نتایج جستجو برای: plastid rpl32

تعداد نتایج: 5117  

Journal: :The Plant cell 2014
Simon Michaeli Arik Honig Hanna Levanony Hadas Peled-Zehavi Gad Galili

Selective autophagy has been extensively studied in various organisms, but knowledge regarding its functions in plants, particularly in organelle turnover, is limited. We have recently discovered ATG8-INTERACTING PROTEIN1 (ATI1) from Arabidopsis thaliana and showed that following carbon starvation it is localized on endoplasmic reticulum (ER)-associated bodies that are subsequently transported ...

Journal: :AoB PLANTS 2010

Journal: :Nucleic acids research 1998
D Karcher R Bock

RNA editing in higher plant plastids changes single cytidine residues to uridine through an unknown mechanism. In order to investigate the relation of editing to physiological processes and to other steps in plastid gene expression, we have tested the sensitivity of chloroplast RNA editing to heat shock and antibiotics. We show that heat shock conditions as well as treatment of plants with prok...

2017
Yoshihiro Hirosawa Yasuko Ito-Inaba Takehito Inaba

Plastids are DNA-containing organelles and can have unique differentiation states depending on age, tissue, and environment. Plastid biogenesis is optimized by bidirectional communication between plastids and the nucleus. Import of nuclear-encoded proteins into plastids serves as anterograde signals and vice versa, plastids themselves send retrograde signals to the nucleus, thereby controlling ...

2017
Jong Im Kim Christa E. Moore John M. Archibald Debashish Bhattacharya Gangman Yi Hwan Su Yoon Woongghi Shin

Cryptophytes are an ecologically important group of largely photosynthetic unicellular eukaryotes. This lineage is of great interest to evolutionary biologists because their plastids are of red algal secondary endosymbiotic origin and the host cell retains four different genomes (host nuclear, mitochondrial, plastid, and red algal nucleomorph). Here, we report a comparative analysis of plastid ...

2015
Alison C. Hills Safina Khan Enrique López-Juez

The assembly of photosynthetically competent chloroplasts occurs in angiosperm seedlings when first exposed to light, and is due to the control by light of photosynthesis-associated nuclear genes (PhANGs), also dependent upon plastid-to-nucleus "biogenic" communication signals. The relationship between light- and plastid signal-regulation of PhANGs is close but poorly understood. In contrast, m...

2018
Yamato Yoshida

The endosymbiosis of a free-living cyanobacterium into an ancestral eukaryote led to the evolution of the chloroplast (plastid) more than one billion years ago. Given their independent origins, plastid proliferation is restricted to the binary fission of pre-existing plastids within a cell. In the last 25 years, the structure of the supramolecular machinery regulating plastid division has been ...

Journal: :Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 2011
Elena Babiychuk Klaas Vandepoele Josef Wissing Miguel Garcia-Diaz Riet De Rycke Hana Akbari Jérôme Joubès Tom Beeckman Lothar Jänsch Margrit Frentzen Marc C E Van Montagu Sergei Kushnir

Plastids are DNA-containing organelles unique to plant cells. In Arabidopsis, one-third of the genes required for embryo development encode plastid-localized proteins. To help understand the role of plastids in embryogenesis and postembryonic development, we characterized proteins of the mitochondrial transcription termination factor (mTERF) family, which in animal models, comprises DNA-binding...

Journal: :Annual review of plant biology 2015
Ralph Bock

The small bacterial-type genome of the plastid (chloroplast) can be engineered by genetic transformation, generating cells and plants with transgenic plastid genomes, also referred to as transplastomic plants. The transformation process relies on homologous recombination, thereby facilitating the site-specific alteration of endogenous plastid genes as well as the precisely targeted insertion of...

Journal: :Current Biology 2000
Kelly S. Colletti Elizabeth A. Tattersall Kevin A. Pyke John E. Froelich Kevin D. Stokes Katherine W. Osteryoung

BACKGROUND Chloroplast division in plant cells occurs by binary fission, yielding two daughter plastids of equal size. Previously, we reported that two Arabidopsis homologues of FtsZ, a bacterial protein that forms a cytokinetic ring during cell division, are essential for plastid division in plants, and may be involved in the formation of plastid-dividing rings on both the stromal and cytosoli...

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