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Dive into the research topics where Rüdiger Cerff is active.

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Featured researches published by Rüdiger Cerff.


Plant Molecular Biology | 1989

Cloning and sequence analysis of cDNAs encoding the cytosolic precursors of subunits GapA and GapB of chloroplast glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase from pea and spinach

Henner Brinkmann; Rüdiger Cerff; Michael Salomon; Jürgen Soll

Chloroplast glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GAPDH) is composed of two different subunits, GapA and GapB. cDNA clones containing the entire coding sequences of the cytosolic precursors for GapA from pea and for GapB from pea and spinach have been identified, sequenced and the derived amino acid sequences have been compared to the corresponding sequences from tobacco, maize and mustard. These comparisons show that GapB differs from GapA in about 20% of its amino acid residues and by the presence of a flexible and negatively charged C-terminal extension, possibly responsible for the observed association of the enzyme with chloroplast envelopes in vitro. This C-terminal extension (29 or 30 residues) may be susceptible to proteolytic cleavage thereby leading to a conversion of chloroplast GAPDH isoenzyme I into isoenzyme II. Evolutionary rate comparisons at the amino acid sequence level show that chloroplast GapA and GapB evolve roughly two-fold slower than their cytosolic counterpart GapC. GapA and GapB transit peptides evolve about 10 times faster than the corresponding mature subunits. They are relatively long (68 and 83 residues for pea GapA and spinach GapB respectively) and share a similar amino acid framework with other chloroplast transit peptides.


Journal of Molecular Evolution | 1987

Endosymbiotic origin and codon bias of the nuclear gene for chloroplast glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase from maize.

Henner Brinkmann; Pascal Martinez; Francoise Quigley; William Martin; Rüdiger Cerff

SummaryThe nuclei of plant cells harbor genes for two types of glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenases (GAPDH) displaying a sequence divergence corresponding to the prokaryote/eukaryote separation. This strongly supports the endosymbiotic theory of chloroplast evolution and in particular the gene transfer hypothesis suggesting that the gene for the chloroplast enzyme, initially located in the genome of the endosymbiotic chloroplast progenitor, was transferred during the course of evolution into the nuclear genome of the endosymbiotic host. Codon usage in the gene for chloroplast GAPDH of maize is radically different from that employed by present-day chloroplasts and from that of the cytosolic (glycolytic) enzyme from the same cell. This reveals the presence of subcellular selective pressures which appear to be involved in the optimization of gene expression in the economically important graminaceous monocots.


Plant Molecular Biology | 1998

Structure and evolution of Cyclops: a novel giant retrotransposon of the Ty3/Gypsy family highly amplified in pea and other legume species.

Franz Chavanne; De-Xing Zhang; Marie-Françoise Liaud; Rüdiger Cerff

We characterized a novel giant Gypsy-like retrotransposon, Cyclops, present in about 5000 copies in the genome of Pisum sativum. The individual element Cyclops-2 measures 12 314 bp including long terminal repeats (LTRs) of 1504 bp and 1594 bp, respectively, showing 4.1% sequence divergence between one another. Cyclops-2 carries a polypurine tract (PPT) and an unusual primer binding site (PBS) complementary to tRNA-Glu. The element is bounded by 5 bp target site duplications and harbors three successive internal regions with homology to retroviral genes gag (424 codons) and pol (1382 codons) and an additional open reading frame (423 codons) of unknown function indicating the elements potential capacity for gene transduction. The pol region contains sequence motifs related to the enzymes protease, reverse transcriptase, RNAse H and integrase in the same typical order (5′-PR-RT-RH-IN-3′) known for retroviruses and Gypsy-like retrotransposons. The reading frame of the pol region is disrupted by several mutations suggesting that Cyclops-2 does not encode functional enzymes. A phylogenetic analysis of the reverse transcriptase domain confirms our differential genetic assessment that Cyclops from pea is a novel element with no specific relationship to the previously described Gypsy-like elements from plants. Genomic Southern hybridizations show that Cyclops is abundant not only in pea but also in common bean, mung bean, broad bean, soybean and the pea nut suggesting that Cyclops may be an useful genetic tool for analyzing the genomes of agronomically important legumes.


