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1.
Temperature caused phenomenal modulation of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase (PEPC, EC 4.1.1.31) in leaf discs of Amaranthus hypochondriacus (NAD-ME type C(4) species), compared to the pattern in Pisum sativum (a C(3) plant). The optimal incubation temperature for PEPC in A. hypochondriacus (C(4)) was 45 degrees C compared to 30 degrees C in P. sativum (C(3)). A. hypochondriacus (C(4)) lost nearly 70% of PEPC activity on exposure to a low temperature of 15 degrees C, compared to only about a 35% loss in the case of P. sativum (C(3)). Thus, the C(4) enzyme was less sensitive to supra-optimal temperature and more sensitive to sub-optimal temperature than that of the C(3) species. As the temperature was raised from 15 degrees C to 50 degrees C, there was a sharp decrease in malate sensitivity of PEPC. The extent of such a decrease in C(4) plants (45%) was more than that in C(3) species (30%). The maintenance of high enzyme activity at warm temperatures, together with a sharp decrease in the malate sensitivity of PEPC was also noticed in other C(4) plants. The temperature-induced changes in PEPC of both A. hypochondriacus (C(4)) and P. sativum (C(3)) were reversible to a large extent. There was no difference in the extent of phosphorylation of PEPC in leaves of A. hypochondriacus on exposure to varying temperatures, unlike the marked increase in the phosphorylation of enzyme on illumination of the leaves. These results demonstrate that (i) there are marked differences in the temperature sensitivity of PEPC in C(3) and C(4) plants, (ii) the temperature induced changes are reversible, and (iii) these changes are not related to the phosphorylation state of the enzyme. The inclusion of PEG-6000, during the assay, dampened the modulation by temperature of malate sensitivity of PEPC in A. hypochondriacus. It is suggested that the variation in temperature may cause significant conformational changes in C(4)-PEPC.  相似文献   

2.
The maximum catalytic activities of several photorespiratoryand photosynthetic enzymes were determined in leaf extractsof three C3–C4 intermediates (Alternanthera ficoides,A. tenella and Parthenium hysterophorus) and were compared tothose of C3 (A. sessiles, Pisum sativum) and C4 (A. pungens,Zea mays and Amaranthus hypochondriacus) species. The activitylevels of key photorespiratory enzymes, glycolate oxidase, catalase,NADH-hydroxypyruvate reductase and glycerate kinase were less(28 to 35% reduced) in intermediates than those of typical C3species. Similarly, the activities of photorespiratory aminotransferasesin the C3–C4 intermediates were also partially reduced(23 to 37% reduction). The activities of phosphoenolpyruvatecarboxylase (PEPC), pyruvate, orthophosphate dikinase and NAD-malicenzyme were higher (2 to 7 times) in leaf extracts of the intermediatesthan those of C3 species. But the ratios of PEPC/rubisco inthe C3–C4 intermediates were more like C3 than C4 species.We draw attention to the partial reduction in enzyme activityof photorespiratory metabolism, which could be an importantfactor for restriction of photorespiration in the C3–C4intermediate species, in addition to enzyme compartmentationand/or operation of a ‘C4-like’ cycle Key words: C3–C4 intermediates, C4 pathway, enzyme profile, glycolate metabolism, photorespiration, photosynthesis  相似文献   

3.
Zervoudakis  G.  Angelopoulos  K.  Salahas  G.  Georgiou  C. D. 《Photosynthetica》1998,35(2):169-175
Among various C4 plants we found a wide range in the level of inactivation of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase (PEPC) at low temperature (0 °C). The activity of the 2-fold diluted enzyme in crude leaf extracts after 60 min incubation (compared to zero time incubation) at pH 7.5, remained above 87 % at low temperatures for the species Setaria verticillata, Portulaca oleracea, and Saccharum officinarum, and between 11 and 17 % in the species Cynodon dactylon and Atriplex halimus. The enzyme exhibited intermediate levels of inactivation (42 to 58 %) for the species Amaranthus sp., Zea mays, Salsola kali, and Digitaria sanguinalis. The enzyme activity for S. verticillata was unaffected between pH 5.7 and 8.4 during incubation at room and low temperatures. Under similar conditions, the activity of the enzyme from C. dactylon was stable between pH 5.7 and 7.0 and decreased at pH above 7.0, but for Z. mays it was enhanced between pH 5.7 and 6.8 and decreased at pH above 7.0.  相似文献   

