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Prosthetic lipoyl groups are required for the function of several essential multienzyme complexes, such as pyruvate dehydrogenase (PDH), α-ketoglutarate dehydrogenase (KGDH), and the glycine cleavage system (glycine decarboxylase [GDC]). How these proteins are lipoylated has been extensively studied in prokaryotes and yeast (Saccharomyces cerevisiae), but little is known for plants. We earlier reported that mitochondrial fatty acid synthesis by ketoacyl-acyl carrier protein synthase is not vital for protein lipoylation in Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) and does not play a significant role in roots. Here, we identify Arabidopsis lipoate-protein ligase (AtLPLA) as an essential mitochondrial enzyme that uses octanoyl-nucleoside monophosphate and possibly other donor substrates for the octanoylation of mitochondrial PDH-E2 and GDC H-protein; it shows no reactivity with bacterial and possibly plant KGDH-E2. The octanoate-activating enzyme is unknown, but we assume that it uses octanoyl moieties provided by mitochondrial β-oxidation. AtLPLA is essential for the octanoylation of PDH-E2, whereas GDC H-protein can optionally also be octanoylated by octanoyltransferase (LIP2) using octanoyl chains provided by mitochondrial ketoacyl-acyl carrier protein synthase to meet the high lipoate requirement of leaf mesophyll mitochondria. Similar to protein lipoylation in yeast, LIP2 likely also transfers octanoyl groups attached to the H-protein to KGDH-E2 but not to PDH-E2, which is exclusively octanoylated by LPLA. We suggest that LPLA and LIP2 together provide a basal protein lipoylation network to plants that is similar to that in other eukaryotes.Lipoic acid (LA; 6,8-dithiooctanoic acid) prosthetic groups are essential for the catalytic activity of four important multienzyme complexes in plants and other organisms: pyruvate dehydrogenase (PDH), α-ketoglutarate dehydrogenase (KGDH), branched-chain α-ketoacid dehydrogenase (BCDH), and the Gly cleavage system (glycine decarboxylase [GDC]; Perham, 2000; Douce et al., 2001; Mooney et al., 2002). In all these multienzyme complexes, LA is covalently attached to the ε-amino group of a particular lysyl residue of the respective protein subunit. Lipoylated E2 subunits of PDH, KGDH, and BCDH are dihydrolipoyl acyltransferases that interact with E1 and E3 subunits to pass acyl intermediates to CoA (Mooney et al., 2002). By contrast, the lipoylated H-protein of GDC acts as a cosubstrate of three other GDC proteins and has no enzymatic activity itself (Douce et al., 2001). In the course of their respective reaction cycles, LA becomes reduced to dihydrolipoic acid. Most of these enzymes are confined to the mitochondrion. As the only exception, PDH is also present in plastids, where it provides acetyl-CoA for fatty acid biosynthesis (Ohlrogge et al., 1979; Lernmark and Gardeström, 1994; Lin et al., 2003).Mitochondria and plastids each have their own route of de novo LA synthesis, both of which start with the synthesis of protein-bound octanoyl chains (Shimakata and Stumpf, 1982; Ohlrogge and Browse, 1995; Wada et al., 1997; Gueguen et al., 2000; Yasuno et al., 2004). These octanoyl moieties are passed on by organelle-specific octanoyltransferases (Wada et al., 2001a, 2001b) to the respective target apoproteins where lipoyl synthase (LIP1) inserts two sulfur atoms to finally produce functional lipoyl groups (Yasuno and Wada, 1998, 2002; Zhao et al., 2003). A similar pathway has been identified in mammalian mitochondria (Morikawa et al., 2001; Witkowski et al., 2007). In quantitative terms, leaf mesophyll mitochondria have an extraordinarily high requirement for lipoate, because they contain very large amounts of GDC to catalyze the photorespiratory Gly-to-Ser conversion (Bauwe et al., 2010). For this reason, leaf mesophyll mitochondria are the major site of LA synthesis in plants (Wada et al., 1997).It was thought that the octanoyl chains provided by mitochondrial β-ketoacyl-acyl carrier protein synthase (mtKAS) represent the solitary source for protein lipoylation in plant mitochondria (Yasuno et al., 2004). As we reported earlier, however, leaves of mtKAS-deficient knockout mutants show considerable lipoylation of mitochondrial PDH-E2 and KGDH-E2 subunits and some residual lipoylation of GDC H-protein; roots are not at all impaired. Accordingly, the phenotype of such mutants can be fully cured in the low-photorespiratory condition of elevated CO2 (Ewald et al., 2007). These observations indicated that plant mitochondria, in addition to the mtKAS-LIP2-LIP1 route of protein lipoylation, can resort to an alternative pathway. This would not be uncommon. In Escherichia coli, for example, a salvage pathway utilizes free octanoate or LA in an ATP-dependent two-step reaction catalyzed by the bifunctional enzyme lipoate-protein ligase A (LPLA; Morris et al., 1995). Archaea (Christensen and Cronan, 2009; Posner et al., 2009) and vertebrates (Tsunoda and Yasunobu, 1967) require two separate enzymes to first activate octanoate or LA to lipoyl-nucleoside monophosphate (NMP) and then, in a second step, to convey the activated lipoyl group to the respective target proteins. The lipoate-activating enzyme (LAE) of mammals was identified as a refunctioned medium-chain acyl-CoA synthetase that utilizes GTP to produce lipoyl-GMP (Fujiwara et al., 2001). LIP3 from yeast (Saccharomyces cerevisiae) can use octanoyl-CoA to octanoylate apoE2 proteins (Hermes and Cronan, 2013), whereas octanoyl groups from fatty acid biosynthesis are first attached to H-protein and then passed on to apoE2 proteins (Schonauer et al., 2009).The physiological significance of lipoyl-protein ligases in plants is not exactly known. Such enzymes do not operate in plastids (Ewald et al., 2014) but could be present in mitochondria. A single-gene-encoded LPLA with predicted mitochondrial localization has been identified in rice (Oryza sativa; Kang et al., 2007). Complementation studies with the lipoylation-deficient E. coli mutant TM137 (Morris et al., 1995) suggested that OsLPLA belongs to the bifunctional type of LPLAs. We report the identification of the homologous enzyme in Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana), provide evidence for its mitochondrial location, and show that Arabidopsis LPLA requires a separate enzyme for octanoate/lipoate activation. We also examine the interplay between LPLA, LIP2, and the mtKAS route of protein lipoylation and suggest a model for protein lipoylation in plant mitochondria.  相似文献   
34.
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   
35.
Photorespiration is an essential metabolic process in leaves that facilitates recovery of carbon lost by the oxygenase reaction of Rubisco and avoids the accumulation of the toxic product, 2-phosphoglycolate (2PG) of this reaction (Bauwe et al., 2012). However, there is also evidence to suggest that photorespiration has a more complex role during normal growth than the mere detoxification of 2PG and the recovery of 3-phosphoglycerate (3PGA) (Bauwe et al., 2012).  相似文献   
36.
Sugars are not only metabolic substrates: they also act as signals that regulate the metabolism of plants. Previously, we found that glycolysis is induced in transgenic tubers expressing a yeast invertase in the cytosol but not in those expressing invertase in the apoplast. This suggests that either the low level of sucrose, the increased formation of cytosolic glucose or the increased levels of metabolites downstream of the sucrose cleavage is responsible for the induction of glycolysis in storage organs. In order to discriminate between these possibilities, we cloned and expressed a bacterial sucrose phosphorylase gene from Pseudomonas saccharophila in potato tubers. Due to the phosphorolytic cleavage of sucrose, formation of glucose was circumvented, thus allowing assessment of the importance of cytosolic glucose – and, by implication, flux through hexokinase – in glycolytic induction. Expression of sucrose phosphorylase led to: (i) a decrease in sucrose content, but no decrease in glucose or fructose; (ii) a decrease in both starch accumulation and tuber yield; (iii) increased levels of glycolytic metabolites; (iv) an induction of the activities of key enzymes of glycolysis; and (v) increased respiratory activity. We conclude that the induction of glycolysis in heterotrophic tissues such as potato tubers occurs via a glucose‐independent mechanism.  相似文献   
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Plants contain light signaling systems and undergo metabolic perturbation and reprogramming under light stress in order to adapt to environmental changes. Flavonoids are one of the largest classes of natural phytochemical compounds having several biological functions conferring stress defense to plants and health benefits in animal diets. A recent study of phenylacylated-flavonoids (also called hydroxycinnamoylated-flavonoids) of natural accessions of Arabidopsis suggested that phenylacylation of flavonoids relates to selection under different natural light conditions. Phenylacylated-flavonoids which are decorated with hydroxycinnamoyl units, namely cinnamoyl, 4-coumaroyl, caffeoyl, feruloyl and sinapoyl moieties, are widely distributed in the plant kingdom. Currently, more than 400 phenylacylated flavonoids have been reported. Phenylacylation renders enhanced phytochemical functions such as ultraviolet-absorbance and antioxidant activity, although, the physiological role of phenylacylation of flavonoids in plants is largely unknown. In this review, we provide an overview of the occurrence and natural diversity of phenylacylated-flavonoids as well as postulating their biological functions both in planta and with respect to biological activity following their consumption.  相似文献   
39.

