Plant Cell Hybrigenics The Protein Interactions Experts
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The Plant Cell, Vol. 13, 2053-2061, September 2001, Copyright © 2001,
American Society of Plant Biologists

Leaf-Specific Upregulation of Chloroplast Translocon Genes by a CCT Motif–Containing Protein, CIA 2

Chih-Wen Sun, Lih-Jen Chen, Li-Chung Lin and Hsou-min Li1

Institute of Molecular Biology, Academia Sinica, Taipei 11529, Taiwan

1 To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail mbhmli{at}ccvax.sinica.edu.tw; fax 886-2-2782-6085

Chloroplasts are a major destination of protein traffic within leaf cells. Protein import into chloroplasts is mediated by a set of translocon complexes at the chloroplast envelope. Current data indicate that the expression of translocon genes is regulated in a tissue-specific manner, possibly to accommodate the higher import demand of chloroplasts in leaves and the lower demand of plastids in other tissues. We have designed a transgene-based positive screen to isolate mutants disrupted in protein import into plastids. The first locus we isolated, CIA2, encodes a protein containing a motif conserved within the CCT family of transcription factors. Biochemical analysis indicates that CIA2 is responsible for specific upregulation of the translocon genes atToc33 and atToc75 in leaves. Identification of CIA2 provides new insights into the tissue-specific regulation of translocon gene expression.




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Copyright © 2001 by the American Society of Plant Biologists