The Barley Magnesium Chelatase 150-kD Subunit Is Not an Abscisic Acid Receptor
- 28 January 2009
- journal article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in Plant Physiology
- Vol. 150 (1), 157-166
- https://doi.org/10.1104/pp.109.135277
Abstract
Magnesium chelatase is the first unique enzyme of the chlorophyll biosynthetic pathway. It is composed of three gene products of which the largest is 150 kD. This protein was recently identified as an abscisic acid receptor in Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana). We have evaluated whether the barley (Hordeum vulgare) magnesium chelatase large subunit, XanF, could be a receptor for the phytohormone. The study involved analysis of recombinant magnesium chelatase protein as well as several induced chlorophyll-deficient magnesium chelatase mutants with defects identified at the gene and protein levels. Abscisic acid had no effect on magnesium chelatase activity and binding to the barley 150-kD protein could not be shown. Magnesium chelatase mutants showed a wild-type response in respect to postgermination growth and stomatal aperture. Our results question the function of the large magnesium chelatase subunit as an abscisic acid receptorKeywords
This publication has 37 references indexed in Scilit:
- Correction: The RNA-binding protein FCA is an abscisic acid receptorNature, 2008
- EM single particle analysis of the ATP-dependent BchI complex of magnesium chelatase: an AAA+ hexamerJournal of Structural Biology, 2004
- Purification and Characterization of a Barley Aleurone Abscisic Acid-binding ProteinPublished by Elsevier ,2004
- Evolutionary history and higher order classification of AAA+ ATPasesJournal of Structural Biology, 2003
- The ATPase Activity of the ChlI Subunit of Magnesium Chelatase and Formation of a Heptameric AAA+RingBiochemistry, 2003
- Chloroplast to nucleus communication triggered by accumulation of Mg-protoporphyrinIXNature, 2003
- Purification and Identification of a 42-Kilodalton Abscisic Acid-Specific-Binding Protein from Epidermis of Broad Bean LeavesPlant Physiology, 2002
- Interplay between an AAA module and an integrin I domain may regulate the function of magnesium chelataseJournal of Molecular Biology, 2001
- Characterization of the Binding of Deuteroporphyrin IX to the Magnesium Chelatase H Subunit and Spectroscopic Properties of the ComplexBiochemistry, 2001
- Aaa ProteinsThe Journal of cell biology, 2000