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1.
The aim of this work was to establish whether plastidial phosphoglucomutase is involved in the starch biosynthetic pathway of potato tubers and thereby to determine the form in which carbon is imported into the potato amyloplast. For this purpose, we cloned the plastidial isoform of potato PGM (StpPGM), and using an antisense approach generated transgenic potato plants that exhibited decreased expression of the StpPGM gene and contained significantly reduced total phosphoglucomutase activity. We confirmed that this loss in activity was due specifically to a reduction in plastidial PGM activity. Potato lines with decreased activities of plastidial PGM exhibited no major changes in either whole-plant or tuber morphology. However, tubers from these lines exhibited a dramatic (up to 40%) decrease in the accumulation of starch, and significant increases in the levels of sucrose and hexose phosphates. As tubers from these lines exhibited no changes in the maximal catalytic activities of other key enzymes of carbohydrate metabolism, we conclude that plastidial PGM forms part of the starch biosynthetic pathway of the potato tuber, and that glucose-6-phosphate is the major precursor taken up by amyloplasts in order to support starch synthesis.  相似文献   

2.
The aim of this work was to investigate the extent to which starch synthesis in potato (Solanum tuberosum L.) tubers is controlled by the activity of ADPglucose pyrophosphorylase (EC 2.7.7.27; AGPase). In order to do this, fluxes of carbohydrate metabolism were measured in tubers that had reduced AGPase activity as a result of the expression of a cDNA encoding the B subunit in the antisense orientation. Reduction in AGPase activity led to a reduction in starch accumulation, and an increase in sucrose accumulation. The control coefficient of AGPase on starch accumulation in intact plants was estimated to be around 0.3. The fluxes of carbohydrate metabolism were measured in tuber discs from wild-type and transgenic plants by investigating the metabolism of [U-14C]glucose. In tuber discs, the control coefficient of AGPase over starch synthesis was estimated as 0.55, while the control coefficient of the enzyme over sucrose synthesis was −0.47. The values obtained suggest that AGPase activity exerts appreciable control over tuber metabolism in potato. Received: 24 February 1999 / Accepted: 8 April 1999  相似文献   

3.
The aim of this work was to investigate the role of cytosolic phosphoglucomutase (PGM; EC 5.4.2.2) in the regulation of carbohydrate metabolism. Many in vitro studies have indicated that PGM plays a central role in carbohydrate metabolism; however, until now the importance of this enzyme in plants has not been subject to reverse-genetics investigations. With this intention we cloned the cytosolic isoform of potato PGM (StcPGM) and expressed this in the antisense orientation under the control of the CaMV 35 S promoter in potato plants. We confirmed that these plants contained reduced total PGM activity and that loss in activity was due specifically to a reduction in cytosolic PGM activity. These plants were characterised by a severe phenotype: stunted aerial growth combined with limited root growth and a reduced tuber yield. Analysis of the metabolism of these lines revealed that leaves of these plants were inhibited in sucrose synthesis whereas the tubers exhibited decreased levels of sucrose and starch as well as decreased levels of glycolytic intermediates but possessed unaltered levels of adenylates. Furthermore, a broader metabolite screen utilising GC-MS profiling revealed that these lines contained altered levels of several intermediates of the TCA cycle and of amino acids. In summary, we conclude that cytosolic PGM plays a crucial role in the sucrose synthetic pathway within the leaf and in starch accumulation within the tuber, and as such is important in the maintenance of sink-source relationships.  相似文献   

