Plant and Cell Physiology Supplement
Supplement to Plant and Cell Physiology Vol. 46
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Characterization of the Arabidopsis thaliana mutant pcb2 which accumulates divinyl chlorophylls
*Hiromitsu NakanishiHatsumi NozueKenji SuzukiYasuko KanekoGoro TaguchiNobuaki Hayashida
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Pages 829

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Abstract
We characterized the pcb2 mutant and found through electron microscopic observation that chloroplasts of pcb2 mesophyll cells lacked distinctive grana stacks. HPLC profiles, absorption spectrum and mass spectrometric analysis showed that the pcb2 mutant accumulated divinyl chlorophylls, and the relative amount of divinyl chlorophyll b was remarkably less than divinyl chlorophyll a. The responsible gene was mapped in an area of 190 kb length at the upper arm of the 5th chromosome, and comparison of DNA sequences revealed a single nucleotide substitution causing a nonsense mutation in At5g18660. Complementation analysis confirmed that the wild-type of this gene suppressed the phenotypes of the mutation. Antisense transformants of the gene also accumulated divinyl chlorophylls. The genes homologous to At5g18660 are conserved in a broad range of species in the plant kingdom, and have similarity to reductases. Our results suggest that the PCB2 product is divinyl protochlorophyllide 8-vinyl reductase
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© 2005 by The Japanese Society of Plant Physiologists
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