Title: Translation in Chloroplasts
1Translation in Chloroplasts
- Translation machinery is bacteria-like
- Ribosomes
- -70S (composed of L (50S) and S (30S)
subunits) - -contain 23S (L), 16S (S), and 5S (L) rRNAs
- -each subunit (L and S) contains 30 proteins
- Initiation factors if1, if2, if3
- Elongation factors ef-Tu, ef-Ts, and G
- Translation is initiated with fmet (formylated
Met)
2How mRNAs selected for translation?
- Many cp mRNAs contain a Shine-Dalgarno sequence
preceding the first codon it base-pairs to the
3'-end of 16S rRNA. - S-D start
- 5'----GGAGG-------AUG-----3 mRNA
-
- 3'----CCUCC--------5' 16S rRNA
- Start codon (AUG) very important for starting
translation at right codon. - Can translate internal ORFs of a polycistronic
transcript.
3mRNA recognition/binding using the Shine-Dalgarno
sequence in plastid mRNAs
Fig. 9.17
4Differences with bacteria
- Many chloroplast mRNAs have relatively long (
300 nt) 5' untranslated regions (UTR) that bind
proteins. - Many chloroplast mRNAs dont have a S-D sequence,
or it is not important (redundant?). - Must be another initiation mechanism
- Scanning ?
- Some of the proteins that bind the 5 UTRs of
mRNAs promote translation
5Chloroplast tRNAs Chloroplast translation relies
heavily on wobble (or 2 out of 3) pairing between
the tRNA anticodon and the mRNA codon.
6Regulation of Chloroplast Gene Expression
- Studied principally during photomorphogenesis
i.e., development of cotyledons and leaves during
"greening" (etioplast -gt chloroplast). - Also studied (in mature chloroplasts) during
light-dark cycles, and in response to certain
stresses (heat, cold, radiation). - Multiple levels are regulated for most genes.
- Difficult to generalize, but some trends emerge.
7Plastid Transcriptional Regulation
- Transcriptional regulation is often global or
large-scale - NEP functions early in development, PEP
dominates later (etioplast ? chloroplast) - PEP-transcribed genes increase or decrease
together - E.g. - overall transcription increases during
"greening", but decreases during chloroplast ?
chromoplast - There are examples of gene-specific
transcriptional regulation - psbD/psbC promoter switching in response to light
8Plastid development is plastic, mostly under
nuclear control. Shoots light
proplastids etioplasts chloroplasts
chromoplasts Roots proplastids
amyloplasts
PEP
NEP
9psbD-psbC Light-responsive Promoter (LRP or BLRP)
- Preferentially utilized in the light (not dark)
stimulated by blue and UV light. - Also shows circadian rhythm of utilization.
- Evolutionarily conserved among higher plants.
- PEP-type promoter, but the -35 region not
necessary. - 2 upstream regions important for the
light-response PGT and AAG boxes. - Boxes bind proteins (PTF1, AGF) binding of PTF1
is inhibited by ADP-dependent phosphorylation
(ADP levels increase in darkness).
10BLRP promoter
11psbD BLRP
Schematic diagram of the barley psbD-LRP and
constructs used for plastid transformation. A.
The boxed regions identify conserved sequences
which include the PGT-box (-71 to -100), AAG-box
(-36 to -56) and the prokaryotic-like -10 (-7 to
-12) and -35 (-28 to -33) promoter elements. The
psbD open-reading frame is shown at the far
right. The direction of transcription is
represented as an arrow and the initiation site
is labeled as 1. A sequence alignment between
the barley (Sexton et al., 1990b) and tobacco
(Shinozaki et al., 1986) psbD-LRP was made with
the ClustalW 1.7 Multiple Sequence Alignment
Program. Aligned nucleotide sequences
corresponding to conserved sequences are boxed in
and labeled accordingly. Numbering of nucleotides
and designation of conserved promoter elements
are in accordance with the structure of the
barley psbD-LRP from the transcription initiation
site (1).