4.
Sweetlove LJ  Tomlinson KL  Hill SA 《Planta》2002,214(5):741-750
The aim of this work was to investigate the effect of exogenous sugars on the extent to which starch synthesis in potato ( Solanum tuberosum L.) is controlled by adenosine 5'-diphosphoglucose pyrophosphorylase (EC 2.7.7.27; AGPase). Tuber discs were incubated in the presence of a range of concentrations of glucose and sucrose, and metabolic fluxes measured following the supply of [U-14C]glucose and measurement of the specific radioactivity of the hexose phosphate pool. In the presence of glucose there was a marked increase in the flux through glucose-phosphorylating hexokinase, and at high concentrations of external glucose this led to a stimulation of the rate of starch and sucrose synthesis relative to those measured in the presence of sucrose. In the presence of glucose the ratio of the rate of starch synthesis to the rate of glycolysis was higher than in the presence of sucrose. Similar effects of glucose were observed at two stages of tuber development. We conclude that the presence of glucose perturbs the carbohydrate metabolism of tuber discs so that starch synthesis is favoured. In order to determine the extent to which AGPase controls flux, we measured fluxes in wild-type plants and transgenic plants with reduced AGPase activity as a result of the expression of a cDNA encoding the B subunit in the antisense orientation. In the presence of sucrose a reduction in AGPase activity had a greater impact on the rate of starch synthesis than in the presence of glucose. The flux control coefficient of AGPase over starch synthesis was higher in the presence of sucrose (0.7-0.9) than in the presence of glucose (0.4-0.6). Conversely, the impact of reduced AGPase activity on the rate of sucrose synthesis was lower in the presence of sucrose than glucose. In the presence of 200 mM sucrose the flux control coefficient of AGPase over the rate of sucrose synthesis was not significantly different from zero. This demonstrates that the nature of the sugar supplied to potato tuber discs can have a major influence on the distribution of control within metabolism. These data were also used to investigate the relationship between demand for ATP and the rate of hexose phosphate entry into glycolysis. A very strong correlation between ATP demand and glycolytic flux was demonstrated.  相似文献   

5.
6.
7.
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   

8.
Phosphoglucomutase (PGM) catalyses the interconversion of glucose 1-phosphate (G1P) and glucose 6-phosphate (G6P) and exists as plastidial (pPGM) and cytosolic (cPGM) isoforms. The plastidial isoform is essential for transitory starch synthesis in chloroplasts of leaves, whereas the cytosolic counterpart is essential for glucose phosphate partitioning and, therefore, for syntheses of sucrose and cell wall components. In Arabidopsis two cytosolic isoforms (PGM2 and PGM3) exist. Both PGM2 and PGM3 are redundant in function as single mutants reveal only small or no alterations compared to wild type with respect to plant primary metabolism. So far, there are no reports of Arabidopsis plants lacking the entire cPGM or total PGM activity, respectively. Therefore, amiRNA transgenic plants were generated and used for analyses of various parameters such as growth, development, and starch metabolism. The lack of the entire cPGM activity resulted in a strongly reduced growth revealed by decreased rosette fresh weight, shorter roots, and reduced seed production compared to wild type. By contrast content of starch, sucrose, maltose and cell wall components were significantly increased. The lack of both cPGM and pPGM activities in Arabidopsis resulted in dwarf growth, prematurely die off, and inability to develop a functional inflorescence. The combined results are discussed in comparison to potato, the only described mutant with lack of total PGM activity.  相似文献   

9.
Sink strength of growing potato tubers is believed to be limited by sucrose metabolism and/or starch synthesis. Sucrose synthase (Susy) is most likely responsible for the entire sucrose cleavage in sink tubers, rather than invertases. To investigate the unique role of sucrose synthase with respect to sucrose metabolism and sink strength in growing potato tubers, transgenic potato plants were created expressing Susy antisense RNA corresponding to the T-type sucrose synthase isoform. Although the constitutive 35S CaMV promotor was used to drive the expression of the antisense RNA the inhibition of Susy activity was tuber-specific, indicating that independent Susy isoforms are responsible for Susy activity in different potato organs. The inhibition of Susy leads to no change in sucrose content, a strong accumulation of reducing sugars and an inhibition of starch accumulation in developing potato tubers. The increase in hexoses is paralleled by a 40-fold increase in invertase activities but no considerable changes in hexokinase activities. The reduction in starch accumulation is not due to an inhibition of the major starch biosynthetic enzymes. The changes in carbohydrate accumulation are accompanied by a decrease in total tuber dry weight and a reduction of soluble tuber proteins. The reduced protein accumulation is mainly due to a decrease in the major storage proteins patatin, the 22 kDa proteins and the proteinase inhibitors. The lowered accumulation of storage proteins is not a consequence of the availability of the free amino acid pool in potato tubers. Altogether these data are in agreement with the assumption that sucrose synthase is the major determinant of potato tuber sink strength. Contradictory to the hypothesis that the sink strength of growing potato tubers is inversely correlated with the tuber number per plant, no increase in tuber number per plant was found in Susy antisense plants.  相似文献   

