The light-harvesting chlorophyll a/b protein (LHCP) is an ∼25,000-D thylakoid membrane protein. LHCP is synthesized in the cytosol as a precursor and must translocate across the chloroplast envelope before becoming integrally associated with the thylakoid bilayer. Previous studies demonstrated that imported LHCP traverses the chloroplast stroma as a soluble intermediate before thylakoid insertion. Here, examination of this intermediate revealed that it is a stable, discrete ∼120,000-D species and thus either an LHCP oligomer or a complex with another compoInent. In vitro-synthesized LHCP can be converted to a similar form by incubation with a stromal extract. The stromal component responsible for this conversion is proteinaceous as evidenced by its inactivation by heat, protease, and NEM. Furthermore, the conversion activity coelutes from a gel filtration column with a stromal protein factor(s) previously shown to be necessary for LHCP integration into isolated thylakoids. Conversion of LHCP to the 120-kD form prevents aggregation and maintains its competence for thylakoid insertion. However, conversion to this form is apparently not sufficient for membrane insertion because the isolated 120-kD LHCP still requires stroma to complete the integration process. This suggests a need for at least one more stroma-mediated reaction. Our resuits explain how a hydrophobic thylakoid protein remains soluble as it traverses the aqueous stroma. Moreover, they describe in part the function of the stromal requirement for insertion into the thylakoid membrane.
CITATION STYLE
Payan, L. A., & Cline, K. (1991). A stromal protein factor maintains the solubility and insertion competence of an imported thylakoid membrane protein. Journal of Cell Biology, 112(4), 603–613. https://doi.org/10.1083/jcb.112.4.603
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