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Temperature‐sensitive Arabidopsis mutant defective in 1‐deoxy‐ d ‐xylulose 5‐phosphate synthase within the plastid non‐mevalonate pathway of isoprenoid biosynthesis
Author(s) -
Araki Naohiro,
Kusumi Kensuke,
Masamoto Kazumori,
Niwa Yasuo,
Iba Koh
Publication year - 2000
Publication title -
physiologia plantarum
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.351
H-Index - 146
eISSN - 1399-3054
pISSN - 0031-9317
DOI - 10.1034/j.1399-3054.2000.108001019.x
Subject(s) - mutant , plastid , biology , chloroplast , mevalonate pathway , atp synthase , biochemistry , biosynthesis , gene , arabidopsis
The temperature‐sensitive mutant of Arabidopsis , chs5 , developed chlorotic leaves at restrictive temperatures (15°C), but almost normal green leaves at permissive temperatures (22°C). At the restrictive temperature, the chs5 mutation blocked the accumulation of chlorophylls and carotenoids. A temperature‐shift analysis revealed that the manifestation of the chlorotic phenotype occurred in young leaf tissues, but did not in mature leaf tissues. Genetic and sequence analysis demonstrated that the chs5 mutation was caused by a single‐base change in the coding region of a recently identified CLA1 gene. The CLA1 gene exhibited a high sequence similarity to the genes encoding 1‐deoxy‐ d ‐xylulose 5‐phosphate synthase (DXS) localized to the non‐mevalonate pathway, which was recently discovered in bacteria and higher plants. In addition, the application of 1‐deoxy‐ d ‐xylulose, the free sugar of 1‐deoxy‐ d ‐xylulose 5‐phosphate, rescues the defect in the chs5 mutant. These results indicated that the chlorotic phenotype of the chs5 mutant was caused by a defect in DXS activity and that DXS functions preferentially at an early stage of leaf cell development. A transiently expressed green fluorescent protein fused with the CLA1 transit peptide was localized within the chloroplasts in the green cultured cells of tobacco, which suggests that the putative localization of the non‐mevalonate pathway is in plastids.

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