(From Thum et al. 2001)
12Models of transcription complexes associated with
the psbD BLRP, rbcL and psbA promoters
- extra TATA box likely maintains high rate of
transcription in mature chloroplast
Kim, M. et al. J. Biol. Chem. 19992744684-4692
13Regulation of RNA splicing stability
- Splicing of psbA introns (Group I) in Chlamy is
strongly promoted by light ( redox). - Splicing of some photosynthetic genes introns
(Group II) is inefficient in maize roots
(amyloplasts), but efficient in leaves. - Stability of some plastid mRNAs increases during
greening (psbA), but most decrease in mature
chloroplasts in the light.
14Translational Regulation
- Cp mRNAs are relatively long-lived (half lives of
0.5 to 8 h or more) - Translation is regulated by
- Global changes in rate (e.g., light-dark cycles)
- e.g. - high in daytime, low at night
- Preferential translation of specific mRNAs under
certain conditions. - e.g.- very high light intensity increases psbA
translation and decreases rbcL translation
15Light-activated translation of psbA mRNA
- Complex of proteins that bind to the 5 UTR of
psbA mRNA in the light. - Demonstrate with gel-shift (electrophoretic
mobility shift) assay.
Lane 1 control (no protein extract) Lane 2 -
extract from light-grown cells Lane 3 - extract
from dark-grown cells
Box 9.4 in Buchanan et al.
16Proteins in complex that bind to the 5 UTR of
psbA mRNA
- PABP - similar to a polyA-binding protein, binds
A-U rich region in the 5 UTR, activates
translation - PDI - a protein disulfide isomerase (reduces
disulfide bonds on certain proteins), activates
PABP to bind RNA - Kinase responds to ADP levels, at high ADP,
kinase deactivates PDI by phosphorylating it
17Model for Activation of psbA translation by Light
via photosynthesis.
Fig. 9.23 in Buchanan et al.
18Translational regulation of RuBPCase LS by SS
Incoming SS somehow promotes translation of rbcL
mRNA!
Fig. 9.16 in Buchanan et al.
19Rough Thylakoids
- Polyribosome (polysomes) can be observed bound
to thylakoid membranes. - At least some of these polysomes are attached to
the membrane by the nascent (new) protein. - Suggests these polysomes make thylakoid membrane
proteins and simultaneously insert them into the
membrane. - Chloroplasts also contain a Signal Recognition
Particle (SRP) homologue.
20Thylakoid-bound polysomes from Chlamydomonas
Occur in the light period of
a light-dark cycle
polysome
polysome
A. Michaels, M. Margulies and G. Palade (1972)
21Stabilization of nascent chlorophyll - binding
proteins of PSI and PSII with Chlorophyll
Fig 9.24 in Buchanan et al.
22Regulation of protein stability in chloroplasts
- Protein stability is regulated by
- binding of cofactors (e.g., chlorophyll)
- assembly with other subunits in a multi-subunit
enzyme complex
23Photoinhibition inhibition of photosynthesis at
very high light flux
Photosystem II damage is critical.
Box 9.6 in Buchanan et al.
24psbA encodes 32-35 kDa D1 polypeptide of PSII
Yamamoto, Plant Cell Physiol. 2001
D1 protein turns over rapidly because it becomes
damaged in the light.
25D1 turnover and replacement is ongoing and
critical
- At photoinhibitory light intensity, D1 protein of
PSII is damaged faster that it can be removed
(and degraded). - At most lower light intensities, degradation,
synthesis and replacement of D1 keeps up with the
damage rate.
26Nuclear Control of Chloroplast Gene Expression
- Genetic studies have revealed considerable
potential for nuclear control of specific cp
genes. - Many Mendelian (nuclear) mutants that are
defective in plastid development or function
dont express a specific Cp-encoded gene.
27Cp genes and their required nuclear gene function
in Chlamydomonas.
Cp gene step affected no. of
nuclear loci
28Does the cross-talk go both ways way? (Does the
chloroplast control nuclear genes?)
- Nuclear genes that encode proteins for
photosynthesis are expressed poorly if plastids
don't develop, or are damaged by photo-oxidation.
- - suggest signal from plastids to nucleus
- Signal?
- - small molecule?
- - intermediate in chlorophyll synthesis?