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Loss of Starch Granule Initiation Has a Deleterious Effect on the Growth of Arabidopsis Plants Due to an Accumulation of ADP-Glucose
Authors:Paula Ragel  Sebastian Streb  Regina Feil  Mariam Sahrawy  Maria Grazia Annunziata  John E Lunn  Samuel Zeeman  ángel Mérida
Abstract:STARCH SYNTHASE4 (SS4) is required for proper starch granule initiation in Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana), although SS3 can partially replace its function. Unlike other starch-deficient mutants, ss4 and ss3/ss4 mutants grow poorly even under long-day conditions. They have less chlorophyll and carotenoids than the wild type and lower maximal rates of photosynthesis. There is evidence of photooxidative damage of the photosynthetic apparatus in the mutants from chlorophyll a fluorescence parameters and their high levels of malondialdehyde. Metabolite profiling revealed that ss3/ss4 accumulates over 170 times more ADP-glucose (Glc) than wild-type plants. Restricting ADP-Glc synthesis, by introducing mutations in the plastidial phosphoglucomutase (pgm1) or the small subunit of ADP-Glc pyrophosphorylase (aps1), largely restored photosynthetic capacity and growth in pgm1/ss3/ss4 and aps1/ss3/ss4 triple mutants. It is proposed that the accumulation of ADP-Glc in the ss3/ss4 mutant sequesters a large part of the plastidial pools of adenine nucleotides, which limits photophosphorylation, leading to photooxidative stress, causing the chlorotic and stunted growth phenotypes of the plants.The metabolism of starch plays an essential role in the physiology of plants. Starch breakdown provides the plant with carbon skeletons and energy when the photosynthetic machinery is inactive (transitory starch) or in the processes of germination and sprouting (storage starch). Deficiencies in the accumulation of transitory starch in Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) have been described previously, specifically in mutants affected in the plastidial phosphoglucomutase (PGM1) or the small subunit (APS1) of the ADP-Glc pyrophosphorylase (AGPase). While they are described as “starchless,” they actually contain small amounts of starch (1%–2% of the wild-type levels; Streb et al., 2009) and share similar phenotypic alterations, such as growth retardation when cultivated under a short-day photoregime and increased levels of soluble sugars during the light phase and reduced levels during the night (Caspar et al., 1985; Lin et al., 1988b; Schulze et al., 1991). Carbon partitioning is altered in these plants. As photosynthate cannot be accumulated as starch, it is diverted via hexose phosphates in the cytosol to the synthesis of Suc, which accumulates together with the hexose sugars, Glc and Fru (Caspar et al., 1985). In Arabidopsis, there are five starch synthase isoforms: one granule-bound starch synthase and four soluble starch synthases: SS1, SS2, SS3, and SS4. We have described previously an Arabidopsis mutant plant lacking SS3 and SS4 that is also severely affected in the accumulation of starch (Szydlowski et al., 2009). SS4 is involved in the initiation of the starch granule and controls the number of granules per chloroplast (Roldán et al., 2007). The elimination of SS3 in an ss4 background leads to an absence of starch in most of the chloroplasts, despite the fact that SS1 and SS2 are still present and total starch synthase activity is only reduced by 35% (Szydlowski et al., 2009). However, a very small proportion of chloroplasts of this mutant plant contain a single huge starch granule, which is also a characteristic of chloroplasts in the ss4 single mutant (D’Hulst and Mérida, 2012). Thus, like aps1 and pgm1, ss3/ss4 plants contain only small amounts of starch. However, unlike aps1 or pgm1 plants, most of the cells of this mutant have empty chloroplasts, without starch (Szydlowski et al., 2009).In this work, we have analyzed the phenotypic effects of the impaired starch accumulation of ss3/ss4 plants. We show that this mutant displays phenotypic changes that are not found in other mutants with very low levels of starch, such as aps1 or pgm1 plants. We provide evidence that extremely high levels of ADP-Glc accumulate in the ss3/ss4 plants. Using reverse genetics to block the pathway of starch synthesis upstream of the starch synthases reduced the level of ADP-Glc in ss3/ss4 plants and reverted the other phenotypic traits. This suggests that ADP-Glc accumulation is the causal factor behind the chlorotic and stunted growth phenotypes of the ss3/ss4 mutant.
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