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Plant Physiol, December 2000, Vol. 124, pp. 1678-1696
Regulation of Etioplast Pigment-Protein Complexes, Inner Membrane
Architecture, and Protochlorophyllide a Chemical
Heterogeneity by Light-Dependent NADPH:Protochlorophyllide
Oxidoreductases A and B1
Fabrice
Franck,
Ulrich
Sperling,
Geneviève
Frick,
Babette
Pochert,
Barbara
van Cleve,
Klaus
Apel, and
Gregory A.
Armstrong*
Laboratory of Photobiology, Department of Plant Biology,
Université de Liege, Liege, Belgium (F.F.); and
Institute for Plant Sciences, Plant Genetics, Swiss Federal
Institute of Technology, Zurich, Switzerland (U.S., G.F., B.P., B.v.C.,
K.A., G.A.A.)
The etioplast of dark-grown angiosperms is characterized by
the prolamellar body (PLB) inner membrane, the absence of chlorophyll, and the accumulation of divinyl and monovinyl derivatives of
protochlorophyll(ide) a [Pchl(ide) a].
Either of two structurally related, but differentially expressed
light-dependent NADPH:Pchlide oxidoreductases (PORs), PORA and PORB,
can assemble the PLB and form dark-stable ternary complexes containing
enzymatically photoactive Pchlide-F655. Here we have examined in detail
whether these polypeptides play redundant roles in etioplast
differentiation by manipulating the total POR content and the
PORA-to-PORB ratio of etiolated Arabidopsis seedlings using antisense
and overexpression approaches. POR content correlates closely with PLB
formation, the amounts, spectroscopic properties, and photoreduction
kinetics of photoactive Pchlide, the ratio of photoactive Pchlide-F655
to non-photoactive Pchl(ide)-F632, and the ratio of divinyl- to
monovinyl-Pchl(ide). This last result defines POR as the first
endogenous protein factor demonstrated to influence the chemical
heterogeneity of Pchl(ide) in angiosperms. It is intriguing that
excitation energy transfer between different spectroscopic forms of
Pchl(ide) in etiolated cotyledons remains largely independent of POR
content. We therefore propose that the PLB contains a minimal
structural unit with defined pigment stoichiometries, within which a
small amount of non-photoactive Pchl(ide) transfers excitation energy
to a large excess of photoactive Pchlide-F655. In addition, our data
suggests that POR may bind not only stoichiometric amounts of
photoactive Pchlide, but also substoichiometric amounts of
non-photoactive Pchl(ide). We conclude that the typical characteristics
of etioplasts are closely related to total POR content, but not
obviously to the specific presence of PORA or PORB.
1
This work was supported by the Belgian Nation
Funds of Scientific Research (grant nos. FRFC 2.4523.95 and
2.4597.99), by the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology Zurich, and
by the Swiss National Science Foundation Swiss Priority
Programme Biotechnology.
*
Corresponding author; e-mail gregory.armstrong{at}ipw.biol.ethz.ch; fax 41-1-632-1081.
© 2000 American Society of Plant Physiologists
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