ian Collinson
and Jürgen Soll
The evolution of the chloroplast from a photosynthetic prokaryote has resulted in the displacement of most of the prokaryote genes to the nucleus of the host eukaryote. Accordingly,
the new organism has evolved targeting and translocation mechanisms on the organellar
membranes for nuclear-encoded proteins. In plastids, the protein-import machinery is distinct from that of other organelles, in both composition and mechanism. Recently, proteins
homologous to several subunits of the chloroplast import machinery were identified in the
cyanobacterium Synechocystis PCC6803. It appears that parts of the protein-import machinery of chloroplasts are derived from ancient transport systems in cyanobacteria. These
observations open up new avenues for elucidating the origin of the chloroplast membranes
and functional properties of the protein-import machinery.
I
ndependent endosymbiotic uptake of ancient prokaryotes into
an early eukaryotic host is thought to have produced two types
of organelles, chloroplasts and mitochondria, that are each surrounded by a double-membrane system. Fundamental differences
in structure and function reflect the different origins of the two
organelles. A distinguishing feature of chloroplasts is their many
subcompartments, which include the outer- and inner-envelope
56
February 1998, Vol. 3, No. 2
membranes, the thylakoid-membrane network, the interenvelope
space, the stroma and the thylakoid lumen. Newly evolved proteins, employed in refining and/or regulating chloroplast function,
are dependent on a specific import mechanism Ð as are those proteins encoded by genes that have become displaced, during evolution, to the nucleus. The major components that catalyse this
protein translocation pathway Ð which starts in the cytosol, and
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