4.
When leaf discs of a C4 species, Alternanthera pungens (L.) H.B. and K. or Amaranthus hypochondriacus L., were preincubated in 7.5 m M NH4Cl, the pH of the cell sap increased by nearly 0.3 unit, while the activity of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase (PEPC) about doubled compared to the cell sap from control leaf discs (preincubated in 5 m M Tricine‐KOH, pH 8.5). The sensitivity of PEPC to L ‐malate (a feedback inhibitor) decreased marginally as a result of cytosolic alkalization. The pH of the cell sap and PEPC activity decreased by nearly 0.4 unit and 50%, respectively, when leaf discs were incubated in weak organic acids such as propionic, butyric or salicylic acid. Thus, our results demonstrate a marked modulation in vivo of cell sap pH and PEPC activity in leaf discs from C4 plants by external alkalizing or acidifying reagents. The rise in PEPC activity due to alkalization of leaf discs was not sensitive to cycloheximide, implying that cytosolic protein synthesis was not involved in the activation of PEPC. Despite the marked increase in the PEPC activity due to the base‐loading of leaf discs, the change in malate sensitivity of the enzyme was only marginal, indicating that there was no significant increase in the extent of PEPC‐phosphorylation. Besides the physiological significance, the technique of acid/ base‐loading may be an important tool for studying the regulation of PEPC in leaf discs of C4 species, since the activity of PEPC could be enhanced apparently without phosphorylation of the enzyme.  相似文献   

5.
The effect of Pi on the properties of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase (PEPC) from Amaranthus hypochondriacus, a NAD-ME type C4 plant, was studied in leaf extracts as well as with purified protein. Efforts were also made to modulate the Pi status of the leaf by feeding leaves with either Pi or mannose. Inclusion of 30 mM Pi during the assay enhanced the enzyme activity in leaf extracts or of purified protein by >2-fold. The effect of Pi on the enzyme purified from dark-adapted leaves was more pronounced than that from light-adapted ones. The Ki for malate increased >2.3-fold and >1.9-fold by Pi in the enzyme purified from dark-adapted leaves and light-adapted leaves, respectively. Pi also induced an almost 50-60% increase in Km for PEP or Ka for glucose-6-phosphate. Feeding the leaves with Pi also increased the activity of PEPC in leaf extracts, while decreasing the malate sensitivity of the enzyme. On the other hand, Pi sequestering by mannose marginally decreased the activity, while markedly suppressing the light activation, of PEPC. There was no change in phosphorylation of PEPC in leaves of A. hypochondriacus due to the feeding of 30 mM Pi. However, feeding with mannose decreased the light-enhanced phosphorylation of PEPC. The marked decrease in malate sensitivity of PEPC with no change in phosphorylation state indicates that the changes induced by Pi are independent of the phosphorylation of PEPC. It is suggested here that Pi is an important factor in regulating PEPC in vivo and could also be used as a tool to analyse the properties of PEPC.  相似文献   

