PubMed 26123918

PubMed ID: 26123918

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PPR protein PDM1/SEL1 is involved in RNA editing and splicing of plastid genes in Arabidopsis thaliana.
Authors: Zhang Hong-Dao, Cui Yong-Lan, Huang Chao, Yin Qian-Qian, Qin Xue-Mei, Xu Te, He Xiao-Fang, Zhang Yi, Li Zi-Ran, Yang Zhong-Nan
Journal: Photosynthesis research (Photosynth Res), Vol.126(2-3), 2015‑Dec

DOI: 10.1007/s11120-015-0171-4

Abstract
After transcription, most chloroplast precursor RNAs undergo further post-transcriptional processing including cleavage, editing, and splicing. Previous investigation has shown that the cleavage of the rpoA transcript and most editing sites, including accD-1, are defective in the knockout mutant of PDM1/SEL1, a PLS-type PPR protein, and that PDM1 is associated with the rpoA transcript. In this work, we found that the splicing of group II introns in trnK and ndhA is also affected in pdm1. Co-immunoprecipitation mass spectrometry experiments were performed to identify proteins that are associated with PDM1. We obtained 126 non-redundant proteins, of which MORF9 was reported to be involved in RNA editing in chloroplast. Yeast two-hybrid assays showed that PDM1 interacts directly with MORF9, MORF2, and MORF8. RNA immunoprecipitation showed that PDM1 associates with the transcripts of trnK and ndhA, as well as accD-1, suggesting that PDM1 is involved in RNA editing and splicing. Therefore, PDM1 is an important protein for post-transcriptional regulation in chloroplast.
Publication Types
Journal Article Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
Keywords
Chloroplast PPR protein RNA editing ROS Splicing
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