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1.
Cell ; 174(2): 256-258, 2018 07 12.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30007415

RESUMEN

Photosynthetic eukaryotes arose ∼1.5 billion years ago by endosymbiosis with a cyanobacterium. Algae then evolved for a billion years before one lineage finally colonized land. Why the wait? The Chara braunii genome details a decisive step linking plant origins with Earth's history.


Asunto(s)
Chara/genética , Eucariontes/genética , Evolución Biológica , Plantas/genética , Simbiosis/genética
2.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 112(33): 10231-8, 2015 Aug 18.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26286985

RESUMEN

Chloroplasts and mitochondria are subcellular bioenergetic organelles with their own genomes and genetic systems. DNA replication and transmission to daughter organelles produces cytoplasmic inheritance of characters associated with primary events in photosynthesis and respiration. The prokaryotic ancestors of chloroplasts and mitochondria were endosymbionts whose genes became copied to the genomes of their cellular hosts. These copies gave rise to nuclear chromosomal genes that encode cytosolic proteins and precursor proteins that are synthesized in the cytosol for import into the organelle into which the endosymbiont evolved. What accounts for the retention of genes for the complete synthesis within chloroplasts and mitochondria of a tiny minority of their protein subunits? One hypothesis is that expression of genes for protein subunits of energy-transducing enzymes must respond to physical environmental change by means of a direct and unconditional regulatory control--control exerted by change in the redox state of the corresponding gene product. This hypothesis proposes that, to preserve function, an entire redox regulatory system has to be retained within its original membrane-bound compartment. Colocation of gene and gene product for redox regulation of gene expression (CoRR) is a hypothesis in agreement with the results of a variety of experiments designed to test it and which seem to have no other satisfactory explanation. Here, I review evidence relating to CoRR and discuss its development, conclusions, and implications. This overview also identifies predictions concerning the results of experiments that may yet prove the hypothesis to be incorrect.


Asunto(s)
Cloroplastos/fisiología , Regulación de la Expresión Génica de las Plantas , Mitocondrias/fisiología , Oxidación-Reducción , Cloroplastos/genética , Citosol/metabolismo , Replicación del ADN , ADN de Plantas/genética , Transporte de Electrón , Genoma del Cloroplasto , Genoma Mitocondrial , Mitocondrias/genética , Fosforilación Oxidativa , Fotosíntesis/fisiología , Plantas/genética , Transcripción Genética
3.
J Theor Biol ; 434: 50-57, 2017 12 07.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28408315

RESUMEN

Chloroplasts and mitochondria perform energy transduction in photosynthesis and respiration. These processes can be described in physico-chemical terms with no obvious requirement for co-located genetic systems, separat from those of the rest of the cell. Accordingly, biochemists once tended to regard endosymbiosis as untestable evolutionary speculation. Lynn Sagan's seminal 1967 paper "On the Origin of Mitosing Cells" outlined the evolution of eukaryotic cells by endosymbiosis of prokaryotes. The endosymbiont hypothesis is consistent with presence of DNA in chloroplasts and mitochondria, but does not assign it a function. Biochemistry and molecular biology now show that Sagan's proposal has an explanatory reach far beyond that originally envisaged. Prokaryotic origins of photosynthetic and respiratory mechanisms are apparent in protein structural insights into energy coupling. Genome sequencing confirms the underlying, prokaryotic architecture of chloroplasts and mitochondria and illustrates the profound influence of the original mergers of their ancestors' genes and proteins with those of their host cells. Peter Mitchell's 1961 chemiosmotic hypothesis applied the concept of vectorial catalysis that underlies biological energy transduction and cell structure, function, and origins. Continuity of electrical charge separation and membrane sidedness requires compartments within compartments, together with intricate mechanisms for transport within and between them. I suggest that the reason for the persistence of distinct genetic systems within bioenergetic organelles is the selective advantage of subcellular co-location of specific genes with their gene products. Co-location for Redox Regulation - CoRR - provides for a dialogue between chemical reduction-oxidation and the action of genes encoding its protein catalysts. These genes and their protein products are in intimate contact, and cannot be isolated from each other without loss of an essential mechanism of adaptation of electron transport to change in the external environment.