Journal of Molecular Evolution | 2006

A ''Green'' Phosphoribulokinase in Complex Algae with Red Plastids: Evidence for a Single Secondary Endosymbiosis Leading to Haptophytes, Cryptophytes, Heterokonts, and Dinoflagellates

Jörn Petersen; René Teich; Henner Brinkmann; Rüdiger Cerff

Phosphoribulokinase (PRK) is an essential enzyme of photosynthetic eukaryotes which is active in the plastid-located Calvin cycle and regenerates the substrate for ribulose-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (Rubisco). Rhodophytes and chlorophytes (red and green algae) recruited their nuclear-encoded PRK from the cyanobacterial ancestor of plastids. The plastids of these organisms can be traced back to a single primary endosymbiosis, whereas, for example, haptophytes, dinoflagellates, and euglenophytes obtained their “complex” plastids through secondary endosymbioses, comprising the engulfment of a unicellular red or green alga by a eukaryotic host cell. We have cloned eight new PRK sequences from complex algae as well as a rhodophyte in order to investigate their evolutionary origin. All available PRK sequences were used for phylogenetic analyses and the significance of alternative topologies was estimated by the approximately unbiased test. Our analyses led to several astonishing findings. First, the close relationship of PRK genes of haptophytes, heterokontophytes, cryptophytes, and dinophytes (complex red lineage) supports a monophyletic origin of their sequences and hence their plastids. Second, based on PRK genes the complex red lineage forms a highly supported assemblage together with chlorophytes and land plants, to the exclusion of the rhodophytes. This green affinity is in striking contrast to the expected red algal origin and our analyses suggest that the PRK gene was acquired once via lateral transfer from a green alga. Third, surprisingly the complex green lineages leading to Bigelowiella and Euglena probably also obtained their PRK genes via lateral gene transfers from a red alga and a complex alga with red plastids, respectively.


Plant Molecular Biology | 1996

Functional studies of chloroplast glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase subunits A and B expressed in Escherichia coli: formation of highly active A4 and B4 homotetramers and evidence that aggregation of the B4 complex is mediated by the B subunit carboxy terminus

Elisabeth Baalmann; Renate Scheibe; Rüdiger Cerff; William Martin

Chloroplast glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (phosphorylating, E.C. 1.2.1.13) (GAPDH) of higher plants exists as an A2B2 heterotetramer that catalyses the reductive step of the Calvin cycle. In dark chloroplasts the enzyme exhibits a molecular mass of 600 kDa, whereas in illuminated chloroplasts the molecular mass is altered in favor of the more active 150 kDa form. We have expressed in Escherichia coli proteins corresponding to the mature A and B subunits of spinach chloroplast GAPDH (GapA and GapB, respectively) in addition to a derivative of the B subunit lacking the GapB-specific C-terminal extension (CTE). One mg of each of the three proteins so expressed was purified to electrophoretic homogeneity with conventional methods. Spinach GapA purified from E. coli is shown to be a highly active homotetramer (50–70 U/mg) which does not associate under aggregating conditions in vitro to high-molecular-mass (HMM) forms of ca. 600 kDa. Since B4 forms of the enzyme have not been described from any source, we were surprised to find that spinach GapB purified from E. coli was active (15–35 U/mg). Spinach GapB lacking the CTE purified from E. coli is more highly active (130 U/mg) than GapB with the CTE. Under aggregating conditions, GapB lacking the CTE is a tetramer that does not associate to HMM forms whereas GapB with the CTE occurs exclusively as an aggregated HMM form. The data indicate that intertetramer association of chloroplast GAPDH in vitro occurs through GapB-mediated protein-protein interaction.


Journal of Molecular Evolution | 1997

Evolutionary origin of cryptomonad microalgae: two novel chloroplast/cytosol-specific GAPDH genes as potential markers of ancestral endosymbiont and host cell components.