6.
Evolution of C4 phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase   总被引:8,自引:0,他引:8  
C4 plants are known to be of polyphyletic origin and to have evolved independently several times during the evolution of angiosperms. This implies that the C4 isoform of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase (PEPC) originated from a nonphotosynthetic PEPC gene that was already present in the C3 ancestral species. To meet the special requirements of the C4 photosynthetic pathway the expression program of the C4 PEPC gene had to be changed to achieve a strong and selective expression in leaf mesophyll cells. In addition, the altered metabolite concentrations around C4 PEPC in the mesophyll cytoplasm necessitated changes in the enzyme's kinetic and regulatory properties. To obtain insight into the evolutionary steps involved in these altered enzyme characteristics, and even the order of these steps, the dicot genus Flaveria (Asteraceae) appears to be the experimental system of choice. Flaveria contains closely related C3, C3-C4, and C4 species that can be ordered by their gradual increase in C4 photosynthetic traits. The C4 PEPC of F. trinervia, which is encoded by the ppcA gene class, possesses typical kinetic and regulatory features of a C4-type PEPC. Its nearest neighbor is the orthologous ppcA gene of the C3 species F. pringlei. This latter gene encodes a typical nonphotosynthetic C3-type PEPC which is believed to be similar to the C3 ancestral PEPC. This pair of orthologous PEPCs has been used to map C4-specific molecular determinants for the kinetic and regulatory characteristics of C4 PEPCs. The most notable finding from these investigations was the identification of a C4 PEPC invariant site-specific mutation from alanine (C3) to serine (C4) at position 774 that was a necessary and late step in the evolution of C3 to C4 PEPC. The C3-C4 intermediate ppcA PEPCs are used to identify the sequence of events leading from a C3- to a C4-type PEPC.  相似文献   

7.
Illumination increased markedly the affinity to bicarbonate of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase (PEPC; EC 4.1.1.31) in leaves of Amaranthus hypochondriacus L., a C4 plant. When leaves were illuminated, the apparent Km for (HCO3-) of PEPC decreased by about 50% concurrent with a 2- to 5-fold increase in Vmax and 3- to 4-fold increase in Ki for malate. The inclusion of ethoxyzolamide, an inhibitor of carbonic anhydrase, during the assay had no effect on kinetic and regulatory properties of PEPC indicating that carbonic anhydrase was not involved during light-induced sensitization of PEPC to HCO3-. Pretreatment of leaf discs with cycloheximide (CHX), a cytosolic protein synthesis inhibitor, suppressed significantly the light-enhanced decrease in apparent Km (HCO3-). Further, in vitro phosphorylation of purified dark-form PEPC by protein kinase A (PKA) decreased the apparent Km (HCO3-) of the enzyme, in addition increasing Ki (malate) as expected. Such changes, due to in vitro phosphorylation of purified PEPC by PKA, occurred only with wild-type PEPC, but not in the mutant form of maize (S15D) which is already a mimic of the phosphorylated enzyme. These results suggest that phosphorylation of the enzyme is important during the sensitization of PEPC to HCO3- by illumination in C4 leaves. Since illumination is expected to increase the cytosolic pH and the availability of dissolved HCO3- in mesophyll cells, the sensitization by light of PEPC to HCO3- could be physiologically quite significant.  相似文献   

8.
9.
Plants of six weedy species (Amaranthus retroflexus, Echinochloa crus-galli, Panicum dichotomiflorum, Setaria faberi, Setaria viridis, Sorghum halapense) and 4 crop species (Amaranthus hypochondriacus, Saccharum officinarum, Sorghum bicolor and Zea mays) possessing the C4type of photosynthesis were grown at ambient (38 Pa) and elevated (69 Pa) carbon dioxide during early development (i.e. up to 60 days after sowing) to determine: (a) if plants possessing the C4photosynthetic pathway could respond photosynthetically or in biomass production to future increases in global carbon dioxide and (b) whether differences exist between weeds and crops in the degree of response. Based on observations in the response of photosynthesis (measured as A, CO2assimilation rate) to the growth CO2condition as well as to a range of internal CO2(Ci) concentrations, eight of ten C4species showed a significant increase in photosynthesis. The largest and smallest increases observed were for A. retroflexus (+30%) and Z. mays (+5%), respectively. Weed species (+19%) showed approximately twice the degree of photosynthetic stimulation as that of crop species (+10%) at the higher CO2concentration. Elevated carbon dioxide also resulted in significant increases in whole plant biomass for four C4weeds (A. retroflexus, E. crus-galli, P. dichotomiflorum, S. viridis) relative to the ambient CO2condition. Leaf water potentials for three selected species (A. retroflexus, A. hypochondriacus, Z. mays) indicated that differences in photosynthetic stimulation were not due solely to improved leaf water status. Data from this study indicate that C4plants may respond directly to increasing CO2concentration, and in the case of some C4weeds (e.g. A. retroflexus) may show photosynthetic increases similar to those published for C3species.  相似文献   

