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1.
The radioactive, photoactivatable labeling probe [beta-32P]5-azidouridine 5'-diphosphoglucose has recently been shown to label a 62-kDa protein in crude homogenates and in partially purified enzyme preparations without photoactivation. Here, we report that a portion of this radioactivity is due to labeling of phosphoglucomutase by contaminating levels of [32P]alpha Glc-1-P initially present at less than 1% of the total 32P. This conclusion is based in part on the ability of excess unlabeled alpha Glc-1-P and Glc-6-P, but not UDP-Glc, to block the labeling. In addition, the labeled protein in liver homogenates had a tryptic peptide pattern similar to that of authentic phosphoglucomutase. These findings, however, raised a second question. Assays for the UDP-Glc: glycoprotein glucosyl phosphotransferase (Glc phosphotransferase) have utilized [beta-32P]UDP-Glc and have resulted in the labeling of a small number of acceptors, including one of approximately 62 kDa. Despite the fact that these assays had routinely been performed in the presence of 1 mM alpha Glc-1-P, the coincidence in molecular weights led to these further studies. We conclude that the acceptor of approximately 62 kDa is distinct from phosphoglucomutase. This conclusion is based on differences in the time courses of incorporation, the specificity of blocking agents, the presence of covalently linked glucose, the products of acid hydrolysis and of beta-elimination, and isoelectric points.  相似文献   

2.
The cytosolic pools of glucose-1-phosphate (Glc-1-P) and glucose-6-phosphate are essential intermediates in several biosynthetic paths, including the formation of sucrose and cell wall constituents, and they are also linked to the cytosolic starch-related heteroglycans. In this work, structural features and biochemical properties of starch-related heteroglycans were analyzed as affected by the cytosolic glucose monophosphate metabolism using both source and sink organs from wild-type and various transgenic potato (Solanum tuberosum) plants. In leaves, increased levels of the cytosolic phosphoglucomutase (cPGM) did affect the cytosolic heteroglycans, as both the glucosyl content and the size distribution were diminished. By contrast, underexpression of cPGM resulted in an unchanged size distribution and an unaltered or even increased glucosyl content of the heteroglycans. Heteroglycans prepared from potato tubers were found to be similar to those from leaves but were not significantly affected by the level of cPGM activity. However, external glucose or Glc-1-P exerted entirely different effects on the cytosolic heteroglycans when added to tuber discs. Glucose was directed mainly toward starch and cell wall material, but incorporation into the constituents of the cytosolic heteroglycans was very low and roughly reflected the relative monomeric abundance. By contrast, Glc-1-P was selectively taken up by the tuber discs and resulted in a fast increase in the glucosyl content of the heteroglycans that quantitatively reflected the level of the cytosolic phosphorylase activity. Based on (14)C labeling experiments, we propose that in the cytosol, glucose and Glc-1-P are metabolized by largely separated paths.  相似文献   

3.
Yu TS  Lue WL  Wang SM  Chen J 《Plant physiology》2000,123(1):319-326
We isolated pgi1-1, an Arabidopsis mutant with a decreased plastid phospho-glucose (Glc) isomerase activity. While pgi1-1 mutant has a deficiency in leaf starch synthesis, it accumulates starch in root cap cells. It has been shown that a plastid transporter for hexose phosphate transports cytosolic Glc-6-P into plastids and expresses restricted mainly to the heterotrophic tissues. The decreased starch content in leaves of the pgi1-1 mutant indicates that cytosolic Glc-6-P cannot be efficiently transported into chloroplasts to complement the mutant's deficiency in chloroplastic phospho-Glc isomerase activity for starch synthesis. We cloned the Arabidopsis PGI1 gene and showed that it encodes the plastid phospho-Glc isomerase. The pgi1-1 allele was found to have a single nucleotide substitution, causing a Ser to Phe transition. While the flowering times of the Arabidopsis starch-deficient mutants pgi1, pgm1, and adg1 were similar to that of the wild type under long-day conditions, it was significantly delayed under short-day conditions. The pleiotropic phenotype of late flowering conferred by these starch metabolic mutations suggests that carbohydrate metabolism plays an important role in floral initiation.  相似文献   

