plastid transit peptide
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2006 ◽  
Vol 5 (12) ◽  
pp. 2079-2091 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dion G. Durnford ◽  
Michael W. Gray

ABSTRACT The plastid of Euglena gracilis was acquired secondarily through an endosymbiotic event with a eukaryotic green alga, and as a result, it is surrounded by a third membrane. This membrane complexity raises the question of how the plastid proteins are targeted to and imported into the organelle. To further explore plastid protein targeting in Euglena, we screened a total of 9,461 expressed sequence tag (EST) clusters (derived from 19,013 individual ESTs) for full-length proteins that are plastid localized to characterize their targeting sequences and to infer potential modes of translocation. Of the 117 proteins identified as being potentially plastid localized whose N-terminal targeting sequences could be inferred, 83 were unique and could be classified into two major groups. Class I proteins have tripartite targeting sequences, comprising (in order) an N-terminal signal sequence, a plastid transit peptide domain, and a predicted stop-transfer sequence. Within this class of proteins are the lumen-targeted proteins (class IB), which have an additional hydrophobic domain similar to a signal sequence and required for further targeting across the thylakoid membrane. Class II proteins lack the putative stop-transfer sequence and possess only a signal sequence at the N terminus, followed by what, in amino acid composition, resembles a plastid transit peptide. Unexpectedly, a few unrelated plastid-targeted proteins exhibit highly similar transit sequences, implying either a recent swapping of these domains or a conserved function. This work represents the most comprehensive description to date of transit peptides in Euglena and hints at the complex routes of plastid targeting that must exist in this organism.


2001 ◽  
Vol 14 (10) ◽  
pp. 1178-1188 ◽  
Author(s):  
Maria C. Rubio ◽  
Javier Ramos ◽  
K. Judith Webb ◽  
Frank R. Minchin ◽  
Esther González ◽  
...  

The composition of antioxidant enzymes, especially superoxide dismutase (SOD), was studied in one nontransgenic and three transgenic lines of nodulated alfalfa plants. Transgenic lines overproduced MnSOD in the mitochondria of nodules and leaves (line 1–10), MnSOD in the chloroplasts (line 4–6), and FeSOD in the chloroplasts (line 10–7). In nodules of line 10–7, the absence of transgene-encoded FeSOD activity was due to a lack of mRNA, whereas in nodules of line 4-6 the absence of transgene-encoded MnSOD activity was due to enzyme inactivation or degradation. Transgenic alfalfa showed a novel compensatory effect in the activities of MnSOD (mitochondrial) and FeSOD (plastidic) in the leaves, which was not caused by changes in the mRNA levels. These findings imply that SOD activity in plant tissues and organelles is regulated, at least partially, at the posttranslational level. All four lines had low CuZnSOD activities and an abundant FeSOD isozyme, especially in nodules, indicating that FeSOD performs important antioxidant functions other than the scavenging of superoxide radicals generated in photosynthesis. This was confirmed by the detection of FeSOD cDNAs and proteins in nodules of other legumes such as cowpea, pea, and soybean. The cDNA encoding alfalfa nodule FeSOD was characterized and the deduced protein found to contain a plastid transit peptide. A comparison of sequences and other properties reveals that there are two types of FeSODs in nodules.


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