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Gene found for chloroplast movement.


Inside each plant cell, light-gathering chloroplasts dance out of a cell's shaded edges to soak up the sun or back into that shade when the light is too intense. Now a team of scientists from five Japanese research centers has found the gene that choreographs this movement, the researchers report in March 16 SCIENCE.

Chloroplasts are the powerhouses of each plant cell. They capture light energy from the sun and use it to convert carbon dioxide carbon dioxide, chemical compound, CO2, a colorless, odorless, tasteless gas that is about one and one-half times as dense as air under ordinary conditions of temperature and pressure.  and water into oxygen and food. The tiny spherical or disk-shaped chloroplasts contain the pigment chlorophyll, which gives green plants their color.

When light is weak, like on a cloudy day, the chloroplasts spread across the upper faces of the cells on a leaf, giving it a deeper green color. In intense sunlight, chloroplasts retreat to the cells' edges, making leaves look pale. Both reactions depend on the amount of blue light reaching the cells.

By noting this response in the leaves of Arabidopsis thaliana Noun 1. Arabidopsis thaliana - a small invasive self-pollinating weed with small white flowers; much studied by plant geneticists; the first higher plant whose complete genome sequence was described
mouse-ear cress
 plants, Masamitsu Wada of Tokyo Metropolitan University Tokyo Metropolitan University (首都大学東京; Shuto Daigaku Tōkyō. former 東京都立大学; Tōkyō Toritsu Daigaku  and his colleagues identified plants with mutated copies of a gene, NPL 1. NPL - New Programming Language. IBM's original (temporary) name for PL/I, changed due to conflict with England's "National Physical Laboratory." MPL and MPPL were considered before settling on PL/I. Sammet 1969, p.542.
2.
1, that codes for a protein that detects blue light in plants and orchestrates chloroplast chloroplast (klōr`əplăst', klôr`–), a complex, discrete green structure, or organelle, contained in the cytoplasm of plant cells.  movement. A similar gene for blue-light detection influences how plants tip their leaves toward or away from the sun. Says Wada, "The finding of the photoreceptor photoreceptor /pho·to·re·cep·tor/ (-re-sep´ter) a nerve end-organ or receptor sensitive to light.

pho·to·re·cep·tor
n.
 means that we now know the very beginning of this phenomenon at the molecular level."

With this knowledge, the researchers will try to determine the detailed mechanism of chloroplast movement. The newly found gene or its mutant forms could also be exploited by genetic engineers trying to elevate the efficiency of photosynthesis, Wada suggests.
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Title Annotation:indications that the mutated gene NPL1 helps chloroplasts absorb light energy for plants
Author:J.N.
Publication:Science News
Article Type:Brief Article
Geographic Code:9JAPA
Date:Mar 31, 2001
Words:274
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