10.
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   

11.
Water stress stimulates sucrose synthesis and inhibits starch synthesis in wild-type tubers. Antisense and co-suppression potato transformants with decreased expression of sucrose–phosphate synthase (SPS) have been used to analyse the importance of SPS for the regulation of this water-stress induced change in partitioning. (i) In the absence of water stress, a 70–80% decrease in SPS activity led to a 30–50% inhibition of sucrose synthesis and a slight (10–20%) increase of starch synthesis in tuber discs in short-term labelling experiments with low concentrations of labelled glucose. Similar changes were seen in short-term labelling experiments with intact tubers attached to well-watered plants. Provided plants were grown with ample light and water, transformant tubers had a slightly lower water and sucrose content and a similar or even marginally higher starch content than wild-type tubers. (ii) When wild-type tuber slices were incubated with labelled glucose in the presence of mannitol to generate a moderate water deficit (between –0.12 and –0.72 MPa), there was a marked stimulation of sucrose synthesis and inhibition of starch synthesis. A similar stimulation was seen in labelling experiments with wild-type tubers that were attached to water-stressed wild-type plants. These changes were almost completely suppressed in transformants with a 70–80% reduction of SPS activity. (iii) Decreased irrigation led to an increase in the fraction of the dry-matter allocated to tubers in wild-type plants. This shift in allocation was prevented in transformants with reduced expression of SPS. (iv) The results show that operation of SPS and the sucrose cycle in growing potato tubers may lead to a marginal decrease in starch accumulation in non-stressed plants. However, SPS becomes a crucial factor in water-stressed plants because it is required for adaptive changes in tuber metabolism and whole plant allocation.  相似文献   

12.
In the present paper we investigated the effect of the sucrose (Suc) analog palatinose on potato (Solanum tuberosum) tuber metabolism. In freshly cut discs of growing potato tubers, addition of 5 mM palatinose altered the metabolism of exogenously supplied [U-14C]Suc. There was slight inhibition of the rate of 14C-Suc uptake, a 1.5-fold increase in the rate at which 14C-Suc was subsequently metabolized, and a shift in the allocation of the metabolized label in favor of starch synthesis. The sum result of these changes was a 2-fold increase in the absolute rate of starch synthesis. The increased rate of starch synthesis was accompanied by a 3-fold increase in inorganic pyrophosphate, a 2-fold increase in UDP, decreased UTP/UDP, ATP/ADP, and ATP/AMP ratios, and decreased adenylate energy charge, whereas glycolytic and Krebs cycle intermediates were unchanged. In addition, feeding palatinose to potato discs also stimulated the metabolism of exogenous 14C-glucose in favor of starch synthesis. In vitro studies revealed that palatinose is not metabolized by Suc synthases or invertases within potato tuber extracts. Enzyme kinetics revealed different effects of palatinose on Suc synthase and invertase activities, implicating palatinose as an allosteric effector leading to an inhibition of Suc synthase and (surprisingly) to an activation of invertase in vitro. However, measurement of tissue palatinose levels revealed that these were too low to have significant effects on Suc degrading activities in vivo. These results suggest that supplying palatinose to potato tubers represents a novel way to increase starch synthesis.  相似文献   

13.
To gain greater insight into the mechanism of dormancy release in the potato tuber, an investigation into physiological and biochemical changes in tuber and bud tissues during the transition from bud dormancy (immediately after harvest) to active bud growth was undertaken. Within the tuber, a rapid shift from storage metabolism (starch synthesis) to reserve mobilization within days of detachment from the mother plant suggested transition from sink to source. Over the same period, a shift in the pattern of [U-(14)C]sucrose uptake by tuber discs from diffuse to punctate accumulation was consistent with a transition from phloem unloading to phloem loading within the tuber parenchyma. There were no gross differences in metabolic capacity between resting and actively growing tuber buds as determined by [U-(14)C]glucose labelling. However, marked differences in metabolite pools were observed with large increases in starch and sucrose, and the accumulation of several organic acids in growing buds. Carboxyfluorescein labelling of tubers clearly demonstrated strong symplastic connection in actively growing buds and symplastic isolation in resting buds. It is proposed that potato tubers rapidly undergo metabolic transitions consistent with bud outgrowth; however, growth is initially prevented by substrate limitation mediated via symplastic isolation.  相似文献   