4.
Phosphoglucomutase (PGM, EC 2.7.5.1) is one of the enzymes constituting the carbohydrate synthesis pathway in higher plants. It catalyzes the reversible conversion of glucose 6-phosphate (Glc6P) to glucose 1-phosphate (Glc1P). Previously, metabolic turnover analysis using (13)CO(2) in tobacco leaves demonstrated that conversion of Glc6P to Glc1P may limit carbon flow into carbohydrate synthesis. In order to assess the effects of PGM, Arabidopsis thaliana cytosolic or plastidial PGM was expressed under the control of cauliflower mosaic virus 35S promoter in tobacco plants (Nicotiana tabacum cv. Xanthi) and phenotypic analysis was performed. The transgenic plants expressing Arabidopsis plastidial PGM showed 3.5-8.2-fold higher PGM activity than that of wild-type, and leaf starch and sucrose contents increased 2.3-3.2-fold and 1.3-1.4-fold, respectively over wild-type levels. In vivo(13)C-labeling experiments indicated that photosynthetically fixed carbon in the transgenic plants could be converted faster to Glc1P and adenosine 5'-diphosphate glucose than in wild-type, suggesting that elevation of plastidial PGM activity should accelerate conversion of Glc6P to Glc1P in chloroplasts and increase carbon flow into starch. On the other hand, transgenic plants expressing Arabidopsis cytosolic PGM showed a 2.1-3.4-fold increase in PGM activity over wild-type and a decrease of leaf starch content, but no change in sucrose content. These results suggest that plastidial PGM limits photosynthetic carbon flow into starch.  相似文献   

5.
Zeeman SC  Smith SM  Smith AM 《Plant physiology》2002,128(3):1069-1076
We investigated the mechanism of amylose synthesis in Arabidopsis leaves using (14)C-labeling techniques. First, we tested the hypothesis that short malto-oligosaccharides (MOS) may act as primers for granule-bound starch synthase I. We found increased amylose synthesis in isolated starch granules supplied with ADP[(14)C]glucose (ADP[(14)C]Glc) and MOS compared with granules supplied with ADP[(14)C]Glc but no MOS. Furthermore, using a MOS-accumulating mutant (dpe1), we found that more amylose was synthesized than in the wild type, correlating with the amount of MOS in vivo. When wild-type and mutant plants were tested in conditions where both lines had similar MOS contents, no difference in amylose synthesis was observed. We also tested the hypothesis that branches of amylopectin might serve as the primers for granule-bound starch synthase I. In this model, elongated branches of amylopectin are subsequently cleaved to form amylose. We conducted pulse-chase experiments, supplying a pulse of ADP[(14)C]Glc to isolated starch granules or (14)CO(2) to intact plants, followed by a chase period in unlabeled substrate. We detected no transfer of label from the amylopectin fraction to the amylose fraction of starch either in isolated starch granules or in intact leaves, despite varying the time course of the experiments and using a mutant line (sex4) in which high-amylose starch is synthesized. We therefore find no evidence for amylopectin-primed amylose synthesis in Arabidopsis. We propose that MOS are the primers for amylose synthesis in Arabidopsis leaves.  相似文献   

6.
Parenchyma cells from tubers of Solanum tuberosum L. convert several externally supplied sugars to starch but the rates vary largely. Conversion of glucose 1-phosphate to starch is exceptionally efficient. In this communication, tuber slices were incubated with either of four solutions containing equimolar [U-1?C]glucose 1-phosphate, [U-1?C]sucrose, [U-1?C]glucose 1-phosphate plus unlabelled equimolar sucrose or [U-1?C]sucrose plus unlabelled equimolar glucose 1-phosphate. C1?-incorporation into starch was monitored. In slices from freshly harvested tubers each unlabelled compound strongly enhanced 1?C incorporation into starch indicating closely interacting paths of starch biosynthesis. However, enhancement disappeared when the tubers were stored. The two paths (and, consequently, the mutual enhancement effect) differ in temperature dependence. At lower temperatures, the glucose 1-phosphate-dependent path is functional, reaching maximal activity at approximately 20 °C but the flux of the sucrose-dependent route strongly increases above 20 °C. Results are confirmed by in vitro experiments using [U-1?C]glucose 1-phosphate or adenosine-[U-1?C]glucose and by quantitative zymograms of starch synthase or phosphorylase activity. In mutants almost completely lacking the plastidial phosphorylase isozyme(s), the glucose 1-phosphate-dependent path is largely impeded. Irrespective of the size of the granules, glucose 1-phosphate-dependent incorporation per granule surface area is essentially equal. Furthermore, within the granules no preference of distinct glucosyl acceptor sites was detectable. Thus, the path is integrated into the entire granule biosynthesis. In vitro C1?C-incorporation into starch granules mediated by the recombinant plastidial phosphorylase isozyme clearly differed from the in situ results. Taken together, the data clearly demonstrate that two closely but flexibly interacting general paths of starch biosynthesis are functional in potato tuber cells.  相似文献   

