4.7 Article

In vivo transport of folded EGFP by the ΔpH/TAT-dependent pathway in chloroplasts of Arabidopsis thaliana

Journal

JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL BOTANY
Volume 55, Issue 403, Pages 1697-1706

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/jxb/erh191

Keywords

chloroplast; green fluorescent protein (GFP); Delta pH/TAT pathway; protein transport; thylakoid membrane

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Among the protein translocation pathways of the thylakoid membrane in chloroplasts, the DeltapH/TAT pathway is unique in several aspects. In vitro transport assays with isolated chloroplasts or thylakoids have defined the trans-thylakoidal proton gradient as the sole requirement for effecting transport. From these studies, evidence has also accumulated indicating that, in contrast to the remaining protein transport pathways present in the thylakoid membrane, the DeltapH/TAT pathway is able to mediate the transport of folded proteins. The present work has established a novel approach to demonstrate the transport of folded proteins by this pathway in vivo. For this purpose, Arabidopsis thaliana plants were stably transformed with gene constructs expressing enhanced green fluorescent protein (EGFP) alone or fused to the transit peptides of different chloroplast proteins under the control of the 35S CAMV promoter. The intracellular and intraorganellar distribution of EGFP in the resulting transformants showed that while all the chloroplast transit peptides efficiently mediated the transport of EGFP into plastids, only those specific for the DeltapH/TAT pathway were able to direct the protein into the thylakoid lumen as well. This could be demonstrated both by fluorescence and immunoelectron microscopy. Analysis of isolated and fractionated chloroplasts using western blot and spectrofluorometric assays confirmed the presence of folded EGFP solely within the thylakoid lumen of these lines. These results strongly suggest that the protein adopts a folded state in the chloroplast stroma and thus, can only be translocated further into the chloroplast lumen by the DeltapH/TAT pathway.

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