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Plant Physiol, January 2001, Vol. 125, pp. 142-144
Posttranscriptional Control of Chloroplast Gene Expression. From
RNA to Photosynthetic Complex
Jean-David
Rochaix*
Departments of Molecular Biology and Plant Biology, University of
Geneva, 30 Quai Ernest Ansermet, 1211 Geneva 4, Switzerland
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INTRODUCTION |
Twenty-five years ago it was well
established that chloroplasts contain their own DNA and protein
synthesizing system, but little was known of how this organellar genome
is expressed. As a result of their endosymbiotic origin, plastids
contain a protein synthesizing system that displays several prokaryotic
features. Its 70S ribosomes resemble those of bacteria and are
sensitive to the same set of antibiotics. However, it has become
apparent that the chloroplast gene expression system is unique,
differing in many respects from bacterial systems and using a variety
of unusual posttranscriptional steps.
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MAJOR TECHNICAL ADVANCES |
Scientific progress is often driven by new technology. A
particularly striking example was the establishment of a chloroplast transformation system in 1988 by Boynton et al. (4) in
Chlamydomonas, which was later extended to tobacco (18).
These were major technical breakthroughs that coincided with the first
determinations of the entire sequence of chloroplast genomes (17) and
opened the door for the in vivo study of chloroplast gene expression.
Because of the efficient chloroplast homologous recombination system, it became possible to perform precise DNA manipulations on any chloroplast gene of interest, in particular, specific gene disruptions and site-directed mutagenesis. This powerful technology also allowed one to dissect chloroplast promoter regions, to introduce chimeric genes in the chloroplast genome, and to identify novel functions by
screening or selecting for specific phenotypes. The development of an
efficient nuclear transformation system in Chlamydomonas and
of gene tagging methods in Chlamydomonas, maize, and
Arabidopsis provided also important tools that led to major advances in
our understanding of chloroplast biogenesis (1).
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MOLECULAR CROSS TALK BETWEEN NUCLEUS AND CHLOROPLAST |
One of the most original features of the chloroplast protein
synthesizing system is that it cooperates with the nucleocytosolic system in the biosynthesis of the photosynthetic apparatus. The subunits of the photosynthetic complexes are encoded by chloroplast and
nuclear genes that need to be coordinately expressed. The study of this
molecular crosstalk between chloroplast and nucleus was greatly helped
by genetic approaches (7). The genetic analysis of photosynthetic
mutants of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii and maize revealed a large number of nuclear and chloroplast loci involved in
several posttranscriptional steps of chloroplast gene expression such
as RNA stability, RNA processing, splicing, and translation. A
characteristic feature of the nucleus-encoded factors, at least in the
case of Chlamydomonas, is that they are specifically
required for a single posttranscriptional step in the synthesis of an
individual plastid gene product. Thus genetic analysis of mutants
deficient in the accumulation of single chloroplast mRNAs
identified a distinct nuclear locus in each case. In a similar manner,
mutations affecting chloroplast translation define one to three nuclear
loci specifically required for the translation of a single chloroplast
mRNA. A particularly striking example is provided by the genetic
analysis of the maturation of the psaA mRNA of
Chlamydomonas, a process that requires at least 14 nuclear
loci. If these findings are extrapolated to the entire chloroplast
genome with a total number of approximately 120 genes, one can estimate
that several hundred nucleus-encoded factors are required for the
expression of the entire set of plastid genes. The first specific
factors of this type were recently cloned in Chlamydomonas,
Arabidopsis, and maize using gene tagging or genomic complementation by
transformation (1). Several are involved in chloroplast trans-splicing,
RNA stability and processing, and translation. As chloroplast RNA
processing, stability, and translation are closely coupled, a defect in
any of these processes could affect the others.
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ESTABLISHING IN VITRO SYSTEMS FOR SPECIFIC STEPS OF CHLOROPLAST
GENE EXPRESSION |
Major advances in our understanding of chloroplast gene
expression, particularly the enzymatic machinery involved in
chloroplast 3' end processing, were achieved through the development of
in vitro systems with chloroplast extracts (13). As it turns out, most
chloroplast 3' ends are produced by RNA processing rather than by
transcription termination. In most cases, an endonucleolytic cleavage
downstream of the mature 3' end is followed by 3'-exonucleolytic resection to a stem-loop at the 3' end. These processing steps are
catalyzed by a chloroplast degradosome similar to that of Escherichia coli, consisting of several nucleus-encoded
RNA-binding proteins, including exo- and endonucleases
(9). As in bacteria, polyadenylation appears to
play an important role in chloroplast RNA turnover (9). Evidence based
on the existence of low abundant polyadenylated chloroplast mRNA
fragments is compatible with a model in which the RNAs are
endonucleolytically cut and extended with a short polyA tail. These
tails may provide a foothold for the degradosome.
Another breakthrough was the establishment of an in vitro translation
system from tobacco chloroplasts (10). This system promotes accurate
initiation of translation from several chloroplast RNAs and revealed
important cis-acting elements within the chloroplast 5'-untranslated
regions (UTRs). The in vitro translation system also provided new
insights on how polypeptides of the photosynthetic apparatus are
targeted and inserted into the thylakoid membrane. It is generally
assumed that this process occurs cotranslationally based on run-on
translations with thylakoid-bound ribosomes and detection of
translation intermediates in the membrane (7). Using the in vitro
translation system, it was possible to produce stable ribosome nascent
chain complexes and to show that one polypeptide of the chloroplast
signal reduction particle (SRP) particle, SRP54, interacts with
the nascent polypeptide chain and thus represents a soluble component
of the targeting machinery (14). Because of their prokaryotic origin,
it is not surprising that several other homologs of E. coli
besides SRP54 are involved in membrane protein targeting and insertion,
including the chloroplast SecA, SecB, and SecY proteins. Disruption of
the SecY gene in maize leads not only to a severe reduction
of thylakoid membranes, but also to a deficiency in chloroplast
translation, thus revealing a link between thylakoid membrane
biogenesis and chloroplast translation (16).
