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Involvement of tetrapyrroles in inter-organellar signaling in plants and algae

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PHOTOSYNTHESIS RESEARCH
卷 82, 期 3, 页码 289-299

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SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11120-004-2160-x

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Chlamydomonas reinhardtii; chloroplast signaling; Mg-protoporphyrin IX; nuclear gene expression; plastid factor; light induction

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For the assembly of a functional chloroplast, the coordinated expression of genes distributed between nucleus and chloroplasts is a prerequisite. While the nucleus plays an undisputed dominant role in controlling biogenesis and functioning of chloroplasts, plastidic signals appear to control the expression of a subset of nuclear genes; the majority of which encodes chloroplast constituents. Tetrapyrrole biosynthesis intermediates are attractive candidates for one type of plastidic signal ever since an involvement of Mg-porphyrins in signaling from chloroplast to nucleus was first demonstrated in Chlamydomonas reinhardtii. Since then. Mg-protoporphyrin IX has been shown to exert a regulatory function on nuclear genes in higher plants as well. Here we review evidence for the role played by tetrapyrroles in inter-organellar communication. We also report on a screening for nuclear genes that may be subject to regulation by tetrapyrroles. This revealed that (i) HEMA. the gene encoding the first enzyme specific for porphyrin biosynthesis is induced by Mg-protoporphyrin IX, (ii) several nuclear HSP70 genes are regulated by tetrapyrroles. Members of the gene family induced by the feeding of Mg-rotoporphyrin IX encode chaperones located in either the chloroplast or the cytosol. These results point to an important role of Mg-tetrapyrroles as plastidic signal in controlling the initial step of porphyrin biosynthesis, and the synthesis of chaperones involved in protein folding in cytosol/stroma, protein transport into organelles, and the stress response.

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