10.
Photosynthetica - Phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase (PEPC) was purified from leaves of four species of Alternanthera differing in their photosynthetic carbon metabolism: Alternanthera sessilis (C3),...  相似文献   

11.
C4 leaf phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase (PEPC; EC 4.1.1.31) is subject to a day/night regulatory phosphorylation cycle. By using the cytoplasmic protein synthesis inhibitor cycloheximide (CHX), we previously reported that the reversible in vivo light activation of the C4 PEPC protein-serine kinase requires protein synthesis. In the present leaf gas-exchange study, we have examined how and to what extent the CHX-induced inhibition of PEPC protein kinase activity/PEPC phosphorylation in the light influences C4 photosynthesis. Detached Sorghum vulgare and maize (Zea mays) leaves fed 10 [mu]M CHX showed a gradual but marked decrease in photosynthetic CO2 assimilation capacity. A series of control experiments designed to assess deleterious secondary effects of the inhibitor established that this reduction in C4 leaf CO2 assimilation was not due to (a) an increased stomatal resistance to CO2 diffusion, (b) a decrease in the activation state of other photoactivated C4 cycle enzymes, and (c) a perturbation of the Benson-Calvin C3 cycle, as evidenced by the absence of an inhibitory effect of CHX on leaf photosynthesis by a C3 grass (Triticum aestivum). It is notable that the CHX-induced decrease in CO2 assimilation by illuminated Sorghum leaves was highly correlated with a decrease in the apparent phosphorylation status of PEPC and a concomitant change in carbon isotope discrimination consistent with a shift from a C4 to a C3 mode of leaf CO2 fixation. These collective findings indicate that the light-dependent activation of the PEPC protein-serine kinase and the resulting phosphorylation of serine-8 or serine-15 in Sorghum or maize PEPC, respectively, are fundamental regulatory events that influence leaf C4 photosynthesis in vivo.  相似文献   

12.
This article reports marked modulation of the activity and regulatory properties of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase (PEPC) by temperature and light in leaf discs as well as leaves of Amaranthus hypochondriacus. The activity of PEPC increased by 1.7-fold at 45 degrees C over 25 degrees C. Warm temperature also stimulated the photoactivation of PEPC. The activation by light of PEPC was 1.9-fold at 25 degrees C and increased to 2.2-fold at 45 degrees C. The sensitivity of PEPC to its inhibitor malate was less and the activation by glucose-6-phosphate (G-6-P) or inorganic phosphate (Pi) was more at 45 degrees C than that at 25 degrees C. These effects of temperature were quite pronounced in light. Similar responses were observed when detached leaves were exposed to varying ambient temperature (dry heat). The activity of PEPC increased by 1.6-fold at 45 degrees C over 25 degrees C in the dark. The activation of PEPC by light was 2.1-fold at 25 degrees C and increased to 2.6-fold at 45 degrees C. Inhibition by malate was less and activation by G-6-P or Pi was more at 45 degrees C than that at 25 degrees C. Thus, there was a marked modulation of not only the activity but also the regulatory properties of the enzyme by temperature and light, independently as well as cooperatively with each other. Further experiments suggested that PEPC was able to memorize to a significant extent the changes induced by warm temperature and that these changes were complemented by subsequent illumination. These effects were not due to changes in PEPC protein levels. We conclude that temperature and light can modulate PEPC activity and regulatory properties not only individually but also in a significantly cooperative manner with each other. As significant increases in temperature are common during daytime in tropical or subtropical conditions, we suggest that the synergistic effects of temperature and light are quite relevant in optimizing the activity of PEPC in leaves of C(4) plants.  相似文献   