Asunto(s)
Compartimento Celular , Orgánulos/genética , Células Procariotas/metabolismo , Enzimas/genética , Oxidación-Reducción , Células Procariotas/ultraestructura , Simbiosis
4.
Physiol Plant ; 161(1): 28-44, 2017 Sep.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28393369

RESUMEN

In oxygenic photosynthesis there are two 'light states' - adaptations of the photosynthetic apparatus to spectral composition that otherwise favours either photosystem I or photosystem II. In chloroplasts of green plants the transition to light state 2 depends on phosphorylation of apoproteins of a membrane-intrinsic antenna, the chlorophyll-a/b-binding, light-harvesting complex II (LHC II), and on the resulting redistribution of absorbed excitation energy from photosystem II to photosystem I. The transition to light state 1 reverses these events and requires a phospho-LHC II phosphatase. Current structures of LHC II reveal little about possible steric effects of phosphorylation. The surface-exposed N-terminal domain of an LHC II polypeptide contains its phosphorylation site and is disordered in its unphosphorylated form. A molecular recognition hypothesis proposes that state transitions are a consequence of movement of LHC II between binding sites on photosystems I and II. In state 1, LHC II forms part of the antenna of photosystem II. In state 2, a unique but as yet unidentified 3-D structure of phospho-LHC II may attach it instead to photosystem I. One possibility is that the LHC II N-terminus becomes ordered upon phosphorylation, adopting a local alpha-helical secondary structure that initiates changes in LHC II tertiary and quaternary structure that sever contact with photosystem II while securing contact with photosystem I. In order to understand redistribution of absorbed excitation energy in photosynthesis we need to know the structure of LHC II in its phosphorylated form, and in its complex with photosystem I.


Asunto(s)
Cloroplastos/metabolismo , Complejos de Proteína Captadores de Luz/química , Proteínas de Cloroplastos/metabolismo , Complejos de Proteína Captadores de Luz/metabolismo , Fosfoproteínas/metabolismo , Fosforilación , Complejo de Proteína del Fotosistema II/metabolismo
5.
Photosynth Res ; 130(1-3): 93-101, 2016 Dec.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26873738

RESUMEN

Two-component signal transduction systems mediate adaptation to environmental changes in bacteria, plants, fungi, and protists. Each two-component system consists of a sensor histidine kinase and a response regulator. Chloroplast sensor kinase (CSK) is a modified sensor histidine kinase found in chloroplasts-photosynthetic organelles of plants and algae. CSK regulates the transcription of chloroplast genes in response to changes in photosynthetic electron transport. In this study, the full-length and truncated forms of Arabidopsis CSK proteins were overexpressed and purified in order to characterise their kinase and redox sensing activities. Our results show that CSK contains a modified kinase catalytic domain that binds ATP with high affinity and forms a quinone adduct that may confer redox sensing activity.


Asunto(s)
Proteínas de Arabidopsis/metabolismo , Cloroplastos/metabolismo , Histidina Quinasa/metabolismo , Adenosina Trifosfato/metabolismo , Arabidopsis/genética , Arabidopsis/metabolismo , Proteínas de Arabidopsis/genética , Proteínas de Arabidopsis/fisiología , Cloroplastos/genética , Histidina Quinasa/genética , Histidina Quinasa/fisiología , Oxidación-Reducción , Fosforilación , Fotosíntesis , Proteínas Recombinantes , Alineación de Secuencia , Transducción de Señal
6.
Biochim Biophys Acta Bioenerg ; 1865(4): 149495, 2024 11 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39004113

