Abstract

The cyanelles of the glaucocystophyte alga Cyanophora paradoxa resemble endosymbiotic cyanobacteria in morphology, pigmentation and, especially, in the presence of a peptidoglycan wall situated between the inner and outer envelope membranes. However, it is now clear that cyanelles in fact are primitive plastids. Phylogenetic analyses of plastid, nuclear and mitochondrial genes support a single primary endosymbiotic event. In this scenario cyanelles and all other plastid types are derived from an ancestral photosynthetic organelle combining the high plastid gene content of the Porphyra purpurea rhodoplast and the peptidoglycan wall of glaucocystophyte cyanelles. This means that the import apparatus of all primary plastids should be homologous. Indeed, heterologous in vitro import can now be shown in both directions, provided a phenylalanine residue essential for cyanelle import is engineered into the N-terminal part of chloroplast transit peptides. The cyanelle and likely also the rhodoplast import apparatus can be envisaged as prototypes with a single receptor showing this requirement for N-terminal phenylalanine. In chloroplasts, multiple receptors with overlapping and less stringent specificities have evolved explaining the efficient heterologous import of native precursors from C. paradoxa. With respect to conservative sorting in cyanelles, both the Sec and Tat pathways could be demonstrated. Another cyanobacterial feature, the dual location of the Sec translocase in thylakoid and inner envelope membranes, is also unique to cyanelles. For the first time, protease protection of internalized lumenal proteins could be shown for cyanobacteria-like, phycobilisome-bearing thylakoid membranes after import into isolated cyanelles.

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