RNA editing is an important post-transcriptional process in chloroplasts and is thought to be functionally significant. Here we show a requirement of RNA editing for a functional enzyme. In peas, acetyl-CoA carboxylase (ACCase), a key enzyme of fatty acid synthesis, is composed of biotin carboxylase with the biotin carboxyl carrier protein and carboxyltransferase (CT). CT is composed of the nuclear-encoded α polypeptide and the chloroplast-encoded β polypeptide in peas. One nucleotide of the β polypeptide mRNA, which is edited in pea chloroplasts, converts the serine codon to the leucine codon. We show that this RNA editing is required for functional CT by comparing the unedited and edited recombinant enzymes. In plants not having a leucine codon at the same position, editing was shown to take place so as to create the leucine codon, indicating that editing is needed for in vivo CT activity and therefore for ACCase. To our knowledge, ACCase is an essential enzyme, suggesting that the chloroplast RNA editing is necessary for these plants.
Chloroplast RNA Editing Required for Functional Acetyl-CoA Carboxylase in Plants*
Y. Sasaki,A. Kozaki,Akira Ohmori,Hiro Iguchi,Y. Nagano
Published 2001 in Journal of Biological Chemistry
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- Publication year
2001
- Venue
Journal of Biological Chemistry
- Publication date
2001-02-09
- Fields of study
Biology, Medicine, Environmental Science
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- Source metadata
Semantic Scholar, PubMed
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