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Plastid ribosomal protein S5 is involved in photosynthesis, plant development, and cold stress tolerance in Arabidopsis

TLDR
Plastid RPS5 affects proteins involved in photosynthesis and translation machinery and mediates cold stress tolerance in Arabidopsis and regulates photosynthetic activity andTranslation machinery inArabidopsis.
Abstract
Plastid ribosomal proteins are essential components of protein synthesis machinery and have diverse roles in plant growth and development. Mutations in plastid ribosomal proteins lead to a range of developmental phenotypes in plants. However, how they regulate these processes is not fully understood, and the functions of some individual plastid ribosomal proteins remain unknown. To identify genes responsible for chloroplast development, we isolated and characterized a mutant that exhibited pale yellow inner leaves with a reduced growth rate in Arabidopsis. The mutant (rps5) contained a missense mutation of plastid ribosomal protein S5 (RPS5), which caused a dramatically reduced abundance of chloroplast 16S rRNA and seriously impaired 16S rRNA processing to affect ribosome function and plastid translation. Comparative proteomic analysis revealed that the rps5 mutation suppressed the expression of a large number of core components involved in photosystems I and II as well as many plastid ribosomal proteins. Unexpectedly, a number of proteins associated with cold stress responses were greatly decreased in rps5, and overexpression of the plastid RPS5 improved plant cold stress tolerance. Our results indicate that RPS5 is an important constituent of the plastid 30S subunit and affects proteins involved in photosynthesis and cold stress responses to mediate plant growth and development.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Clp Protease and OR Directly Control the Proteostasis of Phytoene Synthase, the Crucial Enzyme for Carotenoid Biosynthesis in Arabidopsis

TL;DR: It is reported that PSY is a substrate of the Clp protease, and the ORANGE (OR) protein, a major post-translational regulator of PSY with holdase chaperone activity, enhances PSY protein stability and increases the enzymatically active proportion of PSy in clpc1, counterbalancing Clp-mediated proteolysis in maintaining PSYprotein homeostasis.
Journal ArticleDOI

Effects of Chilling on the Structure, Function and Development of Chloroplasts.

TL;DR: The response of chloroplasts to low temperatures is reviewed and focus on photosynthesis, redox regulation, lipid homeostasis, and chloroplast development is focused on to elucidate the processes involved in plant responses and adaptation to chilling stress.
Journal ArticleDOI

Phosphorylation of WHIRLY1 by CIPK14 Shifts Its Localization and Dual Functions in Arabidopsis.

TL;DR: It is reported that the Calcineurin B-Like-Interacting Protein Kinase14 (CIPK14) interacts with and phosphorylates WHY1 in Arabidopsis and regulates thephosphorylation and organellar distributions of WHY1, suggesting that CIPK 14 may function as a cellular switch between leaf senescence and plastid development for coordinating the intercellular signaling inArabidopsis.
Journal ArticleDOI

Organellar Gene Expression and Acclimation of Plants to Environmental Stress

TL;DR: Recent findings suggest that perturbations of OGE homeostasis regularly result in the activation of acclimation and tolerance responses, presumably via retrograde signaling.
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The DEAD-box RNA Helicase RH50 Is a 23S-4.5S rRNA Maturation Factor that Functionally Overlaps with the Plastid Signaling Factor GUN1.

TL;DR: It is concluded that RH50 is a plastid rRNA maturation factor, supported by the finding that loss of RH50 renders chloroplast protein synthesis sensitive to erythromycin and exposure to cold.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

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TL;DR: This protocol provides a guide to interpreting the output of structure prediction servers in general and one such tool in particular, the protein homology/analogy recognition engine (Phyre), which can reliably detect up to twice as many remote homologies as standard sequence-profile searching.
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Locating proteins in the cell using TargetP, SignalP and related tools

TL;DR: The properties of three well-known N-terminal sequence motifs directing proteins to the secretory pathway, mitochondria and chloroplasts are described and a brief history of methods to predict subcellular localization based on these sorting signals and other sequence properties are sketched.
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Structure of the 30S ribosomal subunit.

TL;DR: The crystal structure of the 30S subunit from Thermus thermophilus, refined to 3 Å resolution, is reported, which will facilitate the interpretation in molecular terms of lower resolution structural data on several functional states of the ribosome from electron microscopy and crystallography.
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Rapid phosphatidic acid accumulation in response to low temperature stress in Arabidopsis is generated through diacylglycerol kinase

TL;DR: Evidence is provided that the rapid 32P-PtdOH response was primarily generated through DAG kinase (DGK), and a tentative model illustrating direct cold effects on phospholipid metabolism is presented.
Journal ArticleDOI

Crystal structure of the ribosome at 5.5 A resolution

TL;DR: The crystal structure of the complete Thermus thermophilus 70S ribosome containing bound messenger RNA and transfer RNAs (tRNAs) at 5.5 angstrom resolution is described, suggesting coupling of the 20 to 50 angstrom movements associated with tRNA translocation with intersubunit movement.
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