RESUMEN

Current views of O2 accumulation in Earth history depict three phases: The onset of O2 production by ∼2.4 billion years ago; 2 billion years of stasis at ∼1 % of modern atmospheric levels; and a rising phase, starting about 500 million years ago, in which oxygen eventually reached modern values. Purely geochemical mechanisms have been proposed to account for this tripartite time course of Earth oxygenation. In particular the second phase, the long period of stasis between the advent of O2 and the late rise to modern levels, has posed a puzzle. Proposed solutions involve Earth processes (geochemical, ecosystem, day length). Here we suggest that Earth oxygenation was not determined by geochemical processes. Rather it resulted from emergent biological innovations associated with photosynthesis and the activity of only three enzymes: 1) The oxygen evolving complex of cyanobacteria that makes O2; 2) Nitrogenase, with its inhibition by O2 causing two billion years of oxygen level stasis; 3) Cellulose synthase of land plants, which caused mass deposition and burial of carbon, thus removing an oxygen sink and therefore increasing atmospheric O2. These three enzymes are endogenously produced by, and contained within, cells that have the capacity for exponential growth. The catalytic properties of these three enzymes paved the path of Earth's atmospheric oxygenation, requiring no help from Earth other than the provision of water, CO2, salts, colonizable habitats, and sunlight.


Asunto(s)
Planeta Tierra , Oxígeno , Oxígeno/metabolismo , Oxígeno/química , Fotosíntesis , Cianobacterias/enzimología , Cianobacterias/metabolismo , Atmósfera/química
7.
FEBS Lett ; 598(14): 1692-1714, 2024 Jul.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38750628

RESUMEN

Molecular oxygen is a stable diradical. All O2-dependent enzymes employ a radical mechanism. Generated by cyanobacteria, O2 started accumulating on Earth 2.4 billion years ago. Its evolutionary impact is traditionally sought in respiration and energy yield. We mapped 365 O2-dependent enzymatic reactions of prokaryotes to phylogenies for the corresponding 792 protein families. The main physiological adaptations imparted by O2-dependent enzymes were not energy conservation, but novel organic substrate oxidations and O2-dependent, hence O2-tolerant, alternative pathways for O2-inhibited reactions. Oxygen-dependent enzymes evolved in ancestrally anaerobic pathways for essential cofactor biosynthesis including NAD+, pyridoxal, thiamine, ubiquinone, cobalamin, heme, and chlorophyll. These innovations allowed prokaryotes to synthesize essential cofactors in O2-containing environments, a prerequisite for the later emergence of aerobic respiratory chains.


Asunto(s)
Oxígeno , Oxígeno/metabolismo , Aerobiosis , Filogenia , Células Procariotas/metabolismo , Evolución Molecular , Oxidación-Reducción , Enzimas/metabolismo , Enzimas/genética
8.
Biochem Soc Trans ; 41(5): 1298-304, 2013 Oct.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24059523

RESUMEN

The persistence of mtDNA to encode a small subset of mitochondrial proteins reflects the selective advantage of co-location of key respiratory chain subunit genes with their gene products. The disadvantage of this co-location is exposure of mtDNA to mutagenic ROS (reactive oxygen species), which are by-products of aerobic respiration. The resulting 'vicious circle' of mitochondrial mutation has been proposed to underlie aging and its associated degenerative diseases. Recent evidence is consistent with the hypothesis that oocyte mitochondria escape the aging process by acting as quiescent genetic templates, transcriptionally and bioenergetically repressed. Transmission of unexpressed mtDNA in the female germline is considered as a reason for the existence of separate sexes, i.e. male and female. Maternal inheritance then circumvents incremental accumulation of age-related disease in each new generation.


Asunto(s)
Envejecimiento/genética , Genes Mitocondriales/genética , Genoma Mitocondrial , Estrés Oxidativo , Aerobiosis/genética , Envejecimiento/metabolismo , Envejecimiento/patología , Daño del ADN/genética , Femenino , Células Germinativas/citología , Humanos , Masculino , Mitocondrias/genética , Mitocondrias/metabolismo , Mutación , Oocitos/metabolismo , Especies Reactivas de Oxígeno/metabolismo
9.
Bioessays ; 33(11): 810-7, 2011 Nov.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21858844

RESUMEN

Planctomycetes, Verrucomicrobia and Chlamydia are prokaryotic phyla, sometimes grouped together as the PVC superphylum of eubacteria. Some PVC species possess interesting attributes, in particular, internal membranes that superficially resemble eukaryotic endomembranes. Some biologists now claim that PVC bacteria are nucleus-bearing prokaryotes and are considered evolutionary intermediates in the transition from prokaryote to eukaryote. PVC prokaryotes do not possess a nucleus and are not intermediates in the prokaryote-to-eukaryote transition. Here we summarise the evidence that shows why all of the PVC traits that are currently cited as evidence for aspiring eukaryoticity are either analogous (the result of convergent evolution), not homologous, to eukaryotic traits; or else they are the result of horizontal gene transfers.