7.
Starch synthesis and CO2 evolution were determined after incubating intact and lysed wheat (Triticum aestivum L. cv. Axona) endosperm amyloplasts with 14C-labelled hexose-phosphates. Amyloplasts converted [U-14C]glucose 1-phosphate (Glc1P) but not [U-14C]glucose 6-phosphate (Glc6P) into starch in the presence of ATP. When the oxidative pentose-phosphate pathway (OPPP) was stimulated, both [U-14C]Glc1P and [U-14C]Glc6P were metabolized to CO2, but Glc6P was the better precursor for the OPPP, and Glc1P-mediated starch synthesis was reduced by 75%. In order to understand the basis for the partitioning of carbon between the two potentially competing metabolic pathways, metabolite pools were measured in purified amyloplasts under conditions which promote both starch synthesis and carbohydrate oxidation via the OPPP. Amyloplasts incubated with Glc1P or Glc6P alone showed little or no interconversion of these hexose-phosphates inside the organelle. When amyloplasts were synthesizing starch, the stromal concentrations of Glc1P and ADP-glucose were high. By contrast, when flux through the OPPP was highest, Glc1P and ADP-glucose inside the organelle were undetectable, and there was an increase in metabolites involved in carbohydrate oxidation. Measurements of the plastidial hexose-monophosphate pool during starch synthesis and carbohydrate oxidation indicate that the phosphoglucose isomerase reaction is at equilibrium whereas the reaction catalysed by phosphoglucomutase is significantly displaced from equilibrium. Received: 29 March 1997 / Accepted: 5 June 1997  相似文献   

8.
Thom E  Neuhaus HE 《Plant physiology》1995,109(4):1421-1426
Recently, we demonstrated that intact chloroplasts isolated from green pepper (Capsicum annum L.) fruits use exogenous glucose-6-phosphate (Glc-6-P) as the most efficient precursor for starch biosynthesis (O. Batz, R. Scheibe, H.E. Neuhaus [1995] Planta 196: 50-57). Here we demonstrate that these chloroplasts transport this hexose phosphate in counter-exchange for orthophosphate. By measuring the release of 14CO2 from [1-14C]Glc-6-P, we show that isolated fruit chloroplasts also use exogenous Glc-6-P as a substrate for the oxidative pentose-phosphate pathway. The rate of decarboxylation appears to be linear with time and is significantly reduced in the presence of Triton X-100, indicating that the reaction is dependent on plastid integrity. Pyruvate has been identified as a positive effector for flux through the oxidative pentose-phosphate pathway. However, the highest rates of Glc-6-P-driven oxidative pentosephosphate pathway activity are achieved in the presence of nitrite, 2-oxoglutarate, and glutamine, indicating a strong interaction between nitrogen metabolism and this pathway. In addition, we show that carbohydrates liberated during starch mobilization are used as substrates for the oxidative pentose-phosphate pathway. Orthophosphate was found to act as an activator for the observed 14CO2 release from carbohydrates formerly bound as starch. In this context, we demonstrate that exogenous Glc-6-P competes with endogenous carbohydrates. A possible interaction between exogenous and endogenous carbohydrates is discussed with respect to altered levels of carbohydrates during fruit development.  相似文献   

9.
The aim of this work was to evaluate the extent to which plastidial phosphoglucomutase (PGM) activity controls starch synthesis within potato (Solanum tuberosum L. cv. Desirée) tubers. The reduction in the activity of plastidial PGM led to both a correlative reduction in starch accumulation and an increased sucrose accumulation. The control coefficient of plastidial PGM on the accumulation of starch was estimated to approximate 0.24. The fluxes of carbohydrate metabolism were measured by investigating the metabolism of [U-14C]glucose in tuber discs from wild-type and transgenic plants. In tuber discs the control coefficient of plastidial PGM over starch synthesis was estimated as 0.36, indicating that this enzyme exerts considerable control over starch synthesis within the potato tuber.  相似文献   

