Evidence for a protein transported through the secretory pathway en route to the higher plant chloroplast. Villarejo, A., Burén, S., Larsson, S., Déjardin, A., Monné, M., Rudhe, C., Karlsson, J., Jansson, S., Lerouge, P., Rolland, N., von Heijne, G., Grebe, M., Bakó, L., & Samuelsson, G. Nature Cell Biology, 7(12):1224–1231, December, 2005. Number: 12 Publisher: Nature Publishing Group
Evidence for a protein transported through the secretory pathway en route to the higher plant chloroplast [link]Paper  doi  abstract   bibtex   
In contrast to animal and fungal cells, green plant cells contain one or multiple chloroplasts, the organelle(s) in which photosynthetic reactions take place. Chloroplasts are believed to have originated from an endosymbiotic event and contain DNA that codes for some of their proteins. Most chloroplast proteins are encoded by the nuclear genome and imported with the help of sorting signals that are intrinsic parts of the polypeptides. Here, we show that a chloroplast-located protein in higher plants takes an alternative route through the secretory pathway, and becomes N-glycosylated before entering the chloroplast.
@article{villarejo_evidence_2005,
	title = {Evidence for a protein transported through the secretory pathway en route to the higher plant chloroplast},
	volume = {7},
	copyright = {2005 Nature Publishing Group},
	issn = {1476-4679},
	url = {https://www.nature.com/articles/ncb1330},
	doi = {10/fmrqwn},
	abstract = {In contrast to animal and fungal cells, green plant cells contain one or multiple chloroplasts, the organelle(s) in which photosynthetic reactions take place. Chloroplasts are believed to have originated from an endosymbiotic event and contain DNA that codes for some of their proteins. Most chloroplast proteins are encoded by the nuclear genome and imported with the help of sorting signals that are intrinsic parts of the polypeptides. Here, we show that a chloroplast-located protein in higher plants takes an alternative route through the secretory pathway, and becomes N-glycosylated before entering the chloroplast.},
	language = {en},
	number = {12},
	urldate = {2021-06-11},
	journal = {Nature Cell Biology},
	author = {Villarejo, Arsenio and Burén, Stefan and Larsson, Susanne and Déjardin, Annabelle and Monné, Magnus and Rudhe, Charlotta and Karlsson, Jan and Jansson, Stefan and Lerouge, Patrice and Rolland, Norbert and von Heijne, Gunnar and Grebe, Markus and Bakó, Laszlo and Samuelsson, Göran},
	month = dec,
	year = {2005},
	note = {Number: 12
Publisher: Nature Publishing Group},
	pages = {1224--1231},
}

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