C
Charlotta Rudhe
Researcher at Stockholm University
Publications - 13
Citations - 876
Charlotta Rudhe is an academic researcher from Stockholm University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Chloroplast & Signal peptide. The author has an hindex of 11, co-authored 13 publications receiving 853 citations. Previous affiliations of Charlotta Rudhe include University of Western Australia.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Evidence for a protein transported through the secretory pathway en route to the higher plant chloroplast.
Arsenio Villarejo,Stefan Burén,Susanne Larsson,Annabelle Déjardin,Annabelle Déjardin,Magnus Monné,Charlotta Rudhe,Jan Karlsson,Stefan Jansson,Patrice Lerouge,Norbert Rolland,Gunnar von Heijne,Markus Grebe,László Bakó,László Bakó,Göran Samuelsson +15 more
TL;DR: It is shown that a chloroplast-located protein in higher plants takes an alternative route through the secretory pathway, and becomes N-glycosylated before entering the chlorop last.
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A novel in vitro system for simultaneous import of precursor proteins into mitochondria and chloroplasts
TL;DR: The results show that the novel dual import system is superior to the single import system as it abolishes mistargeting of chloroplast precursors into pea mitochondria observed in a single organelle import system.
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Characterization of the targeting signal of dual-targeted pea glutathione reductase
TL;DR: Results indicate that some residues in the signal for dual localisation of GR play a role in both mitochondrial and chloroplastic import, and thus the signal is overlapping.
Journal ArticleDOI
Arabidopsis thaliana ferrochelatase-I and -II are not imported into Arabidopsis mitochondria
TL;DR: Pea mitochondria are not a suitable system to either study dual targeting, or to distinguish between isozymes present in mitochondria and chloroplasts, as only two ferrochelatase genes are present in the completed Arabidopsis genome.
Journal ArticleDOI
Environmental stresses inhibit and stimulate different protein import pathways in plant mitochondria
Nicolas L. Taylor,Charlotta Rudhe,Joanne M Hulett,Trevor Lithgow,Elzbieta Glaser,David A. Day,A. Harvey Millar,James Whelan +7 more
TL;DR: Environmental stresses differentially affect import of precursor proteins in a complicated manner dependent on the import pathway utilised, including drought, chilling or herbicide treatment.