| Literature DB >> 33273113 |
Silvia Ramundo1,2, Yukari Asakura3, Patrice A Salomé4, Daniela Strenkert4, Morgane Boone1,2, Luke C M Mackinder5, Kazuaki Takafuji6, Emine Dinc7,8, Michèle Rahire7,8, Michèle Crèvecoeur7,8, Leonardo Magneschi9, Olivier Schaad10, Michael Hippler9,11, Martin C Jonikas12,2, Sabeeha Merchant4, Masato Nakai13, Jean-David Rochaix14,8, Peter Walter15,2.
Abstract
In photosynthetic eukaryotes, thousands of proteins are translated in the cytosol and imported into the chloroplast through the concerted action of two translocons-termed TOC and TIC-located in the outer and inner membranes of the chloroplast envelope, respectively. The degree to which the molecular composition of the TOC and TIC complexes is conserved over phylogenetic distances has remained controversial. Here, we combine transcriptomic, biochemical, and genetic tools in the green alga Chlamydomonas (Chlamydomonas reinhardtii) to demonstrate that, despite a lack of evident sequence conservation for some of its components, the algal TIC complex mirrors the molecular composition of a TIC complex from Arabidopsis thaliana. The Chlamydomonas TIC complex contains three nuclear-encoded subunits, Tic20, Tic56, and Tic100, and one chloroplast-encoded subunit, Tic214, and interacts with the TOC complex, as well as with several uncharacterized proteins to form a stable supercomplex (TIC-TOC), indicating that protein import across both envelope membranes is mechanistically coupled. Expression of the nuclear and chloroplast genes encoding both known and uncharacterized TIC-TOC components is highly coordinated, suggesting that a mechanism for regulating its biogenesis across compartmental boundaries must exist. Conditional repression of Tic214, the only chloroplast-encoded subunit in the TIC-TOC complex, impairs the import of chloroplast proteins with essential roles in chloroplast ribosome biogenesis and protein folding and induces a pleiotropic stress response, including several proteins involved in the chloroplast unfolded protein response. These findings underscore the functional importance of the TIC-TOC supercomplex in maintaining chloroplast proteostasis.Entities:
Keywords: Chlamydomonas reinhardtii; chloroplast gene targeting; chloroplast protein import; gene coexpression
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Year: 2020 PMID: 33273113 PMCID: PMC7768757 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2014294117
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ISSN: 0027-8424 Impact factor: 12.779