10.
In Vitro Biosynthesis of Phosphorylated Starch in Intact Potato Amyloplasts   总被引:4,自引:2,他引:2  
Intact amyloplasts from potato (Solanum tuberosum L.) were used to study starch biosynthesis and phosphorylation. Assessed by the degree of intactness and by the level of cytosolic and vacuolar contamination, the best preparations were selected by searching for amyloplasts containing small starch grains. The isolated, small amyloplasts were 80% intact and were free from cytosolic and vacuolar contamination. Biosynthetic studies of the amyloplasts showed that [1-14C]glucose-6-phosphate (Glc-6-P) was an efficient precursor for starch synthesis in a manner highly dependent on amyloplast integrity. Starch biosynthesis from [1-14C]Glc-1-P in small, intact amyloplasts was 5-fold lower and largely independent of amyloplast intactness. When [33P]Glc-6-P was administered to the amyloplasts, radiophosphorylated starch was produced. Isoamylase treatment of the starch followed by high-performance anion-exchange chromatography with pulsed amperometric detection revealed the separated phosphorylated α-glucans. Acid hydrolysis of the phosphorylated α-glucans and high-performance anion-exchange chromatography analyses showed that the incorporated phosphate was preferentially positioned at C-6 of the Glc moiety. The incorporation of radiolabel from Glc-1-P into starch in preparations of amyloplasts containing large grains was independent of intactness and most likely catalyzed by starch phosphorylase bound to naked starch grains.  相似文献   

11.
This paper addresses the controversial idea that ADPglucose pyrophosphorylase may be located in the cytosol in some non-photosynthetic plant organs. The intracellular location of the enzyme in developing barley endosperm has been investigated by isolation of intact amyloplasts. Amyloplast preparations contained 13–17% of the total endosperm activity of two plastidial marker enzymes, and less than 0.5% of the total endosperm activity of two cytosolic marker enzymes. Amyloplast preparations contained about 2.5% of the ADPglucose pyrophosphorylase activity, indicating that approximately 15% of the ADPglucose pyrophosphorylase activity in young endosperms is plastidial. Immunoblotting of gels of endosperm and amyloplast extracts also indicated that the enzyme is both inside and outside the amyloplast. Antibodies to the small subunits of the enzyme from barley and maize revealed two bands of protein of different sizes, one of which was located inside and the other outside the amyloplast. The plastidial protein was of the same size as a protein in the chloroplasts of barley leaves which was also recognized by these antibodies. It is suggested that the barley plant contains two distinct isoforms of ADPglucose pyrophosphorylase: one located in plastids (chloroplasts and amyloplasts) and the other in the cytosol of the endosperm. The role of the cytosolic ADPglucose pyrophosphorylase is unknown. Although it may contribute ADPglucose to starch synthesis, the total activity of ADPglucose pyrophosphorylase in the endosperm is far in excess of the rate of starch synthesis and the plastidial isoform is probably capable of catalysing the entire flux of carbon to starch.  相似文献   

12.
A sucrose glucosyltransferase GTF-I from cariogenic Streptococcus sobrinus transferred the uniformly 13C-labeled glucosyl residue ([U-(13)C]Glc) from [U-(13)C]sucrose to exogenous dextran T500 at the non-reducing-end, mostly by alpha-(1-->6) linkages and partially by alpha-(1-->3) linkages, as revealed by the 13C-(13)C NMR coupling pattern. With increasing amounts of [U-(13)C]sucrose, transfer of [U-(13)C]Glc to the alpha-(1-->3)-linked chain became predominant without increase in the number of chains. The transfer of [U-(13)C]Glc to an isomaltopentaose acceptor occurred similarly to its transfer to T500. alpha-(1-->3)-branches in the [U-(13)C]dextran, specifically synthesized from [U-(13)C]sucrose by a Streptococcus bovis dextransucrase, were not formed by GTF-I, as judged by the observation that a newly-formed alpha-1,3,6-branched [U-(13)C]Glc was not detected, which could have been formed by transferring the unlabeled Glc from sucrose to the internal alpha-(1-->6)-linked [U-(13)C]Glc at C-3. The 13C-(13)C one-bond coupling constants (1J) were also recorded for the C-1--C-6 bond of the internal alpha-(1-->6)-linked [U-(13)C]Glc and of the non-reducing-end [U-(13)C]Glc.  相似文献   