Marie-Françoise Liaud; Ulrike Brandt; Margitta Scherzinger; Rüdiger Cerff

Cryptomonads are complex microalgae which share characteristics of chromophytes (chlorophyll c, extra pair of membranes surrounding the plastids) and rhodophytes (phycobiliproteins). Unlike chromophytes, however, they contain a small nucleus-like organelle, the nucleomorph, in the periplastidial space between the inner and outer plastid membrane pairs. These cellular characteristics led to the suggestion that cryptomonads may have originated via a eukaryoteeukaryote endosymbiosis between a phagotrophic host cell and a unicellular red alga, a hypothesis supported by rRNA phylogenies. Here we characterized cDNAs of the nuclear genes encoding chloroplast and cytosolic glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenases (GAPDH) from the two cryptomonads Pyrenomonas salina and Guillardia theta. Our results suggest that in cryptomonads the classic Calvin cycle GAPDH enzyme of cyanobacterial origin, GapAB, is absent and functionally replaced by a photosynthetic GapC enzyme of proteobacterial descent, GapCl. The derived GapCl precursor contains a typical signal/transit peptide of complex structure and sequence signatures diagnostic for dual cosubstrate specificity with NADP and NAD. In addition to this novel GapCl gene a cytosol-specific GapC2 gene of glycolytic function has been found in both cryptomonads showing conspicuous sequence similarities to animal GAPDH. The present findings support the hypothesis that the host cell component of cryptomonads may be derived from a phototrophic rather than a organotrophic cell which lost its primary plastid after receiving a secondary one. Hence, cellular compartments of endosymbiotic origin may have been lost or replaced several times in eukaryote cell evolution, while the corresponding endosymbiotic genes (e.g., GapC1) were retained, thereby increasing the chimeric potential of the nuclear genome.


Plant Molecular Biology | 1992

The ?-tubulin gene family of pea: Primary structures, genomic organization and intron-dependent evolution of genes

Marie-Françoise Liaud; Henner Brinkmann; Rüdiger Cerff

One gene and two cDNAs encoding three different β-tubulins (TUB1, TUB2, TUB3) of pea have been cloned and sequenced. The derived amino acid sequences show between 92% and 96% identity relative to one another and to most other β-tubulins of higher plants and green algae. Two notable extremes are the high similarity of 98% between pea TUB3 and maize β-tubulin 2 and the relatively low similarity (90%) of the hypocotyl-specific β-tubulin 1 of soybean to the pea sequences. These similarities do not reflect the molecular phylogeny but rather differences in evolutionary rate of β-tubulins which are differentially regulated during plant development. Genomic Southern blots reveal a β-tubulin gene family in pea with at least four separate members including two TUB1 genes, one TUB2 gene and one TUB3 gene. This contradicts an earlier report by Rahaet al. (Plant Mol Biol 9: 565–571, 1987) suggesting a tandem repeat organization of tubulin genes in pea. The pea TUB1 gene has two introns in identical positions compared to the β-tubulin genes fromArabidopsis and soybean. In an attempt to reconstruct the universal ancestor of all present-day tubulin genes the intron positions in 38 different α- and β-tubulin genes from plants, animals, fungi and protozoa were compared. This comparison shows that the primordial gene probably had many introns (more than 20) separating ‘protoexons’ of 15 to 20 codons in agreement with the ‘exon theory of genes’. It also supports the view that, during the course of evolutions introns have shifted and were deleted preferentially in the 3′ part of the genes. Similar observations have been made previously for other genes. They can be interpreted in terms of a homologous recombination of genes with their modified (incorrectly spliced) and reverse-transcribed pre-mRNAs.


Plant Molecular Biology | 1995

Intron-dependent transient expression of the maize GapA1 gene

Michael Donath; Ralf R. Mendel; Rüdiger Cerff; William Martin

Transient expression experiments show that the maize GapA1 promoter exhibits a requirement for sequences contained within intron 1 and surrounding exon border regions for expression in maize Black Mexican Sweet cells. Maize GapA1-promoter constructs lacking intron 1 are inactive. Intron 1 and its exon border sequences, when reintroduced into constructs lacking introns, restore gene activity whereas intron 2 and its exon borders to not. The minimal promoter so defined encompasses roughly 250 bp upstream of the in vivo transcription start and appears also to include intron 1. An octameric sequence was identified in intron 1 of maize GapA1 which is similar to sequence motifs found in other maize introns known to increase transient expression. Partial restoration of gene expression in GapA1 constructs lacking intron 1 was achieved through insertion of the identified octameric sequence.