13.
Phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase (PEPC) was purified from leaves of four species of Alternanthera differing in their photosynthetic carbon metabolism: Alternanthera sessilis (C3), A. pungens (C4), A. ficoides and A. tenella (C3-C4 intermediates or C3-C4). The activity and properties of PEPC were examined at limiting (0.05 mM) or saturating (10 mM) bicarbonate concentrations. The Vmax as well as Km values (for Mg2+ or PEP) of PEPC from A. ficoides and A. tenella (C3-C4 intermediates) were in between those of C3 (A. sessilis) and C4 species (A. pungens). Similarly, the sensitivity of PEPC to malate (an inhibitor) or G-6-P (an activator) of A. ficoides and A. tenella (C3-C4) was also of intermediate status between those of C3 and C4 species of A. sessilis and A. pungens, respectively. In all the four species, the maximal activity (Vmax), affinity for PEP (Km), and the sensitivity to malate (KI) or G-6-P (KA) of PEPC were higher at 10 mM bicarbonate than at 0.05 mM bicarbonate. Again, the sensitivity to bicarbonate of PEPC from C3-C4 intermediates was in between those of C3- and C4-species. Thus the characteristics of PEPC of C3-C4 intermediate species of Alternanthera are intermediate between C3- and C4-type, in both their kinetic and regulatory properties. Bicarbonate could be an important modulator of PEPC, particularly in C4 plants. This revised version was published online in August 2006 with corrections to the Cover Date.  相似文献   

14.
The rate and extent of light activation of PEPC may be used as another criterion to distinguish C3 and C4 plants. Light stimulated phosphoenolypyruvate carboxylase (PEPC) in leaf discs of C4 plants, the activity being three times greater than that in the dark but stimulation of PEPC was limited about 30% over the dark-control in C3 species. The light activation of PEPC in leaves of C3 plants was complete within 10 min, while maximum activation in C4 plants required illumination for more than 20 min, indicating that the relative pace of PEPC activation was slower in C4 plants than in C3 plants. Similarly, the dark-deactivation of the enzyme was also slower in leaves of C4 than in C3 species. The extent of PEPC stimulation in the alkaline pH range indicated that the dark-adapted form of the C4 enzyme is very sensitive to changes in pH. The pH of cytosol-enriched cell sap extracted from illuminated leaves of C4 plants was more alkaline than that of dark-adapted leaves. The extent of such light-dependent alkalization of cell sap was three times higher in C4 leaves than in C3 plants. The course of light-induced alkalization and dark-acidification of cytosol-enriched cell sap was markedly similar to the pattern of light activation and dark-deactivation of PEPC in Alternanthera pungens, a C4 plant. Our report provides preliminary evidence that the photoactivation of PEPC in C4 plants may be mediated at least partially by the modulation of cytosolic pH.Abbreviations CAM Crassulacean acid metabolism - G-6-P glucose-6-phosphate - PMSF phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride - PEPC phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase - PEPC-PK phosphoenolpyruvate ca carboxylase-protein kinase  相似文献   

15.
Young plants of Panicum bisulcatum (C(3)), Zuloagaea bulbosa [NADP-malic enzyme (ME)-C(4)], P. miliaceum (NAD-ME-C(4)) and Urochloa maxima [phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase (PCK)-C(4)] were subjected to drought stress (DS) in soil for 6?days. The C(3) species showed severe wilting symptoms at higher soil water potential (-1.1?MPa) and relative leaf water content (77?%) than in the case of the C(4) species (-1.5 to -1.7?MPa; 58-64?%). DS decreased photosynthesis, both under atmospheric and under saturating CO(2). Stomatal limitation of net photosynthesis (P (N)) in the C(3), but not in the C(4) species was indicated by P (N)/C (o) curves. Chlorophyll fluorescence of photosystem II, resulting from different cell types in the four species, indicated NADPH accumulation and non-stomatal limitation of photosynthesis in all four species, even under high CO(2). In the NAD-ME-C(4) and the PCK-C(4) species, DS plants showed increased violaxanthin de-epoxidase rates. Biochemical analyses of carboxylating enzymes and in vitro enzyme activities of the C(4) enzymes identified the most likely non-stomatal limiting steps of photosynthesis. In P. bisulcatum, declining RubisCO content and activity would explain the findings. In Z. bulbosa, all photosynthesis enzymes declined significantly; photosynthesis is probably limited by the turnover rate of the PEPC reaction. In P. miliaceum, all enzyme levels remained fairly constant under DS, but photosynthesis can be limited by feedback inhibition of the Calvin cycle, resulting in asp inhibition of PEPC. In U. maxima, declines of in vivo PEPC activity and feedback inhibition of the Calvin cycle are the main candidates for non-stomatal limitation of photosynthesis under DS.  相似文献   

