16 research outputs found

    Identification of a major soluble protein in mitochondria from nonphotosynthetic tissues as NAD-dependent formate dehydrogenase

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    International audienc

    Identification of a major soluble protein in mitochondria from nonphotosynthetic tissues as NAD-dependent formate dehydrogenase.

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    In many plant species, one of the most abundant soluble proteins (as judged by two-dimensional polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis) in mitochondria from nongreen tissues is a 40-kD polypeptide that is relatively scarce in mitochondria from photosynthetic tissues. cDNA sequences encoding this polypeptide were isolated from a lambda gt11 cDNA expression library from potato (Solanum tuberosum L.) by screening with a specific antibody raised against the 40-kD polypeptide. The cDNA sequence contains an open reading frame of 1137 nucleotides whose predicted amino acid sequence shows strong homology to an NAD-dependent formate dehydrogenase (EC 1.2.1.2) from Pseudomonas sp. 101. Comparison of the cDNA sequence with the N-terminal amino acid sequence of the mature 40-kD polypeptide suggests that the polypeptide is made as a precursor with a 23-amino acid presequence that shows characteristics typical of mitochondrial targeting signals. The identity of the polypeptide was confirmed by assaying the formate dehydrogenase activity in plant mitochondria from various tissues and by activity staining of mitochondrial proteins run on native gels combined with antibody recognition. The abundance and distribution of this protein suggest that higher plant mitochondria from various nonphotosynthetic plant tissues (tubers, storage roots, seeds, dark-grown shoots, cauliflower heads, and tissues grown in vitro) might contain a formate-producing fermentation pathway similar to those described in bacteria and algae

    Sequence of a cDNA encoding a differentially expressed mitochondrial polypeptide

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    International audienc

    Deconvoluting apocarotenoid-mediated retrograde signaling networks regulating plastid translation and leaf development

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    Signals originating within plastids modulate organelle differentiation by transcriptionally regulating nuclear-encoded genes. These retrograde signals are also integral regulators of plant development, including leaf morphology. The clb5 mutant displays severe leaf morphology defects due to Apocarotenoid Signal 1 (ACS1) accumulation in the developmentally arrested plastid. Transcriptomic analysis of clb5 validates that ACS1 accumulation deregulates hundreds of nuclear genes, including the suppression of most genes encoding plastid ribosomal proteins. Herein, we order the molecular events causing the leaf phenotype associated with the accumulation of ACS1, which includes two consecutive retrograde signaling cascades. Firstly, ACS1 originating in the plastid drives inhibition of plastid translation (IPT) via nuclear transcriptome remodeling of chlororibosomal proteins, requiring light as an essential component. Subsequently, IPT results in leaf morphological defects via a GUN1-dependent pathway shared with seedlings undergoing chemical IPT treatments and is restricted to an early window of the leaf development. Collectively, this work advances our understanding of the complexity within plastid retrograde signaling exemplified by sequential signal exchange and consequences that in a particular temporal and spatial context contribute to the modulation of leaf development
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