Abstract
Localization and protein composition of plastid nucleoids was analyzed in light-grown pea seedlings at various stages of leaf development. In young plastids of unopened leaf buds, nucleoids were abundant and localized in the periphery of plastids, whereas, in mature leaves, chloroplasts contained nucleoids within narrow spaces restricted by thylakoids or grana. The migration of nucleoids into the interior of plastids preceded the formation of grana, and hence, the maturation of the photosynthetic apparatus. The protein composition of nucleoids was considerably different in young plastids and mature chloroplasts. Polypeptides with a molecular mass of 70–100 kDa predominated in the nucleoids of young plastids, whereas polypeptides with molecular mass of 20–30 kDa were abundant in the nucleoids of mature chloroplasts. Immuno-blot analysis with antibodies against the nucleoids of young plastids identified various polypeptides that were significantly more abundant in the nucleoids of young plastids than in the nucleoids of mature chloroplasts. These results demonstrate that plastid nucleoids are subject to dynamic changes in both localization and composition during the normal development of chloroplasts in the light.
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