Abstract

Chloroplast development requires the coordinated action of various proteins, many of which remain to be identified. Here, we report two novel genes, Mesophyll-cell RNAi Library line 7 (MRL7) and MRL7-Like (MRL7-L), that are involved in this process. An Arabidopsis knock-down transgenic plant (MRL7-RNAi) with delayed-greening phenotype was isolated from an RNA interference (RNAi) transformant library. Cotyledons and young leaves of MRL7-RNAi were pale in seedlings and gradually greened as the plant matured, while a knock-out in the MRL7 gene was seedling lethal. The MRL7 protein was shown to co-localize with a marker protein for nucleoids in chloroplasts, indicative of a role for the protein in chloroplast nucleic acid metabolism. Accordingly, chloroplast development was arrested upon loss of MRL7 function and the expression of plastid-encoded genes transcribed by plastid-encoded RNA polymerase (PEP) was significantly reduced in MRL7 knock-down and knock-out plants. A paralog of MRL7 (MRL7-L) was identified in the Arabidopsis genome. Both MRL7 and MRL7-L are only found in land plants and encode previously uncharacterized proteins without any known conserved domain. Like MRL7, knock-down of MRL7-L also resulted in a virescent phenotype, and a similar effect on plastid gene expression. However, the MRL7-L protein was localized to the chloroplast stroma. Taken together, our data indicate that the two paralogous proteins MRL7 and MRL7-L have essential but distinct roles during early chloroplast development and are involved in regulation of plastid gene expression.

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