13.
Phosphorylation of the 64 kilodalton stromal phosphoprotein by incubation of pea (Pisum sativum) chloroplast extracts with [γ-32P]ATP decreased in the presence of Glc-6-P and Glc-1,6-P2, but was stimulated by glucose. Two-dimensional gel electrophoresis following incubation of intact chloroplasts and stromal extracts with [γ-32P]ATP, or incubation of stromal extracts and partially purified phosphoglucomutase (EC 2.7.5.1) with [32P]Glc-1-P showed that the identical 64 kilodalton polypeptide was labeled. A 62 kilodalton polypeptide was phosphorylated by incubation of tobacco (Nicotiana sylvestris) stromal extracts with either [γ-32P]ATP or [32P]Glc-1-P. In contrast, an analogous polypeptide was not phosphorylated in extracts from a tobacco mutant deficient in plastid phosphoglucomutase activity. The results indicate that the 64 (or 62) kilodalton chloroplast stromal phosphoprotein is phosphoglucomutase.  相似文献   

14.
The subcellular distribution of starch-related enzymes and the phenotype of Arabidopsis mutants defective in starch degradation suggest that the plastidial starch turnover is linked to a cytosolic glycan metabolism. In this communication, a soluble heteroglycan (SHG) from leaves of Pisum sativum L. has been studied. Major constituents of the SHG are galactose, arabinose and glucose. For subcellular location, the SHG was prepared from isolated protoplasts and chloroplasts. On a chlorophyll basis, protoplasts and chloroplasts yielded approximately 70% and less than 5%, respectively, of the amount of the leaf-derived SHG preparation. Thus, most of SHG resides inside the cell but outside the chloroplast. SHG is soluble and not membrane-associated. Using membrane filtration, the SHG was separated into a <10 kDa and a >10 kDa fraction. The latter was resolved into two subfractions (I and II) by field-flow fractionation. In the protoplast-derived >10 kDa SHG preparation the subfraction I was by far the most dominant compound. beta-Glucosyl Yariv reagent was reactive with subfraction II, but not with subfraction I. In in vitro assays the latter acted as glucosyl acceptor for the cytosolic (Pho 2) phosphorylase but not for rabbit muscle phosphorylase. Glycosidic linkage analyses of subfractions I and II and of the Yariv reagent reactive glycans revealed that all three glycans contain a high percentage of arabinogalactan-like linkages. However, SHG possesses a higher content of minor compounds, namely glucosyl, mannosyl, rhamnosyl and fucosyl residues. Based on glycosyl residues and glycosidic linkages, subfraction I possesses a more complex structure than subfraction II.  相似文献   

15.
The uptake in vitro of glucose (Glc)-6-phosphate (Glc-6-P) into plastids from the roots of 10- to 14-d-old pea (Pisum sativum L. cv Puget) plants was inhibited by oleoyl-coenzyme A (CoA) concentrations in the low micromolar range (1--2 microM). The IC(50) (the concentration of inhibitor that reduces enzyme activity by 50%) for the inhibition of Glc-6-P uptake was approximately 750 nM; inhibition was reversed by recombinant rapeseed (Brassica napus) acyl-CoA binding protein. In the presence of ATP (3 mM) and CoASH (coenzyme A; 0.3 mM), Glc-6-P uptake was inhibited by 60%, due to long-chain acyl-CoA synthesis, presumably from endogenous sources of fatty acids present in the preparations. Addition of oleoyl-CoA (1 microM) decreased carbon flux from Glc-6-P into the synthesis of starch and through the oxidative pentose phosphate (OPP) pathway by up to 73% and 40%, respectively. The incorporation of carbon from Glc-6-P into fatty acids was not detected under any conditions. Oleoyl-CoA inhibited the incorporation of acetate into fatty acids by 67%, a decrease similar to that when ATP was excluded from incubations. The oleoyl-CoA-dependent inhibition of fatty acid synthesis was attributable to a direct inhibition of the adenine nucleotide translocator by oleoyl-CoA, which indirectly reduced fatty acid synthesis by ATP deprivation. The Glc-6-P-dependent stimulation of acetate incorporation into fatty acids was reversed by the addition of oleoyl-CoA.  相似文献   

16.
Many environmental and experimental conditions lead to accumulation of carbohydrates in photosynthetic tissues. This situation is typically associated with major changes in the mRNA and protein complement of the cell, including metabolic repression of photosynthetic gene expression, which can be induced by feeding carbohydrates directly to leaves. In this study we examined the carbohydrate transport properties of chloroplasts isolated from spinach (Spinacia oleracea L.) leaves fed with glucose for several days. These chloroplasts contain large quantities of starch, can perform photosynthetic 3-phosphoglycerate reduction, and surprisingly also have the ability to perform starch synthesis from exogenous glucose-6-phosphate (Glc-6-P) both in the light and in darkness, similarly to heterotrophic plastids. Glucose-1-phosphate does not act as an exogenous precursor for starch synthesis. Light, ATP, and 3-phosphoglyceric acid stimulate Glc-6-P-dependent starch synthesis. Short-term uptake experiments indicate that a novel Glc-6-P-translocator capacity is present in the envelope membrane, exhibiting an apparent Km of 0.54 mM and a Vmax of 2.9 [mu]mol Glc-6-P mg-1 chlorophyll h-1. Similar results were obtained with chloroplasts isolated from glucose-fed potato leaves and from water-stressed spinach leaves. The generally held view that sugar phosphates transported by chloroplasts are confined to triose phosphates is not supported by these results. A physiological role for a Glc-6-P translocator in green plastids is presented with reference to the source/sink function of the leaf.  相似文献   