Asunto(s)
Chlamydia/citología , Eucariontes/citología , Planctomycetales/citología , Verrucomicrobia/citología , Proteínas Bacterianas/genética , Proteínas Bacterianas/fisiología , Evolución Biológica , Núcleo Celular/fisiología , Chlamydia/clasificación , Chlamydia/genética , Chlamydia/fisiología , Retículo Endoplásmico/fisiología , Eucariontes/clasificación , Eucariontes/genética , Eucariontes/fisiología , Transferencia de Gen Horizontal , Mitocondrias/genética , Mitocondrias/fisiología , Membrana Nuclear/fisiología , Filogenia , Planctomycetales/clasificación , Planctomycetales/genética , Planctomycetales/fisiología , Verrucomicrobia/clasificación , Verrucomicrobia/genética , Verrucomicrobia/fisiología
10.
Plant Cell Environ ; 35(2): 347-59, 2012 Feb.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21554328

RESUMEN

State transitions and photosystem stoichiometry adjustment are two oxidation-reduction (redox)-regulated acclimatory responses in photosynthesis. State transitions are short-term adaptations that, in chloroplasts, involve reversible post-translational modification by phosphorylation of light-harvesting complex II (LHC II). Photosystem stoichiometry adjustments are long-term responses involving transcriptional regulation of reaction centre genes. Both responses are initiated by changes in light quality and are regulated by the redox state of plastoquinone (PQ). The LHC II kinase involved in the state 2 transition is a serine/threonine kinase known as STT7 in Chlamydomonas, and as STN7 in Arabidopsis. The phospho-LHC II phosphatase that produces the state 1 transition is a PP2C-type protein phosphatase currently termed both TAP38 and PPH1. In plants and algae, photosystem stoichiometry adjustment is governed by a modified two-component sensor kinase of cyanobacterial origin - chloroplast sensor kinase (CSK). CSK is a sensor of the PQ redox state. Chloroplast sigma factor 1 (SIG1) and plastid transcription kinase (PTK) are the functional partners of CSK in chloroplast gene regulation. We suggest a signalling pathway for photosystem stoichiometry adjustment. The signalling pathways of state transitions and photosystem stoichiometry adjustments are proposed to be distinct, with the two pathways sensing PQ redox state independently of each other.


Asunto(s)
Cloroplastos/química , Complejos de Proteína Captadores de Luz/química , Plantas/química , Transducción de Señal , Adaptación Fisiológica , Cloroplastos/enzimología , Cloroplastos/genética , Luz , Complejos de Proteína Captadores de Luz/metabolismo , Oxidación-Reducción , Fosfoproteínas Fosfatasas/metabolismo , Fosforilación , Fotosíntesis , Proteínas de Plantas/metabolismo , Plantas/enzimología , Plantas/genética , Plastoquinona/metabolismo , Proteínas Serina-Treonina Quinasas/metabolismo , Transcripción Genética
11.
J Exp Bot ; 63(4): 1543-57, 2012 Feb.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22268145

RESUMEN

Diatoms are unicellular, mainly photosynthetic, eukaryotes living within elaborate silicified cell walls and believed to be responsible for around 40% of global primary productivity in the oceans. Their abundance in aquatic ecosystems is such that they have on different occasions been described as the insects, the weeds, or the cancer cells of the ocean. In contrast to higher plants and green algae which derive from a primary endosymbiosis, diatoms are now believed to originate from a serial secondary endosymbiosis involving both green and red algae and a heterotrophic exosymbiont host. As a consequence of their dynamic evolutionary history, they appear to have red algal-derived chloroplasts empowered largely by green algal proteins, working alongside mitochondria derived from the non-photosynthetic exosymbiont. This review will discuss the evidence for such an unusual assemblage of organelles in diatoms, and will present the evidence implying that it has enabled them with unorthodox metabolisms that may have contributed to their profound ecological success.


