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Post‐transcriptional mechanisms control catalase synthesis during its light‐induced turnover in rye leaves through the availability of the hemin cofactor and reversible changes of the translation efficiency of mRNA
Author(s) -
Schmidt Matthias,
Dehne Silvia,
Feierabend Jürgen
Publication year - 2002
Publication title -
the plant journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.058
H-Index - 269
eISSN - 1365-313X
pISSN - 0960-7412
DOI - 10.1046/j.1365-313x.2002.01382.x
Subject(s) - hemin , cofactor , catalase , translation (biology) , chemistry , messenger rna , heme , enzyme , biochemistry , microbiology and biotechnology , biology , gene
Summary The enzyme catalase is light‐sensitive. In leaves, losses caused by photoinactivation are replaced by new enzyme and the rate of de novo synthesis must be rapidly and flexibly attuned to fluctuating light conditions. In mature rye leaves, post‐transcriptional mechanisms were shown to control the rate of catalase synthesis. The amount of the leaf catalase (CAT‐1) transcript did not increase with light intensity, but was even higher after dark exposure of light‐grown leaves. Initiation was apparently not limiting translation in the dark, as the association of the Cat1 mRNA with polysomes did not change notably under different light conditions. By analysing the translation of catalase polypeptides in cell‐free systems with poly(A)+ RNA from leaves or with mRNA transcribed from a Cat1 ‐containing cDNA clone, two mechanisms of post‐transcriptional control were identified. First, translation of catalase depended on the presence of hemin. In leaves, the availability of hemin may signal the extent of catalase degradation as the hemin of the inactivated enzyme is recycled. Second, the translation efficiency of the Cat1 transcripts was reversibly modulated in a dose‐dependent manner by the light intensity to which leaves were exposed, prior to extraction. The Cat1 mRNA from light‐exposed leaves was translated much more efficiently than mRNA from dark‐exposed leaves. The increase of its translation activity in vivo was not blocked by cordycepin but was suppressed by methylation inhibitors, indicating a reversible modification of pre‐existing mRNA by methylation. Translation of in vitro synthesized Cat1 mRNA required a methylated cap (m7GpppG), but was virtually below detection when it contained an unmethylated cap (GpppG).