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Plant Physiology 147:443-445 (2008) © 2008 American Society of Plant Biologists Plastoglobule Proteome
University of Illinois
Originally identified in early electron microscopic studies as "osmiophilic globuli" in plastids (Greenwood et al., 1963
Present in all plastid types, plastoglobuli are lipoprotein particles, the shape and size of which change during development, plastid differentiation, and under stress conditions (for review, see Bréhélin et al., 2007 -tocopherol, and lipids, and those in chromoplasts accumulate high levels of carotenoids (Deruere et al., 1994
A recent microscopy study demonstrated that plastoglobules arise from a "blistering" of the stroma-side leaflet of the thylakoid membrane, predominantly along highly curved margins (Austin et al., 2006
Clustering of large groups of connected plastoglobules is also observed, particularly during senescence and under stress conditions. The trigger for the formation of the clusters, or indeed how plastoglobules arise, is unknown. One hint comes from a study in plants overexpressing fibrillin (plastoglobulin), a plastoglobule structural protein. An increase in clusters was observed in these plants (Rey et al., 2000
Yield is a perennial problem for anyone studying proteins, and when identification of the proteins is the goal, this can be an even greater problem due to the potential loss of underrepresented proteins. Ytterberg et al. (2006) Although some of the plastoglobule-associated proteins had been previously identified in thylakoid studies, most were unique to this structure and had not been found in either the stromal or envelope proteome. Considering the thylakoid origin of plastoglobules, the overlap with some thylakoid proteins is not unexpected. Also not unusual was the finding that only one out of 32 proteins had a predicted transmembrane domain since the plastoglobule lipid monolayer could not support such transmembrane domains. The plastoglobule proteome was also compared with proteins isolated from the prolamellar bodies from rice (Orzya sativa) etioplasts and little-to-no overlap was found between the two, demonstrating that the plastoglobule is distinct from prolamellar bodies.
The authors tentatively assigned the proteins to four functional classes: fibrillins (plastoglobulins; plastoglobule protein coat), lipid metabolism or fatty acid mobilization, quinone synthesis or regulation, and those with no obvious function. Fibrillins, found in almost all oxygenic photosynthetic organisms, were the most prominent proteins in the plastoglobule proteome. There are 11 or more fibrillin proteins in land plants associated with both plastoglobules and thylakoid membranes. They have one or more hydrophobic regions and are proposed to stud the surface of the plastoglobule to prevent them from coalescing (Deruere et al., 1994
Of the four enzymes possibly involved in lipid and hormone metabolism, one was identified as allene oxide synthase, the first enzyme of the lipoxygenase pathway leading to the formation of jasmonic acid. The function of the remaining three enzymes is unknown. Tocopherol cyclase, VTE1, orthologous to maize (Zea mays) SUCROSE EXPORT DEFECTIVE, was found in the plastoglobule proteome from both chloroplasts (Vidi et al., 2006
Previous studies have found that plastoquinones are a large component of plastoglobules and, to a lesser extent, so are phylloquinone (vitamin K1) and
One of the "other proteins" identified in the plastoglobules proteome is At1g09340, an ortholog to the Chlamydomonas reinhardtii ribosomal associate protein RAP38 (Ytterberg et al., 2006
Another of the "other proteins," At2g34460 with a predicted NAD-dependent epimerase/dehydrase domain, is a member of the Group II subfamily of Tic62 (Balsera et al., 2007
Together, the studies by Ytterberg et al. (2006)
www.plantphysiol.org/cgi/doi/10.1104/pp.104.900261
Austin JR II, Frost E, Vidi P, Kessler F, Staehelin LA (2006) Plastoglobules are lipoprotein subcompartments of the chloroplast that are permanently coupled to thylakoid membranes and contain biosynthetic enzymes. Plant Cell 18: 1693–1703 Bailey JL, Whyborn AG (1963) The osmophilic globules of chloroplasts. II. Globules of the spinach-beet chloroplast. Biochim Biophys Acta 78: 163–174 Balsera M, Stengel A, Soll J, Bolter B (2007) Tic62: a protein family from metabolism to protein translocation. BMC Evol Biol 7: 43[CrossRef][Medline] Bréhélin C, Kessler F, van Wijk KJ (2007) Plastoglobules: versatile lipoprotein particles in plastids. Trends Plant Sci 12: 260–266[CrossRef][ISI][Medline] Deruere J, Romer S, d'Harlingue A, Backhaus RA, Kuntz M, Camara B (1994) Fibril assembly and carotenoid overaccumulation in chromoplasts: a model for supramolecular lipoprotein structures. Plant Cell 6: 119–133[Abstract] Greenwood AD, Leech RM, Williams JP (1963) The osmiophilic globules of chloroplasts. I. Osmiophilic globules as a normal component of chloroplasts and their isolation and composition in Vicia faba L. Biochim Biophys Acta 78: 148–162 Hassidim M, Yakir E, Fradkin D, Hilman D, Kron I, Keren N, Harir Y, Yerushalmi S, Green RM (2007) Mutations in CHLOROPLAST RNA BINDING provide evidence for the involvement of the chloroplast in the regulation of the circadian clock in Arabidopsis. Plant J 51: 551–562[CrossRef][ISI][Medline] Hopkins M, Taylor C, Liu Z, Ma F, McNamara L, Wang T, Thompson JE (2007) Regulation and execution of molecular disassembly and catabolism during senescence. New Phytol 175: 201–214[CrossRef][ISI][Medline] Maeda H, DellaPenna D (2007) Tocopherol functions in photosynthetic organisms. Curr Opin Plant Biol 10: 260–265[CrossRef][ISI][Medline] Rey P, Gillet B, Romer S, Eymery F, Massimino J, Peltier G, Kuntz M (2000) Over-expression of a pepper plastid lipid-associated protein in tobacco leads to changes in plastid ultrastructure and plant development upon stress. Plant J 21: 483–494[CrossRef][ISI][Medline] Simkin AJ, Gaffé J, Alcaraz J, Carde J, Bramley PM, Fraser PD, Kuntz M (2007) Fibrillin influence on plastid ultrastructure and pigment content in tomato fruit. Phytochemistry 68: 1545–1556[CrossRef][ISI][Medline] Stengel A, Benz P, Balsera M, Soll J, Bolter B (2008) TIC62 redox-regulated translocon composition and dynamics. J Biol Chem 283: 6656–6667 Vidi P, Kanwischer M, Baginsky S, Austin JR, Csucs G, Dormann P, Kessler F, Brehelin C (2006) Tocopherol cyclase (VTE1) localization and vitamin E accumulation in chloroplast plastoglobule lipoprotein particles. J Biol Chem 281: 11225–11234 Vidi P, Kessler F, Brehelin C (2007) Plastoglobules: a new address for targeting recombinant proteins in the chloroplast. BMC Biotechnol 7: 4[CrossRef][Medline] Yamaguchi K, Beligni MV, Prieto S, Haynes PA, McDonald WH, Yates JR III, Mayfield SP (2003) Proteomic characterization of the Chlamydomonas reinhardtii chloroplast ribosome: identification of proteins unique to the 70 S ribosome. J Biol Chem 278: 33774–33785 Ytterberg AJ, Peltier J, van Wijk KJ (2006) Protein profiling of plastoglobules in chloroplasts and chromoplasts. A surprising site for differential accumulation of metabolic enzymes. Plant Physiol 140: 984–997
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