Asunto(s)
Cloroplastos/metabolismo , Diatomeas/metabolismo , Mitocondrias/metabolismo , Transducción de Señal/fisiología
12.
Bioessays ; 32(4): 271-80, 2010 Apr.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20108228

RESUMEN

Despite thermodynamic, bioenergetic and phylogenetic failings, the 81-year-old concept of primordial soup remains central to mainstream thinking on the origin of life. But soup is homogeneous in pH and redox potential, and so has no capacity for energy coupling by chemiosmosis. Thermodynamic constraints make chemiosmosis strictly necessary for carbon and energy metabolism in all free-living chemotrophs, and presumably the first free-living cells too. Proton gradients form naturally at alkaline hydrothermal vents and are viewed as central to the origin of life. Here we consider how the earliest cells might have harnessed a geochemically created proton-motive force and then learned to make their own, a transition that was necessary for their escape from the vents. Synthesis of ATP by chemiosmosis today involves generation of an ion gradient by means of vectorial electron transfer from a donor to an acceptor. We argue that the first donor was hydrogen and the first acceptor CO2.


Asunto(s)
Origen de la Vida , Ósmosis , Adenosina Trifosfatasas , Dióxido de Carbono/química , Hidrógeno/química , Modelos Teóricos
13.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 105(29): 10061-6, 2008 Jul 22.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18632566

RESUMEN

We describe a novel, typically prokaryotic, sensor kinase in chloroplasts of green plants. The gene for this chloroplast sensor kinase (CSK) is found in cyanobacteria, prokaryotes from which chloroplasts evolved. The CSK gene has moved, during evolution, from the ancestral chloroplast to the nuclear genomes of eukaryotic algae and green plants. The CSK protein is now synthesised in the cytosol of photosynthetic eukaryotes and imported into their chloroplasts as a protein precursor. In the model higher plant Arabidopsis thaliana, CSK is autophosphorylated and required for control of transcription of chloroplast genes by the redox state of an electron carrier connecting photosystems I and II. CSK therefore provides a redox regulatory mechanism that couples photosynthesis to gene expression. This mechanism is inherited directly from the cyanobacterial ancestor of chloroplasts, is intrinsic to chloroplasts, and is targeted to chloroplast genes.


Asunto(s)
Proteínas de Arabidopsis/genética , Proteínas de Arabidopsis/metabolismo , Cloroplastos/enzimología , Cloroplastos/genética , Histidina Quinasa/genética , Histidina Quinasa/metabolismo , Fotosíntesis/genética , Proteínas Quinasas/genética , Proteínas Quinasas/metabolismo , Secuencia de Aminoácidos , Arabidopsis/enzimología , Arabidopsis/genética , Secuencia de Bases , Cianobacterias/enzimología , Cianobacterias/genética , Cartilla de ADN/genética , Evolución Molecular , Expresión Génica , Genes de Plantas , Datos de Secuencia Molecular , Mutación , Oxidación-Reducción , Plantas Modificadas Genéticamente , Proteínas Recombinantes de Fusión/genética , Proteínas Recombinantes de Fusión/metabolismo , Homología de Secuencia de Aminoácido , Transducción de Señal , Simbiosis , Nicotiana/enzimología , Nicotiana/genética , Transcripción Genética
14.
Plant J ; 60(5): 783-94, 2009 Dec.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19682289

RESUMEN

Working in tandem, two photosystems in the chloroplast thylakoid membranes produce a linear electron flow from H(2)O to NADP(+). Final electron transfer from ferredoxin to NADP(+) is accomplished by a flavoenzyme ferredoxin:NADP(+) oxidoreductase (FNR). Here we describe TROL (thylakoid rhodanese-like protein), a nuclear-encoded component of thylakoid membranes that is required for tethering of FNR and sustaining efficient linear electron flow (LEF) in vascular plants. TROL consists of two distinct modules; a centrally positioned rhodanese-like domain and a C-terminal hydrophobic FNR binding region. Analysis of Arabidopsis mutant lines indicates that, in the absence of TROL, relative electron transport rates at high-light intensities are severely lowered accompanied with significant increase in non-photochemical quenching (NPQ). Thus, TROL might represent a missing thylakoid membrane docking site for a complex between FNR, ferredoxin and NADP(+). Such association might be necessary for maintaining photosynthetic redox poise and enhancement of the NPQ.


