An optimized transit peptide for effective targeting of diverse foreign proteins into chloroplasts in rice

Boran Shen(South China Agricultural University), Chenghua Zhu(South China Agricultural University), Zhen Yao(South China Agricultural University), Lili Cui(South China Agricultural University), Jianjun Zhang(South China Agricultural University), Chengwei Yang(South China Normal University), Zheng‐Hui He(San Francisco State University), Xinxiang Peng(South China Agricultural University)
Scientific Reports
April 11, 2017
Cited by 60Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

Various chloroplast transit peptides (CTP) have been used to successfully target some foreign proteins into chloroplasts, but for other proteins these same CTPs have reduced localization efficiencies or fail completely. The underlying cause of the failures remains an open question, and more effective CTPs are needed. In this study, we initially observed that two E.coli enzymes, EcTSR and EcGCL, failed to be targeted into rice chloroplasts by the commonly-used rice rbcS transit peptide (rCTP) and were subsequently degraded. Further analyses revealed that the N-terminal unfolded region of cargo proteins is critical for their localization capability, and that a length of about 20 amino acids is required to attain the maximum localization efficiency. We considered that the unfolded region may alleviate the steric hindrance produced by the cargo protein, by functioning as a spacer to which cytosolic translocators can bind. Based on this inference, an optimized CTP, named RC2, was constructed. Analyses showed that RC2 can more effectively target diverse proteins, including EcTSR and EcGCL, into rice chloroplasts. Collectively, our results provide further insight into the mechanism of CTP-mediated chloroplastic localization, and more importantly, RC2 can be widely applied in future chloroplastic metabolic engineering, particularly for crop plants.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis