Abstract

Cryptophytes, unicellular algae, evolved by secondary endosymbiosis and contain plastids surrounded by four membranes. In contrast to cyanobacteria and red algae, their phycobiliproteins do not assemble into phycobilisomes and are located within the thylakoid lumen instead of the stroma. We identified two gene families encoding phycoerythrin alpha and light-harvesting complex proteins from an expressed sequence tag library of the cryptophyte Guillardia theta. The proteins bear a bipartite topogenic signal responsible for the transport of nuclear encoded proteins via the ER into the plastid. Analysis of the phycoerythrin alpha sequences revealed that more than half of them carry an additional, third topogenic signal comprising a twin arginine motif, which is indicative of Tat (twin arginine transport)-specific targeting signals. We performed import studies with several derivatives of one member using a diatom transformation system, as well as intact chloroplasts and thylakoid vesicles isolated from pea. We demonstrated the different targeting properties of each individual part of the tripartite leader and show that phycoerythrin alpha is transported across the thylakoid membrane into the thylakoid lumen and protease-protected. Furthermore, we showed that thylakoid transport of phycoerythrin alpha takes place by the Tat pathway even if the 36 amino acid long bipartite topogenic signal precedes the actual twin arginine signal. This is the first experimental evidence of a protein being targeted across five biological membranes.

Highlights

  • (ER)2 and four membranes separate the cytosol from the stroma: (i) the ER membrane, (ii) the periplastidial membrane, the former cytoplasm membrane of the red alga, (iii) the outer plastid envelope membrane, and (iv) the inner plastid envelope membrane (Fig. 5)

  • We showed that thylakoid transport of phycoerythrin ␣ takes place by the twin arginine translocase (Tat) pathway even if the 36 amino acid long bipartite topogenic signal precedes the actual twin arginine signal

  • Our results demonstrate that the PE␣ subunit is transported into the thylakoid lumen and that the twin arginine translocase (Tat) catalyzes this transport

Read more

Summary

Introduction

(ER)2 and four membranes separate the cytosol from the stroma: (i) the ER membrane, (ii) the periplastidial membrane, the former cytoplasm membrane of the red alga, (iii) the outer plastid envelope membrane, and (iv) the inner plastid envelope membrane (Fig. 5). All genes encode preproteins containing a bipartite topogenic signal (BTS), composed of an N-terminal signal peptide for co-translational import into the ER lumen via the Sec61 complex, followed by a transit peptide-like region mediating transport across the remaining three membranes into the plastid stroma [10, 11].

Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call