Asunto(s)
Proteínas de Arabidopsis/fisiología , Arabidopsis/metabolismo , Ferredoxina-NADP Reductasa/metabolismo , Proteínas de la Membrana/metabolismo , Tilacoides/metabolismo , Secuencia de Aminoácidos , Arabidopsis/genética , Arabidopsis/ultraestructura , Proteínas de Arabidopsis/química , Proteínas de Arabidopsis/genética , Cloroplastos/metabolismo , Cloroplastos/ultraestructura , Transporte de Electrón/fisiología , Proteínas de la Membrana/química , Proteínas de la Membrana/genética , Proteínas de la Membrana/fisiología , Datos de Secuencia Molecular , Hojas de la Planta/anatomía & histología , Hojas de la Planta/genética , Hojas de la Planta/metabolismo , Estructura Terciaria de Proteína , Transporte de Proteínas/fisiología , Alineación de Secuencia , Transducción de Señal
15.
Mol Biol Evol ; 25(4): 748-61, 2008 Apr.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18222943

RESUMEN

Plastids are descended from a cyanobacterial symbiosis which occurred over 1.2 billion years ago. During the course of endosymbiosis, most genes were lost from the cyanobacterium's genome and many were relocated to the host nucleus through endosymbiotic gene transfer (EGT). The issue of how many genes were acquired through EGT in different plant lineages is unresolved. Here, we report the genome-wide frequency of gene acquisitions from cyanobacteria in 4 photosynthetic eukaryotes--Arabidopsis, rice, Chlamydomonas, and the red alga Cyanidioschyzon--by comparison of the 83,138 proteins encoded in their genomes with 851,607 proteins encoded in 9 sequenced cyanobacterial genomes, 215 other reference prokaryotic genomes, and 13 reference eukaryotic genomes. The analyses entail 11,569 phylogenies inferred with both maximum likelihood and Neighbor-Joining approaches. Because each phylogenetic result is dependent not only upon the reconstruction method but also upon the site patterns in the underlying alignment, we investigated how the reliability of site pattern generation via alignment affects our results: if the site patterns in an alignment differ depending upon the order in which amino acids are introduced into multiple sequence alignment--N- to C-terminal versus C- to N-terminal--then the phylogenetic result is likely to be artifactual. Excluding unreliable alignments by this means, we obtain a conservative estimate, wherein about 14% of the proteins examined in each plant genome indicate a cyanobacterial origin for the corresponding nuclear gene, with higher proportions (17-25%) observed among the more reliable alignments. The identification of cyanobacterial genes in plant genomes affords access to an important question: from which type of cyanobacterium did the ancestor of plastids arise? Among the 9 cyanobacterial genomes sampled, Nostoc sp. PCC7120 and Anabaena variabilis ATCC29143 were found to harbor collections of genes which are-in terms of presence/absence and sequence similarity-more like those possessed by the plastid ancestor than those of the other 7 cyanobacterial genomes sampled here. This suggests that the ancestor of plastids might have been an organism more similar to filamentous, heterocyst-forming (nitrogen-fixing) representatives of section IV recognized in Stanier's cyanobacterial classification. Members of section IV are very common partners in contemporary symbiotic associations involving endosymbiotic cyanobacteria, which generally provide nitrogen to their host, consistent with suggestions that fixed nitrogen supplied by the endosymbiont might have played an important role during the origin of plastids.


Asunto(s)
Núcleo Celular/genética , Cianobacterias/genética , Genes Bacterianos , Genoma de Planta/genética , Plantas/genética , Plastidios/genética , Secuencia de Aminoácidos , Animales , Arabidopsis/genética , Proteínas Bacterianas/química , Proteínas Bacterianas/genética , Chlamydomonas/genética , Secuencia Conservada , Transferencia de Gen Horizontal , Datos de Secuencia Molecular , Fijación del Nitrógeno/genética , Oryza/genética , Filogenia , Rhodophyta/genética , Alineación de Secuencia , Simbiosis/genética
16.
Proc Biol Sci ; 276(1665): 2133-45, 2009 Jun 22.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19324807

