Abstract

In the cytosol of plant cells vesicle transport occurs via secretory pathways among the endoplasmic reticulum network, Golgi bodies, secretory granules, endosome, and plasma membrane. Three systems transfer lipids, proteins and other important molecules through aqueous spaces to membrane-enclosed compartments, via vesicles that bud from donor membranes, being coated and uncoated before tethered and fused with acceptor membranes. In addition, molecular, biochemical and ultrastructural evidence indicates presence of a vesicle transport system in chloroplasts. Little is known about the protein components of this system. However, as chloroplasts harbor the photosynthetic apparatus that ultimately supports most organisms on the planet, close attention to their pathways is warranted. This may also reveal novel diversification and/or distinct solutions to the problems posed by the targeted intra-cellular trafficking of important molecules. To date two homologs to well-known yeast cytosolic vesicle transport proteins, CPSAR1 and CPRabA5e (CP, chloroplast localized), have been shown to have roles in chloroplast vesicle transport, both being GTPases. Bioinformatic data indicate that several homologs of cytosolic vesicle transport system components are putatively chloroplast-localized and in addition other proteins have been implicated to participate in chloroplast vesicle transport, including vesicle-inducing protein in plastids 1, thylakoid formation 1, snowy cotyledon 2/cotyledon chloroplast biogenesis factor, curvature thylakoid 1 proteins, and a dynamin like GTPase FZO-like protein. Several putative potential cargo proteins have also been identified, including building blocks of the photosynthetic apparatus. Here we discuss details of the largely unknown putative chloroplast vesicle transport system, focusing on GTPase-related components.

Highlights

  • Eukaryotic cells contain an endomembrane system that delimits organelles with specific functions

  • Efforts to elucidate the systems for transporting cargos of vital molecules through the ER, Golgi, secretory granules, and plasma membrane from donor to target membranes were honored with the Nobel Prize in Physiology and Medicine in 2013

  • The prize was awarded to Rothman, Schekman, and Südhof for contributions toward unraveling vesicle transport mechanisms in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae and neurotransmitter transport mediated by synaptic vesicles in mammals (Südhof, 2004; Mellman and Emr, 2013)

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Summary

Sazzad Karim and Henrik Aronsson*

As chloroplasts harbor the photosynthetic apparatus that supports most organisms on the planet, close attention to their pathways is warranted. This may reveal novel diversification and/or distinct solutions to the problems posed by the targeted intra-cellular trafficking of important molecules. Bioinformatic data indicate that several homologs of cytosolic vesicle transport system components are putatively chloroplast-localized and in addition other proteins have been implicated to participate in chloroplast vesicle transport, including vesicle-inducing protein in plastids 1, thylakoid formation 1, snowy cotyledon 2/cotyledon chloroplast biogenesis factor, curvature thylakoid 1 proteins, and a dynamin like GTPase FZO-like protein.

INTRODUCTION
Karim and Aronsson
Findings
No visible phenotype
Full Text
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