16.
Maize (Zea mays L. cv Golden Cross Bantam T51) seedlings were grown under full sunlight or 50% sunlight in a temperature-controlled glasshouse at the temperatures of near optimum (30/25°C) and suboptimum (17/13°C) with seven levels of nitrate-N (0.4 to 12 millimolars). The contents of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase (PEPC), pyruvate orthophosphate dikinase (PPD), and ribulose-1,5-P2 carboxylase/oxygenase (RuBisCO) were immunochemically determined for each treatment with rabbit antibodies raised against the respective maize leaf proteins (anti-PEPC and anti-PPD) or spinach leaf protein (anti-RuBisCO). The content of each enzymic protein increased with increasing N and raised under reduced temperature. The positive effect of light intensity on their contents was evident only at near optimal temperature. The relative increase in PEPC and PPD content with increasing N was significantly greater than that of RuBisCO irrespective of growth conditions. These enzymic proteins comprised about 8, 6, and 35% of total soluble protein, respectively, at near optimal growth condition. In contrast to significant increase in the proportion of soluble protein allocated to PEPC and PPD seen under certain conditions, the proportion allocated to RuBisCO decreased reciprocally with an increased biomass yield by N supply.

These results indicated that the levels of PEPC and PPD parallel to maize biomass more tightly than that of RuBisCO at least under near optimal growth condition.

  相似文献   

17.
Dong L  Ermolova NV  Chollet R 《Planta》2001,213(3):379-389
The activity and allosteric properties of plant phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase (PEPC; EC 4.1.1.31) are controlled posttranslationally by specific reversible phosphorylation of a strictly conserved serine residue near the N-terminus. This up/down-regulation of PEPC is catalyzed by a dedicated and highly regulated serine/threonine (Ser/Thr) kinase (PEPC-kinase) and an opposing type-2A Ser/Thr phosphatase (PP2A). In marked contrast to PEPC-kinase, the PP2A holoenzyme from photosynthetic tissue has been virtually unstudied to date. In the present investigation, we have partially purified and characterized the native form of this PP2A from illuminated leaves of maize (Zea mays L.), a C4 plant, using maize [32P]PEPC as substrate. Various conventional chromatographic matrices, together with thiophosphorylated C4 PEPC-peptide and microcystin-LR affinity-supports, were exploited for the enrichment of this PP2A from soluble leaf extracts. Biochemical and immunological results indicate that the C4-leaf holoenzyme is analogous to other eukaryotic PP2As in being a approximately 170-kDa heteromer comprised of a core PP2Ac-A heterodimer (approximately 38- and approximately 65-kDa subunits, respectively) complexed with a putative, approximately 74-kDa B-type regulatory/targeting subunit. This heterotrimer lacks any strict substrate specificity in that it dephosphorylates C4 PEPC, mammalian phosphorylase a, and casein in vitro. This activity is independent of free Me2+, insensitive to levamisole and the Inhibitor-2 protein that targets PP1, activated by several polycations such as protamine and poly-L-lysine, and highly sensitive to inhibition by microcystin-LR and okadaic acid (IC50 approximately 30 pM), all of which are diagnostic features of yeast and mammalian PP2As. In addition, this C4-leaf PP2A holoenzyme (i) is inhibited in vitro by physiological concentrations of certain C4 PEPC-related metabolites (L-malate, PEP, glucose 6-phosphate, but not the activator glycine) when either 32P-labeled maize PEPC or rabbit muscle phosphorylase a is used as substrate, suggesting a direct effect on this Ser/Thr phosphatase; and (ii) displays, at best, only modest light/dark effects in vivo on its apparent molecular mass, component core subunits and activity against C4 PEPC, in marked contrast to the opposing activity of PEPC-kinase in C4 and Crassulacean acid metabolism leaves. This report represents one of the few studies of a heteromeric PP2A holoenzyme from photosynthetic tissue that dephosphorylates a known target enzyme in plants, such as PEPC, sucrose-phosphate synthase or nitrate reductase.  相似文献   