RESUMEN

Two-component signal transduction, consisting of sensor kinases and response regulators, is the predominant signalling mechanism in bacteria. This signalling system originated in prokaryotes and has spread throughout the eukaryotic domain of life through endosymbiotic, lateral gene transfer from the bacterial ancestors and early evolutionary precursors of eukaryotic, cytoplasmic, bioenergetic organelles-chloroplasts and mitochondria. Until recently, it was thought that two-component systems inherited from an ancestral cyanobacterial symbiont are no longer present in chloroplasts. Recent research now shows that two-component systems have survived in chloroplasts as products of both chloroplast and nuclear genes. Comparative genomic analysis of photosynthetic eukaryotes shows a lineage-specific distribution of chloroplast two-component systems. The components and the systems they comprise have homologues in extant cyanobacterial lineages, indicating their ancient cyanobacterial origin. Sequence and functional characteristics of chloroplast two-component systems point to their fundamental role in linking photosynthesis with gene expression. We propose that two-component systems provide a coupling between photosynthesis and gene expression that serves to retain genes in chloroplasts, thus providing the basis of cytoplasmic, non-Mendelian inheritance of plastid-associated characters. We discuss the role of this coupling in the chronobiology of cells and in the dialogue between nuclear and cytoplasmic genetic systems.


Asunto(s)
Cloroplastos/genética , Cloroplastos/metabolismo , Evolución Molecular , Regulación de la Expresión Génica de las Plantas/fisiología , Fotosíntesis/genética , Fotosíntesis/fisiología
18.
Trends Plant Sci ; 24(5): 388-392, 2019 05.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30930004

RESUMEN

True to its name, light-harvesting complex II (LHC II) harvests light energy for photosystem II (PS II). However, LHC II can stray, harvesting light energy for photosystem I (PS I) instead. Cryo-electron microscopy (cryo-EM) now shows how this mobile antenna becomes so attached to its new partner.


Asunto(s)
Complejos de Proteína Captadores de Luz , Fotosíntesis , Clorofila , Microscopía por Crioelectrón , Luz , Complejo de Proteína del Fotosistema I , Complejo de Proteína del Fotosistema II
19.
Trends Plant Sci ; 24(11): 1022-1031, 2019 11.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31447302

RESUMEN

Cyanobacteria produced the oxygen that began to accumulate on Earth 2.5 billion years ago, at the dawn of the Proterozoic Eon. By 2.4 billion years ago, the Great Oxidation Event (GOE) marked the onset of an atmosphere containing oxygen. The oxygen content of the atmosphere then remained low for almost 2 billion years. Why? Nitrogenase, the sole nitrogen-fixing enzyme on Earth, controls the entry of molecular nitrogen into the biosphere. Nitrogenase is inhibited in air containing more than 2% oxygen: the concentration of oxygen in the Proterozoic atmosphere. We propose that oxygen inhibition of nitrogenase limited Proterozoic global primary production. Oxygen levels increased when upright terrestrial plants isolated nitrogen fixation in soil from photosynthetic oxygen production in shoots and leaves.


Asunto(s)
Cianobacterias , Nitrogenasa , Atmósfera , Evolución Biológica , Planeta Tierra , Oxígeno
20.
Interface Focus ; 9(6): 20190072, 2019 Dec 06.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31641438

RESUMEN

If life on Earth started out in geochemical environments like hydrothermal vents, then it started out from gasses like CO2, N2 and H2. Anaerobic autotrophs still live from these gasses today, and they still inhabit the Earth's crust. In the search for connections between abiotic processes in ancient geological systems and biotic processes in biological systems, it becomes evident that chemical activation (catalysis) of these gasses and a constant source of energy are key. The H2-CO2 redox reaction provides a constant source of energy and anabolic inputs, because the equilibrium lies on the side of reduced carbon compounds. Identifying geochemical catalysts that activate these gasses en route to nitrogenous organic compounds and small autocatalytic networks will be an important step towards understanding prebiotic chemistry that operates only on the basis of chemical energy, without input from solar radiation. So, if life arose in the dark depths of hydrothermal vents, then understanding reactions and catalysts that operate under such conditions is crucial for understanding origins.

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