Preferential Loss of Chloroplast Proteins in Nitrogen Deficient Euglena
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概要
- 論文の詳細を見る
Two dimensional gel electrophoresis was used to follow changes in the relative amounts of over 500 cellular proteins during nitrogen deficiency and in light limited nitrogen sufficient stationary phase Euglena cultures. Of 53 polypeptides whose relative amount decreased in nitrogen deficient cells, 37 were chloroplast proteins and only 11 were mitochondrial proteins. This cor-responds to a decrease in the relative amounts of 77% of the chloroplast proteins and 31% of the mitochondrial proteins found on the two dimensional gel map. Over a similar time period, the relative amounts of only 1 chloroplast and 1 mitochondrial protein decreased in light limited nitrogen sufficient stationary phase cultures. Many of the chloroplast proteins whose level declined during nitrogen deficiency were proteins whose light induced accumulation is independent of chlorophyll synthesis, photosynthetic CO_2 fixation and the developmental status of the chloroplast. Taken together, these results indicate that nitrogen deficiency triggers a preferential loss of chloro-plast proteins which can not simply be explained through a dependence of protein stability on chlorophyll levels or the developmental status of the chloroplast.
- 日本植物生理学会の論文
著者
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Rosen Barry
School Of Biological Sciences University Of Nebraska:(present)department Of Biology University Of Ta
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Coleman L.
School Of Biological Sciences University Of Nebraska:(present)the Mycology Center Washington Univers
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Schwartzbach S
Univ. Nebraska Nebraska Usa
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Schwartzbach Steven
School of Biological Sciences, University of Nebraska
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Schwartzbach Steven
School Of Biological Sciences University Of Nebraska
関連論文
- Preferential Loss of Chloroplast Proteins in Nitrogen Deficient Euglena
- Environmental Control of Carbohydrate and Lipid Synthesis in Euglena
- A Soluble Chloroplast Protease Processes the Euglena Polyprotein Precursor to the Light Harvesting Chlorophyll a/b Binding Protein of Photosystem II
- Immunocytochemical Localization of RuBisCO in the Compartmentalized Osmiophilic Body in Dark-Grown Cells of Euglena gracilis Z^1