Recognition and envelope translocation of chloroplast preproteins
Open Access
- 8 August 2005
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in Journal of Experimental Botany
- Vol. 56 (419) , 2287-2320
- https://doi.org/10.1093/jxb/eri243
Abstract
Plastids are a diverse group of plant organelles that perform essential functions including important steps in many biosynthetic pathways. Chloroplasts are the best characterized type of plastid, and constitute the site of oxygenic photosynthesis in plants, a process essential to all higher life forms. It is well established that the majority (>90%) of chloroplast proteins are nucleus-encoded and must be post-translationally imported into these envelope-bound compartments. Most nucleus-encoded chloroplast proteins are translated in precursor form on cytosolic ribosomes, targeted to the chloroplast surface, and then imported across the double-membrane envelope by translocons in the outer and inner envelope membranes of the chloroplast, termed TOC and TIC, respectively. Recently, significant progress has been made in our understanding of how proteins are targeted to the chloroplast surface and translocated across the chloroplast envelope into the stroma. Evidence suggesting the existence of multiple import pathways at the outer envelope membrane for different classes of precursor proteins has been presented. These pathways appear to utilize similar TOC complexes equipped with different combinations of homologous GTPase receptors, providing preprotein recognition specificity.Keywords
This publication has 94 references indexed in Scilit:
- Characterization of a T-DNA insertion mutant for the protein import receptor atToc33 from chloroplastsMolecular Genetics and Genomics, 2004
- Processing of the Dual Targeted Precursor Protein of Glutathione Reductase in Mitochondria and ChloroplastsJournal of Molecular Biology, 2004
- The Role of Hot13p and Redox Chemistry in the Mitochondrial TIM22 Import PathwayJournal of Biological Chemistry, 2004
- Endosymbiotic gene transfer: organelle genomes forge eukaryotic chromosomesNature Reviews Genetics, 2004
- The Roles of Toc34 and Toc75 in Targeting the Toc159 Preprotein Receptor to ChloroplastsJournal of Biological Chemistry, 2003
- The Chloroplast Protein Import Receptors Toc34 and Toc159 Are Phosphorylated by Distinct Protein KinasesPublished by Elsevier ,2002
- NMR identification of the Tom20 binding segment in mitochondrial presequencesJournal of Molecular Biology, 2001
- The preprotein translocase of the mitochondrial inner membrane: function and evolutionJournal of Molecular Biology, 1999
- A constituent of the chloroplast import complex represents a new type of GTP‐binding proteinThe Plant Journal, 1995
- The GTPase superfamily: conserved structure and molecular mechanismNature, 1991