Plant Physiology 98:446-451 (1992)
© 1992 American Society of Plant Biologists
Metabolism and Enzymology
Identification of Low Molecular Mass GTP-Binding Proteins in Membranes of the Halotolerant Alga Dunaliella salina 1
María P. Rodríguez-Rosales,
David L. Herrin and
Guy A. Thompson, Jr.
Department of Botany, The University of Texas, Austin, Texas 78713
A family of specific guanine nucleotide-binding proteins in Dunaliella salina was studied. Polypeptides of different subcellular fractions were separated by electrophoresis and transferred to nitrocellulose or Immobilon membranes. Incubation of the transfer blots with [35S]GTP S or [ -32P]GTP showed no evidence for GTP-binding proteins in the chloroplast and cytosol fractions. However, two GTP-binding proteins with molecular masses of 28 and 30 kilodaltons were present in the plasma membrane and microsomal fractions. An additional 29 kilodalton GTP-binding protein was detected in the plasma membrane. The mitochondrial fraction contained significant amounts of only the 28 kilodalton GTP-binding protein. Binding of [32P]GTP to the protein blots was completely prevented by 10 micromolar GTP or guanosine 5'-O-(2-thiodiphosphate) (added in 3 x 104-fold excess), whereas ATP or CTP had no effect on the binding. The 28 kilodalton GTP-binding protein was recognized by polyclonal antibodies to the ras-related YPT1 protein of yeast but not by the anti-ras Y13-259 monoclonal antibody. GTP-binding proteins present in the microsomal fraction could not be solubilized by incubation of microsomes with 1 molar NaCl or 0.2 molar Na2CO3, but some GTP-binding activity was solubilized when microsomes were treated with 6 molar urea. These results indicate that D. salina GTP-binding proteins are tightly associated with the membranes. The covalent attachment of fatty acids to these proteins was also investigated. Electrophoresis followed by fluorography of delipidated microsomal proteins extracted from [3H]myristic acid-labeled cells showed an intense labeling of a 28 kilodalton protein. We conclude that D. salina contains proteins resembling the ras-related proteins found in animal cells and higher plants.
1 This study was supported in part by grants from the National Science Foundation (DMB-8802838 to G.A.T. and DMB-8905303 to D.L.H.) and the R.A. Welch Foundation (F-350 to G.A.T. and F-1164 to D.L.H.). M.P.R.-R. is a Fulbright/Spanish Ministerio de Educación y Ciencia postdoctoral fellow.
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