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. 1989 Jul 1;182(3):539-46.
doi: 10.1111/j.1432-1033.1989.tb14861.x.

The nuclear-coded chloroplast 22-kDa heat-shock protein of Chlamydomonas. Evidence for translocation into the organelle without a processing step

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The nuclear-coded chloroplast 22-kDa heat-shock protein of Chlamydomonas. Evidence for translocation into the organelle without a processing step

B Grimm et al. Eur J Biochem. .
Free article

Abstract

A cDNA clone, pCHS62, was isolated using poly(A)-rich RNA from heat-shocked Chlamydomonas reinhardtii cells. The clone has a length of 1.1 kb and codes for the complete heat-shock protein which was reported to be associated with the grana region of the thylakoid membranes and ascribes protection against photoinhibition during heat-shock. An expression vector prepared in the pUC19 plasmid was used to obtain a fusion protein against which rabbit polyclonal antibodies have been raised. The antibodies react specifically with the heat-shock protein of 22 kDa synthesized in vivo during heat-shock, which is localized in the grana thylakoids, with the in vitro translated product using poly(A)-rich RNA from heat-treated cells as well as with the hybrid release translation product of the pCHS62 clone. The clone was sequenced. It contains a 5' region consisting of 85 nucleotides, an open reading frame of 471 nucleotides and a non-coding 3' region of 600 nucleotides. Northern hybridization indicates a length of 1.7 kb for the messenger RNA of heat-shock protein 22. Analysis of similarity between the derived amino acid sequence of this protein and other heat-shock proteins demonstrates that this protein belongs to the small-molecular-mass plant heat-shock protein family and also shows similarities with animal heat-shock proteins including the presence of a short region possessing similarity with bovine alpha-crystalline as reported for other heat-shock proteins. The molecular mass of the protein as determined from the sequence is 16.8 kDa. Despite its localization in the chloroplast membranes, it does not seem to include a transit peptide sequence, in agreement with previous data. The sequence contains only a short hydrophobic region compatible with its previously reported localization as a thylakoid extrinsic protein.

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