17.
In leaves of two starch-related single-knockout lines lacking either the cytosolic transglucosidase (also designated as disproportionating enzyme 2, DPE2) or the maltose transporter (MEX1), the activity of the plastidial phosphorylase isozyme (PHS1) is increased. In both mutants, metabolism of starch-derived maltose is impaired but inhibition is effective at different subcellular sites. Two constitutive double knockout mutants were generated (designated as dpe2-1 × phs1a and mex1 × phs1b) both lacking functional PHS1. They reveal that in normally grown plants, the plastidial phosphorylase isozyme participates in transitory starch degradation and that the central carbon metabolism is closely integrated into the entire cell biology. All plants were grown either under continuous illumination or in a light-dark regime. Both double mutants were compromised in growth and, compared with the single knockout plants, possess less average leaf starch when grown in a light-dark regime. Starch and chlorophyll contents decline with leaf age. As revealed by transmission electron microscopy, mesophyll cells degrade chloroplasts, but degradation is not observed in plants grown under continuous illumination. The two double mutants possess similar but not identical phenotypes. When grown in a light-dark regime, mesophyll chloroplasts of dpe2-1 × phs1a contain a single starch granule but under continuous illumination more granules per chloroplast are formed. The other double mutant synthesizes more granules under either growth condition. In continuous light, growth of both double mutants is similar to that of the parental single knockout lines. Metabolite profiles and oligoglucan patterns differ largely in the two double mutants.During the last two decades, biochemical analyses of starch metabolism in higher plants have been favored by the availability of large sets of insertion mutants deficient in a single starch-related gene product. Based on phenotypical characterization of these mutants followed by the identification of the respective locus in the genome, novel starch-related proteins were discovered that reside inside the plastid, in the cytosol, in the nucleus, and in the plastidial envelope membranes. Taken together, these results have largely altered the current view on starch metabolism (Zeeman et al., 2010; Fettke et al., 2012a; Smith, 2012).Despite this progress, phenotypical analyses of starch-related mutants are complex and, under certain circumstances, yield misleading conclusions. Loss of function of metabolic steps may cause the entire starch synthesizing or degrading process to become nonfunctional. In this case, mutants are expected to have starch levels that are significantly altered. If, however, single knockout mutants are capable of partially or fully compensating the loss of function by other routes, the resulting phenotypes are less obvious and more difficult to predict. Carbon fluxes through existing paths may be enhanced, or novel metabolic routes may be established that compensate the lost function. As an example, leaves of Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) mutants constitutively lacking the plastidial hexose-phosphate isomerase strongly express a distinct plastidial Glc-6-P/orthophosphate antiporter isoform that in wild-type plants is found only in heterotrophic tissues (Kunz et al., 2010). In mesophyll cells of the mutant, the reductive pentose phosphate cycle cannot drive assimilatory starch biosynthesis, as chloroplasts are unable to convert Fru-6-P to Glc-6-P. However, their capacity of transporting Glc-6-P between the cytosolic and the chloroplastic compartment is strongly increased. Furthermore, nonfunctionality of some starch-related proteins can lead to enlarged or diminished metabolite pools that via sensing processes, lead to cellular alterations distant from central carbon metabolism. This complexity is evidenced by several starch-related Arabidopsis mutants that possess a largely altered plastidial ultrastructure and exhibit premature degradation of the entire chloroplast (Stettler et al., 2009; Cho et al., 2011).Furthermore, several starch-related enzymes are capable of forming homomeric or heteromeric complexes that are functionally relevant but, to some extent, variable (Delatte et al., 2005; Utsumi and Nakamura, 2006; Kubo et al., 2010; Emes and Tetlow, 2012; Nakamura et al., 2012; Streb et al., 2012).In starch or glycogen storing prokaryotic and eukaryotic cells, α-glucan phosphorylase (EC 2.4.1.1) is common. Initially, this enzyme was considered to be the main starch synthesizing activity (Hanes, 1940). Later, both starch and glycogen synthases have been discovered that utilize either ADPglucose or UDPglucose (or both; Deschamps et al., 2006) as hexosyl donor. Ample evidence has been presented that these enzymes are essential biosynthetic enzymes (Ballicora et al., 2003; Zeeman et al., 2010; Roach et al., 2012; Palm et al., 2013). Furthermore, it is widely accepted that in