Background

Until recently, plant metabolomics have provided a deep understanding on the metabolic regulation in individual plants as experimental units. The application of these techniques to agricultural systems subjected to more complex interactions is a step towards the implementation of translational metabolomics in crop breeding.

Aim of Review

We present here a review paper discussing advances in the knowledge reached in the last years derived from the application of metabolomic techniques that evolved from biomarker discovery to improve crop yield and quality.

Key Scientific Concepts of Review

Translational metabolomics applied to crop breeding programs.
  相似文献   
40.
Salt respiration is defined as the increase of respiration under early salt stress. However, the response of respiration varies depending on the degree of salt tolerance and salt stress. It has been hypothesized that the activity of the alternative pathway may increase preventing over‐reduction of the ubiquinone pool in response to salinity, which in turn can increase respiration. Three genotypes of Medicago truncatula are reputed as differently responsive to salinity: TN1.11, A17 and TN6.18. We used the oxygen‐isotope fractionation technique to study the in vivo respiratory activities of the cytochrome oxidase pathway (COP) and the alternative oxidase pathway (AOP) in leaves and roots of these genotypes treated with severe salt stress (300 mM) during 1 and 3 days. In parallel, AOX capacity, gas exchange measurements, relative water content and metabolomics were determined in control and treated plants. Our study shows for first time that salt respiration is induced by the triggered AOP in response to salinity. Moreover, this phenomenon coincides with increased levels of metabolites such as amino and organic acids, and is shown to be related with higher photosynthetic rate and water content in TN6.18.  相似文献   
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