| Literature DB >> 11027719 |
Abstract
In photosynthetic organisms it is becoming increasingly evident that light-driven shifts in redox potential act as a sensor that initiates alterations in gene expression at both the level of transcription and translation. This report provides evidence that the expression of a cyanobacterial RNA helicase gene, crhR, is controlled at the level of transcription and mRNA stability by a complex series of interacting mechanisms that are redox regulated. Transcript accumulation correlates with reduction of the electron transport chain between Q(A) in photosystem II and Q(O) in cyt b(6)f, when Synechocystis sp. strain PCC 6803 is cultured photoautotrophically or photomixotrophically and subjected to darkness and/or electron transport inhibitors or illumination that preferentially excites photosystem II. crhR mRNA stability is also regulated by a redox responsive mechanism, which differs from that affecting accumulation and does not involve signaling initiated by photoreceptors. The data are most consistent with plastoquinol/cyt b(6)f interaction as the sensor initiating a signal transduction cascade resulting in accumulation of the crhR transcript. Functionally, CrhR RNA unwinding could act as a linker between redox regulated transcription and translation. The potential for translational regulation of redox-induced gene expression through RNA helicase-catalyzed modulation of RNA secondary structure is discussed.Entities:
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Year: 2000 PMID: 11027719 PMCID: PMC59175 DOI: 10.1104/pp.124.2.703
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Plant Physiol ISSN: 0032-0889 Impact factor: 8.340