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Cited 34 time in webofscience Cited 35 time in scopus
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AtObgC, a plant ortholog of bacterial Obg, is a chloroplast-targeting GTPase essential for early embryogenesis

Authors
Bang, Woo YoungHata, AkiraJeong, In SilUmeda, TetsuyaMasuda, TakayukiChen, JiYoko, IshizakiSuwastika, I. NengahKim, Dae WonIm, Chak HanLee, Byung HyunLee, YunoLee, Keun WooShiina, TakashiBahk, Jeong Dong
Issue Date
Nov-2009
Publisher
SPRINGER
Keywords
Chloroplast; Embryogenesis; GTPase; Obg; Ribosome
Citation
PLANT MOLECULAR BIOLOGY, v.71, no.4-5, pp 379 - 390
Pages
12
Indexed
SCIE
SCOPUS
Journal Title
PLANT MOLECULAR BIOLOGY
Volume
71
Number
4-5
Start Page
379
End Page
390
URI
https://scholarworks.gnu.ac.kr/handle/sw.gnu/26119
DOI
10.1007/s11103-009-9529-3
ISSN
0167-4412
1573-5028
Abstract
Obg is a ribosome-associated GTPase essential for bacterial viability and is conserved in most organisms, from bacteria to eukaryotes. Obg is also expressed in plants, which predicts an important role for this molecule in plant viability; however, the functions of the plant Obg homologs have not been reported. Here, we first identified Arabidopsis AtObgC as a plant chloroplast-targeting Obg and elucidated its molecular biological and physiological properties. AtObgC encodes a plant-specific Obg GTPase that contains an N-terminal region for chloroplast targeting and has intrinsic GTP hydrolysis activity. A targeting assay using a few AtObgC N-terminal truncation mutants revealed that AtObgC localizes to chloroplasts and its transit peptide consists of more than 50 amino acid residues. Interestingly, GFP-fused full-length AtObgC exhibited a punctate staining pattern in chloroplasts of Arabidopsis protoplasts, which suggests a dimerization or multimerization of AtObgC. Moreover, its Obg fold was indispensable for the generation of the punctate staining pattern, and thus, was supposed to be important for such oligomerization of AtObgC by mediating the protein-protein interaction. In addition, the T-DNA insertion AtObgC null mutant exhibited an embryonic lethal phenotype that disturbed the early stage of embryogenesis. Altogether, our results provide a significant implication that AtObgC as a chloroplast targeting GTPase plays an important role at the early embryogenesis by exerting its function in chloroplast protein synthesis.
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