Journal of Molecular Evolution | 1994

The Evolutionary Origin of Red Algae as Deduced from the Nuclear Genes Encoding Cytosolic and Chloroplast Glyceraldehyde-3-Phosphate Dehydrogenases from Chondrus crispus

Marie-Françoise Liaud; Christiane Valentin; William Martin; François-Yves Bouget; Bernard Kloareg; Rüdiger Cerff

Algae are a heterogeneous group of photosynthetic eukaryotes traditionally separated into three major subdivisions: rhodophytes, chlorophytes, and chromophytes. The evolutionary origin of rhodophytes or red algae and their links to other photosynthetic and nonphotosynthetic eukaryotes have been a matter of much controversy and speculation. Here we present the first cDNAs of nuclear protein genes from red algae: Those encoding cytosolic and chloroplast glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenases (GAPDH) from Chondrus crispus. A phylogenetic analysis including GAPDH gene sequences from a number of eukaryotic taxa, cyanobacteria, and purple bacteria suggests that chloroplasts and rhodoplasts together form a monophyletic group of cyanobacterial descent and that rhodophytes separated from chlorophytes at about the same time as animals and fungi. The composite GAPDH tree further demonstrates that chloroplast and cytosolic GAPDH genes are closely related to their homologs in cyanobacteria and purple bacteria, respectively, the presumptive ancestors of chloroplasts and mitochondria, thereby firmly establishing the endosymbiotic origin of these nuclear genes and their fixation in eukaryotic cells before the rhodophyte/chlorophyte separation. The present data are in conflict with phylogenetic inferences based on plastid-encoded rbcL sequences supporting a polyphyletic origin of rhodoplasts and chloroplasts. Comparison of rbcL to GAPDH phylogenies suggests that rbcL trees may be misleading because they are composed of branches representing ancient duplicated (paralogous) genes.


Plant Molecular Biology | 1994

Molecular characterization of a novel, nuclear-encoded, NAD+-dependent glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase in plastids of the gymnosperm Pinus sylvestris L.

Gilbert Meyer-Gauen; Claus Schnarrenberger; Rüdiger Cerff; William Martin

Angiosperms and algae possess two distinct glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GAPDH) enzymes, an NAD+-dependent tetramer involved in cytosolic glycolysis and an NADP+-dependent enzyme of the Calvin cycle in chloroplasts. We have found that the gymnosperm Pinus sylvestris possesses, in addition to these, a nuclear-encoded, plastid-specific, NAD+-dependent GAPDH, designated GapCp, which has not previously been described from any plant. Several independent full-size cDNAs for this enzyme were isolated which encode a functional transit peptide and mature subunit very similar to that of cytosolic GAPDH of angiosperms and algae. A molecular phylogeny reveals that chloroplast GapCp and cytosolic GapC arose through gene duplication early in chlorophyte evolution. The GapCp gene is expressed as highly as that for GapC in light-grown pine seedlings. These findings suggest that aspects of compartmentalized sugar phosphate metabolism may differ in angiosperms and gymnosperms and furthermore underscore the contributions of endosymbiotic gene transfer and gene duplication to the nuclear complement of genes for enzymes of plant primary metabolism.

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William Martin

University of Düsseldorf

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Marie-Françoise Liaud

Braunschweig University of Technology

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Reinhard Hehl

Braunschweig University of Technology

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Ralf R. Mendel

Braunschweig University of Technology

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Uwe Köhler

Braunschweig University of Technology

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Gilbert Meyer-Gauen

Braunschweig University of Technology

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Ulrike Brandt

Braunschweig University of Technology

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Bernard Kloareg

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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