A characteristic feature of chloroplast protein synthesis is its strong
stimulation by light. A major advance occurred when a correlation was
shown between the light-stimulated binding of a multiprotein complex to
the 5'-UTR of the chloroplast psbA mRNA and its translation
(6). Binding of this complex to the 5'-UTR was proposed to be
controlled by the redox potential and ATP levels that are modulated by
photosynthetic activity (5). The characterization of this complex
revealed that it contains a 47-kD protein that is homologous to
polyA-binding proteins and a 60-kD protein that appears to be a protein
disulfide isomerase, usually found in the endoplasmic reticulum (5). It
thus appears that several cytoplasmic proteins have been recruited by
the chloroplast for novel regulatory functions in plastid gene expression.
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COORDINATE EXPRESSION OF CHLOROPLAST PROTEINS |
All photosynthetic complexes consist of several subunits, the
accumulation of which needs to be coordinated in a stoichiometric fashion. This appears to be achieved in two ways. The first involves proteolytic degradation of most of the unassembled subunits. The proteases required for this process are still largely unknown, although
recent evidence indicates that the ATP-dependent ClpP protease is
partly involved (20). The second mechanism was elegantly demonstrated
with the cytochrome b6f complex of Chlamydomonas (20). In this process, referred to as control by epistasy of synthesis, translation of the cytochrome f subunit of the cytochrome
b6f complex is strongly attenuated when other subunits from
the same complex are absent. This control is mediated by a direct or
indirect interaction between the 5'-UTR of the cytochrome f
mRNA and the C-terminal domain of the unassembled cytochrome
f subunit. Whether this process is also valid for other
chloroplast genes in Chlamydomonas and higher plants remains
to be determined.
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UNUSUAL FEATURES OF CHLOROPLAST POSTTRANSCRIPTIONAL
PROCESSES |
The chloroplast psaA gene of Chlamydomonas
consists of three exons flanked by group II intron sequences that are
widely separated on the plastid genome and transcribed independently.
The assembly of the mature psaA mRNA depends on two
trans-splicing reactions that require several trans-acting factors (7).
Factors involved in this process were recently characterized. One of
them resembles -uridine synthases, although this enzyme activity is
not required for trans-splicing (15). Another trans-acting factor
required for psaA trans-splicing is an RNA (8). This RNA,
called tscA RNA, was identified as part of the group II
psaA intron 1 structure, a first example of a tri-partite
intron. This finding has important evolutionary implications given the
fact that group II introns with their cis-acting catalytic domains are
considered to be the precursors of nuclear introns with their
trans-acting snRNPs. The tripartite psaA group II intron may
thus represent an intermediate stage in this evolutionary process. The
tscA RNA has recently been found to be part of a protein
complex that may represent a chloroplast counterpart of snRNPs (C. Rivier, unpublished data). It will be particularly interesting to
determine whether any evolutionary relationship is apparent between the
proteins of this complex and those of eukaryotic snRNPs. These studies
should provide new insights into the evolution of gene expression systems.
RNA editing, the mechanism of posttranscriptional nucleotide
modification, is one of the most striking chloroplast oddities and also
occurs in plant mitochondria. Chloroplast RNA editing involves mostly
cytidine-to-uridine conversions with the reverse change occurring only
in few cases (3). It thus adds a novel posttranscriptional step in
chloroplast gene expression besides RNA 5'- and 3'- end processing,
cleavage of polycistronic into monocistroinic mRNAs, and group I and
group II splicing. Only 25 sites in the entire tobacco plastid genome
are edited (11). How the editing machinery selectively modifies these
sites remains an intriguing question, although recent studies indicate
that both mRNA sequences flanking the editing site and specific
trans-acting factors play an important role (3). The existence of
chloroplast editing requires caution in the evaluation of chloroplast
DNA sequence data. In particular, plastid open reading frames may be
missed because of the editing of cryptic ACG initiation codons to AUG.
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PERSPECTIVES |
Although the nucleus influences the expression of the chloroplast
genome through a large set of factors, the chloroplast can also
influence nuclear gene activity. Plants devoid of carotenoids photobleach when exposed to light. This condition leads to the selective inhibition of transcription of a selected set of nuclear genes including the genes of the light-harvesting chlorophyll a/b proteins (19). The chloroplast signal involved in this
response has remained enigmatic for many years. However, recent studies with C. reinhardtii indicate that intermediates in
the porphyrin pathway such as magnesium protochlorophyllide methyl
ester play a crucial role in this response (12). An important task for
the future is to identify the targets of these porphyrin intermediates.
Mitochondria interact in many ways with the chloroplast through
metabolic pathways. Recent work strongly suggests that genetic interactions also exist between these two organelles. Genetic data
indicate that informational suppressors of chloroplast non-sense mutations suppress mitochondrial mutations, suggesting exchange of
tRNAs between these two organelles (2). A molecular analysis of this
intriguing process should prove particularly rewarding.
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FOOTNOTES |
*
E-mail Jean-David.Rochaix{at}molbio.unige.ch; fax
41-22-702-6868.
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© 2001 American Society of Plant Physiologists
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