Plants (Feb 2020)

Functional Analysis of PSRP1, the Chloroplast Homolog of a Cyanobacterial Ribosome Hibernation Factor

  • Kevin Swift,
  • Prakitchai Chotewutmontri,
  • Susan Belcher,
  • Rosalind Williams-Carrier,
  • Alice Barkan

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/plants9020209
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 2
p. 209

Abstract

Read online

Bacterial ribosome hibernation factors sequester ribosomes in an inactive state during the stationary phase and in response to stress. The cyanobacterial ribosome hibernation factor LrtA has been suggested to inactivate ribosomes in the dark and to be important for post-stress survival. In this study, we addressed the hypothesis that Plastid Specific Ribosomal Protein 1 (PSRP1), the chloroplast-localized LrtA homolog in plants, contributes to the global repression of chloroplast translation that occurs when plants are shifted from light to dark. We found that the abundance of PSRP1 and its association with ribosomes were similar in the light and the dark. Maize mutants lacking PSRP1 were phenotypically normal under standard laboratory growth conditions. Furthermore, the absence of PSRP1 did not alter the distribution of chloroplast ribosomes among monosomes and polysomes in the light or in the dark, and did not affect the light-regulated synthesis of the chloroplast psbA gene product. These results suggest that PSRP1 does not play a significant role in the regulation of chloroplast translation by light. As such, the physiological driving force for the retention of PSRP1 during chloroplast evolution remains unclear.

Keywords