glycogen-storing cells, phosphorylase is indispensible for the degradation of the storage polysaccharide (Hwang et al., 1989; Alonso-Casajús et al., 2006; Wilson et al., 2010; Roach et al., 2012; Gazzerro et al., 2013).In plant cells, the metabolic function of phosphorylase is more complex and far from being clear. In lower and higher plants, two distinct phosphorylase types exist as plastid- and cytosol-specific isozymes and are designated as Pho1 (or, in Arabidopsis, PHS1) and Pho2 (PHS2), respectively. Based on the large differences in the affinities for glycogen, the plastidial and the cytosolic phosphorylases are also named as low-affinity (L-type) and high-affinity (H-type) isozymes, respectively. As starch is restricted to the plastids, only the Pho1 (PHS1) type appears to possess direct access to native starch and/or plastidial starch-derived α-glucans.Conflicting phenotypical features have been reported for several mutants possessing altered levels of the plastidial phosphorylase isozyme(s). In the starch-related mutant4 of the unicellular green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii, the lack of one plastidial Pho1 isozyme (designated as PhoB) was associated with a lower cellular starch content, abnormally shaped granules, a modified amylopectin structure, and an elevated amylose-to-amylopectin ratio when the cells were kept under nitrogen limitation (Dauvillée et al., 2006). These phenotypical features suggest an involvement of the plastidial phosphorylase PhoB in the biosynthesis of a storage polysaccharide resembling the reserve starch of higher plants. Similarly, a rapid incorporation of 14C into starch was observed when tuber discs from various transgenic potato lines were incubated with [U-14C]Glc-1-P. The rate of starch labeling was found to reflect the activity of the plastidial phosphorylase isozyme Pho1 (Fettke et al., 2010, 2012b). By contrast, transgenic potato (Solanum tuberosum) lines have been generated that due to expression of an antisense construct, possess a largely diminished total Pho1 activity in leaves. Leaf starch content is essentially unchanged compared with that of the wild-type plants, suggesting that under normal growth conditions, the plastidial phosphorylase is not necessarily involved in starch metabolism or, alternatively, can easily be replaced by other enzymes (Sonnewald et al., 1995). Likewise, the phenotype (including leaf starch content) of an Arabidopsis mutant lacking functional PHS1 has been reported not to differ from the wild type when the plants were grown under normal conditions. However, under water stress conditions, significantly more local leaf lesions have been reported to occur (Zeeman et al., 2004).When leaf discs from bean (Phaseolus vulgaris) or Arabidopsis plants were exposed to conditions favoring photorespiration (i.e. an atmosphere consisting of 30% [v/v] O2 and 70% [v/v] N2 but lacking CO2), transitory starch was degraded in the light at a high rate and the plastidial Glc-6-P pool increased. In Arabidopsis mutants deficient in PHS1, the Glc monophosphate pool did not respond to photorespiratory conditions (Weise et al., 2006). These data lead to the conclusion that in illuminated leaves with very high rates of photorespiration, PHS1 is involved in the conversion of starch to Glc monophosphates but does not to participate in the nocturnal starch degradation.When studying several starch-related Arabidopsis mutants, we noticed that two single knockout mutations that both affect the maltose metabolism but differ in the subcellular location of the target protein possess a significantly increased PHS1 activity (Malinova et al., 2011a, 2011b). One mutant constitutively lacks the functional cytosolic transglucosidase (also designated as disproportionating enzyme2; DPE2) and, therefore, the cytosolic route of starch-derived maltose metabolism is impaired (Chia et al., 2004; Lu and Sharkey, 2004). The other mutant does not express the plastidial maltose transporter MEX1, resulting in a massively enlarged maltose pool (Niittylä et al., 2004). Thus, in the two mutants, the metabolism of starch-derived maltose is blocked at different subcellular sites, i.e. the cytosol and the chloroplast. The enhanced PHS1 activity as observed for the two mutants is difficult to explain unless a more general function of the phosphorylase isozyme in starch metabolism is assumed.For a detailed functional analysis of PHS1-related processes, we generated two types of constitutive PHS1-deficient double knockout mutants (DPE2 plus PHS1 or MEX1 plus PHS1) and studied their phenotypes in more detail under various experimental conditions. Shoot growth and leaf chlorophyll content are reduced when the plants are grown under a light-dark regime, but under continuous illumination, both effects are far less pronounced. Based on these data, we propose that the plastidial phosphorylase participates in both the turnover of transitory starch and in the maintenance of intact chloroplasts.  相似文献   