18.
Seeds from the C(4) plant Amaranthus edulis were studied as part of the characterisation of a mutant (designated LaC(4) 2.16), which contains reduced amounts (5% of wild type) of the photosynthetic leaf form of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase (PEPC). On a per seed basis, the amount of PEPC activity was not significantly altered, while the weight and protein content of the mutant seeds were 34% lower than that of the wild type. Western gel blot analysis detected two PEPC polypeptides with molecular masses of 105 kDa (minor) and 100 kDa (major). The determination of in vitro phosphorylation in reconstituted assays revealed the presence of both calcium-dependent and calcium-independent PEPC-kinase activities in protein extracts of wild-type and mutant seeds. However, PEPC proteins were phosphorylated in dry seeds, and PEPC phosphorylation did not occur in vivo during seed imbibition in the presence of (32) P-phosphate. In contrast, (32) P-phosphate was incorporated into a range of proteins in wild-type seeds, but not in mutant seeds. In addition, ATP content was much reduced in germinating mutant seeds and this did not increase following the supply of phosphate. Collectively, these data suggest that the deficiency in C(4) PEPC in mutant A. edulis leaves has no effect on C(3) -type PEPC content and phosphorylation state in seeds, but causes impairment of energy production, thereby accounting for the reduced germination of the mutant.  相似文献   

19.
Carbonic anhydrase (CA) was purified to homogeneity from maizeleaves, and antibodies to the purified protein raised usingrabbits. Western blot analyses using antibodies to the purifiedmaize leaf CA indicated cross-reactivity with leaf extractsfrom a variety of C3 and C4 monocotyledonous and dicotyledonousplants. However maize leaf CA antibodies quantitatively titratedCA activity only in leaf extracts of maize and sorghum. Pretitrationof crude leaf extracts with maize CA antibodies and activitymeasurements, together with Western blot analyses of the resultantsamples, indicated that there are isozymic forms of CA in plantleaf tissues in both C3 and C4 plants which are similar in sizebut which differ antigenically from the maize leaf CA. (Received September 7, 1989; Accepted February 23, 1990)  相似文献   

20.
Feeding K+ or Na+ nitrate salts in vivo enhanced the activity of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase (PEPC) in the leaf extracts of Alternanthera pungens (C4 plant) and A. sessilis (C3 species). The increase was more pronounced in A. pungens than in A. sessilis. Chloride salts increased the PEPC activity only marginally. However, the sulfate salts were either not effective or inhibitory. Feeding nitrate modulated the regulatory properties of PEPC in A. pungens, resulting in increased KI (malate) and decreased KA (glucose-6-P). The sensitivity of PEPC to malate, which gives a measure of phosphorylation status of the enzyme, indicated that feeding leaves with NO3 enhanced the phosphorylation status of the enzyme. The reduction in PEPC activity due to cycloheximide treatment suggested that increased synthesis of PEPC protein kinase may be one of the reasons for the enhancement in PEPC activity, after the nitrate feeding. We suggest that nitrate salts could be used as a tool to modulate and analyze the properties of PEPC in C3 and C4 plants.  相似文献   

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