Chlorophyll regulates accumulation of the plastid-encoded chlorophyll apoproteins CP43 and D1 by increasing apoprotein stability

Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 1990 Jun;87(11):4038-42. doi: 10.1073/pnas.87.11.4038.

Abstract

Chlorophyll apoprotein accumulation in higher plant chloroplasts is controlled by light-dependent chlorophyll formation. Dark-grown plants lack chlorophyll and chlorophyll apoproteins. However, the plastid genes encoding the chlorophyll apoproteins are transcribed; chlorophyll apoprotein mRNA accumulates and associates with polysomes in plastids of dark-grown plants. Pulse-labeling assays revealed a population of short-lived proteins in plastids of dark-grown plants. One of these transiently labeled proteins was CP43, a chlorophyll apoprotein associated with photosystem II. Pulse-chase assays showed that newly synthesized CP43 was rapidly degraded in plastids of dark-grown plants, which lack chlorophyll. In contrast, CP43 synthesized in plastids from illuminated plants was stable. The synthesis of D1, a chlorophyll apoprotein of the photosystem II reaction center, was also analyzed in plastids of dark-grown and illuminated plants. Radiolabel accumulation into full-length D1 was only detected in plastids of illuminated plants. However, D1 translation intermediates of 15-25 kDa were detected in both plastid populations. Pulse-chase assays showed that the 15- to 25-kDa D1 translation products were precursors of mature D1 in plastids of illuminated plants. In contrast, in plastids of dark-grown plants, the 15- to 25-kDa translation intermediates were converted into a 23-kDa polypeptide previously suggested to be a proteolytic product of D1. These results indicate that chlorophyll produced in illuminated plants stabilizes D1 nascent polypeptides, which allows accumulation of mature D1.

Publication types

  • Research Support, U.S. Gov't, P.H.S.

MeSH terms

  • Apoproteins / metabolism
  • Chlorophyll / physiology*
  • Chloroplasts / metabolism*
  • Darkness
  • Gene Expression
  • Hordeum
  • Light
  • Molecular Weight
  • Plant Proteins / biosynthesis
  • Plant Proteins / metabolism*
  • Polyribosomes / metabolism
  • Precipitin Tests
  • RNA, Messenger / genetics

Substances

  • Apoproteins
  • Plant Proteins
  • RNA, Messenger
  • Chlorophyll