18.
Plastidial phosphoglucomutase (PGM) plays an important role in starch synthesis and degradation. Nonetheless, the impact of enhanced plastidial PGM activity on metabolism in photosynthetic tissue is yet to be elucidated. In this study, we generated transplastomic tobacco plants overproducing Arabidopsis thaliana plastidial PGM (AtptPGM) in chloroplasts and analyzed the consequent metabolic and physiological parameters in the transplastomic plants. AtptPGM accumulated in the chloroplasts to up to 16% of total soluble protein in the leaves. PGM activity in leaves increased 100-fold relative to that of wild-type plants. The transplastomic plants were phenotypically indistinguishable in their growth rates, photosynthetic activities, and starch synthesis from wild-type plants, but hexose partitioning in the light period was dramatically different. Furthermore, alteration of extracellular invertase activity was observed in the lower leaves of the transplastomic plants. These observations suggest that high-level expression of plastidial PGM alters hexose partitioning in light periods via modification of extracellular invertase activity.  相似文献   

19.
Glucose 1,6-bisphosphate (Glc-1,6-P(2)) concentration in brain is much higher than what is required for the functioning of phosphoglucomutase, suggesting that this compound has a role other than as a cofactor of phosphomutases. In cell-free systems, Glc-1,6-P(2) is formed from 1,3-bisphosphoglycerate and Glc-6-P by two related enzymes: PGM2L1 (phosphoglucomutase 2-like 1) and, to a lesser extent, PGM2 (phosphoglucomutase 2). It is hydrolyzed by the IMP-stimulated brain Glc-1,6-bisphosphatase of still unknown identity. Our aim was to test whether Glc-1,6-bisphosphatase corresponds to the phosphomannomutase PMM1, an enzyme of mysterious physiological function sharing several properties with Glc-1,6-bisphosphatase. We show that IMP, but not other nucleotides, stimulated by >100-fold (K(a) approximately 20 mum) the intrinsic Glc-1,6-bisphosphatase activity of recombinant PMM1 while inhibiting its phosphoglucomutase activity. No such effects were observed with PMM2, an enzyme paralogous to PMM1 that physiologically acts as a phosphomannomutase in mammals. Transfection of HEK293T cells with PGM2L1, but not the related enzyme PGM2, caused an approximately 20-fold increase in the concentration of Glc-1,6-P(2). Transfection with PMM1 caused a profound decrease (>5-fold) in Glc-1,6-P(2) in cells that were or were not cotransfected with PGM2L1. Furthermore, the concentration of Glc-1,6-P(2) in wild-type mouse brain decreased with time after ischemia, whereas it did not change in PMM1-deficient mouse brain. Taken together, these data show that PMM1 corresponds to the IMP-stimulated Glc-1,6-bisphosphatase and that this enzyme is responsible for the degradation of Glc-1,6-P(2) in brain. In addition, the role of PGM2L1 as the enzyme responsible for the synthesis of the elevated concentrations of Glc-1,6-P(2) in brain is established.  相似文献   

20.
1. The level of glucose-1,6-diphosphate (Glc-1,6-P2), the powerful regulator of carbohydrate metabolism, was found to be strikingly decreased in brains of adult rats (5 months of age) as compared to young (10-14 days of age). 2. This age-related decrease in Glc-1,6-P2, the potent inhibitor of hexokinase and activator of phosphoglucomutase, was accompanied by a correlated increase in the activity of hexokinase and a reduction in phosphoglucomutase. 3. Evidence is provided showing that Glc-1,6-P2 participates in the regulation of these enzymes' activities with age. 4. The age-related changes in Glc-1,6-P2 and in the enzymes' activities in brain were opposite to those which we previously found in skeletal muscle. 5. These results suggest that Glc-1,6-P2 is involved in the regulation of carbohydrate metabolism during growth in both brain and muscle, as well as in the interrelationship between these two tissues.  相似文献   

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