ChrA is a carotenoid-binding protein in chromoplasts of Capsicum annuum

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Abstract

Chromoplasts of Capsicum annuum var Albino contain a carotenoid-protein complex, which migrates as a brilliant orange band in gels under conditions of nondenaturing electrophoresis. In a second, denaturing separation, the complex resolves into a principal protein (ChrA) of 58 kilodaltons and several minor proteins of 20 to 55 kilodaltons, which may be adventitiously associated. Analysis of Western blots of both one- and two-dimensional gels showed that the principal protein component of the carotenoid complex is ChrA, a protein previously shown to be located specifically in chromoplast membranes. The identification of ChrA as a carotenoid-binding protein appears to be the first instance of a nonthylakoid, carotenoid-binding protein in higher plants.

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Cervantes-Cervantes, M., Hadjeb, N., Newman, L. A., & Price, C. A. (1990). ChrA is a carotenoid-binding protein in chromoplasts of Capsicum annuum. Plant Physiology, 92(4), 1241–1243. https://doi.org/10.1104/pp.92.4.1241

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