
Occurrence of two plastidic ATP/ADP transporters in Arabidopsis thaliana L
Author(s) -
Möhlmann Torsten,
Tjaden Joachim,
Schwöppe Christian,
Winkler Herbert H.,
Kampfenkel Karlheinz,
Neuhaus H. Ekkehard
Publication year - 1998
Publication title -
european journal of biochemistry
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1432-1033
pISSN - 0014-2956
DOI - 10.1046/j.1432-1327.1998.2520353.x
Subject(s) - arabidopsis thaliana , transporter , arabidopsis , biology , computational biology , genetics , gene , mutant
Recently, we sequenced a cDNA clone from Arabidopsis thaliana L. encoding an ATP/ADP transporter protein (AATP1) located in the plastid envelope membrane. The deduced amino acid sequence of AATP1 exhibits a high degree of similarity (> 66 %) to the ATP/ADP transporter from the obligate intracellular gram‐negative bacterium Rickettsia prowazekii . Here we report a second plastidic ATP/ADP carrier from A. thaliana (AATP2). As deduced from the amino acid sequence, AATP2 exhibits 77.6 % identity to AATP1 and 36 % to the rickettsial protein. Hydropathy analysis indicates that all three translocators are highly hydrophobic membrane proteins, which exhibit marked similarities and differences. The AATP1 translocator lacks the sixth transmembrane domain that is present in AATP2 and the bacterial transporter in R. prowazekii . In contrast to AATP1 and the bacterial transport protein, only AATP2 exhibits a truncated C‐terminal end. To compare the general biochemical properties of AATP2 with the known transport properties of AATP1 we cloned the entire AATP2 cDNA into plasmid pJT118, leading to the presence of an additional N‐terminal histidine tag of 10 amino acids. For heterologous expression of His 10 ‐AATP2 we chose the Escherichia coli strain C43, which was reported recently to allow overproduction of eucaryotic membrane transport proteins. After transformation and subsequent induction by isopropylthio‐2‐ D ‐galactopyranoside intact E. coli cells harbouring plasmid pJT118 showed import of radioactively labelled ATP and ADP. As deduced from a Lineweaver‐Burk analysis His 10 ‐AATP2 exhibited apparent K m values for ATP and ADP of 22 μM and 20 μM, respectively. Import of ADP into His 10 ‐AATP2−expressing E. coli cells occurred at a rate of 24 nmol mg protein −1 h −1 , which was about threefold faster than import of ATP. These biochemical characteristics are similar to transport properties of the heterologously expressed His 10 ‐AATP1 protein.