Publication | Open Access
Arabidopsis CHL27, located in both envelope and thylakoid membranes, is required for the synthesis of protochlorophyllide
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References
2003
Year
Plant Molecular BiologyBiosynthesisEngineeringBiochemistryPhotosystemsChlorotic LeavesNatural SciencesArabidopsis Chl27Molecular BiologyChlamydomonas Crd1Plant BiochemistryPlant MetabolismArabidopsis HomologuePhotosynthesisPlant PhysiologyThylakoid Membranes
CHL27, the Arabidopsis homologue to Chlamydomonas Crd1, a plastid-localized putative diiron protein, is required for the synthesis of protochlorophyllide and therefore is a candidate subunit of the aerobic cyclase in chlorophyll biosynthesis. delta-Aminolevulinic acid-fed antisense Arabidopsis plants with reduced amounts of Crd1/CHL27 accumulate Mg-protoporphyrin IX monomethyl ester, the substrate of the cyclase reaction. Mutant plants have chlorotic leaves with reduced abundance of all chlorophyll proteins. Fractionation of Arabidopsis chloroplast membranes shows that Crd1/CHL27 is equally distributed on a membrane-weight basis in the thylakoid and inner-envelope membranes.
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