Land plant genomes encode four functional ribosomal peptide chain release factors (Prf) of eubacterial origin, two (PrfA and PrfB homologs) for each endosymbiotic organelle. Formerly, we have shown that the Arabidopsis thaliana chloroplastlocalized PrfB homolog, PrfB1, is required not only for termination of translation but also for stabilization of UGA stop codon-containing chloroplast transcripts. A previously undiscovered PrfB-like protein, PrfB3, is localized to the chloroplast stroma in a petB RNA-containing complex and found only in vascular plants. Highly conserved positions of introns unequivocally indicate that PrfB3 arose from a duplication of PrfB1. Notably, PrfB3 is lacking the two most important tripeptide motifs characteristic for all eubacterial and organellar PrfB homologs described so far: the stop codon recognition motif SPF and the catalytic center GGQ for peptidyl-tRNA hydrolysis. Complementation studies, as well as functional and molecular analyses of two allelic mutations in Arabidopsis, both of which lead to a specific deficiency of the cytochrome b6f complex, revealed that PrfB3 is essentially required for photoautotrophic growth. Plastid transcript, polysome, and translation analyses indicate that PrfB3 has been recruited in vascular plants for light-and stress-dependent regulation of stability of 3' processed petB transcripts to adjust cytochrome b6 levels. © 2011 American Society of Plant Biologists. All rights reserved.
CITATION STYLE
Stoppel, R., Lezhneva, L., Schwenkert, S., Torabi, S., Felder, S., Meierhoff, K., … Meurer, J. (2011). Recruitment of a ribosomal release factor for light-and stress-dependent regulation of petB transcript stability in Arabidopsis chloroplasts. Plant Cell, 23(7), 2680–2695. https://doi.org/10.1105/tpc.111.085324
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