14.
Adenine nucleotides are of general importance for many aspectsof cell function, but their role in the regulation of biosyntheticprocesses is still unclear. It was previously reported thatdecreased expression of plastidial adenylate kinase, catalysingthe interconversion of ATP and AMP to ADP, leads to increasedadenylate pools and starch content in transgenic potato tubers.However, the underlying mechanisms were not elucidated. Here,it is shown that decreased expression of plastidial adenylatekinase in growing tubers leads to increased rates of respiratoryoxygen consumption and increased carbon fluxes into starch.Increased rates of starch synthesis were accompanied by post-translationalredox-activation of ADP-glucose pyrophosphorylase (AGPase),catalysing the key regulatory step of starch synthesis in theplastid, while there were no substantial changes in metabolicintermediates or sugar levels. A similar increase in post-translationalredox-activation of AGPase was found after supplying adenineto wild-type potato tuber discs to increase adenine nucleotidelevels. Results provide first evidence for a link between redox-activationof AGPase and adenine nucleotide levels in plants. Key words: Adenylate kinase, ADPglucose pyrophosphorylase, plastid, redox-regulation, potato, respiration, starch Received 18 September 2007; Revised 12 November 2007 Accepted 13 November 2007  相似文献   

15.
The early stages of tuber development are characterized by cell division, high metabolic activity, and the predominance of invertase as the sucrose (Suc) cleaving activity. However, during the subsequent phase of starch accumulation the cleavage of Suc occurs primarily by the action of Suc synthase. The mechanism that is responsible for this switch in Suc cleaving activities is currently unknown. One striking difference between the invertase and Suc synthase mediated cleavage of Suc is the direct involvement of inorganic pyrophosphate (PPi) in the latter case. There is presently no convincing explanation of how the PPi required to support this process is generated in potato (Solanum tuberosum) tubers. The major site of PPi production in a maturing potato tubers is likely to be the reaction catalyzed by ADP-glucose pyrophosphorylase, the first committed step of starch biosynthesis in amyloplasts. We present data based on the analysis of the PPi levels in various transgenic plants altered in starch and Suc metabolism that support the hypothesis that PPi produced in the plastid is used to support cytosolic Suc breakdown and that PPi is an important coordinator of cytosolic and plastidial metabolism in potato tubers.  相似文献   

16.
As reported in a previous paper (Plant, Cell and Environment 24, 357–365, 2001), introduction of sucrose phosphorylase into the cytosol of potato results in increased respiration, an inhibition of starch accumulation and decreased tuber yield. Herein a more detailed investigation into the effect of sucrose phosphorylase expression on tuber metabolism, in order to understand why storage and growth are impaired is described. (1) Although the activity of the introduced sucrose phosphorylase was low and accounted for less than 10% of that of sucrose synthase its expression led to a decrease in the activities of enzymes of starch synthesis relative to enzymes of glycolysis and relative to total amylolytic activity. (2) Incubation of tuber discs in [14C]glucose revealed that the transformants display a two‐fold increase of the unidirectional rate of sucrose breakdown. However this was largely compensated by a large stimulation of sucrose re‐synthesis and therefore the net rate of sucrose breakdown was not greatly affected. Despite this fact major shifts in tuber metabolism, including depletion of sucrose to very low levels, higher rates of glycolysis, and larger pools of amino acids were observed in these lines. (3) Expression of sucrose phosphorylase led to a decrease of the cellular ATP/ADP ratio and energy charge in intact growing tubers. It was estimated that at least 30% of the ATP formed during respiration is consumed as a result of the large acceleration of the cycle of sucrose breakdown and re‐synthesis in the transformants. Although the absolute rate of starch synthesis in short‐term labelling experiments with discs rose, starch synthesis fell relative to other fluxes including respiration, and the overall starch content of the tubers was lower than in wild‐type tubers. (4) External supply of amino acids to replace sucrose as an osmoticum led to a feed‐back inhibition of glycolysis, but did not restore allocation to starch. (5) However, an external supply of the non‐metabolizable sucrose analogue palatinose – but not sucrose itself – stimulated flux to starch in the transformants. (6) The results indicate that the impaired performance of sucrose phosphorylase‐expressing tubers is attributable to decreased levels of sucrose and increased energy consumption during sucrose futile cycling, and imply that sucrose degradation via sucrose synthase is important to maintain a relatively large sucrose pool and to minimize the ATP consumption required for normal metabolic function in the wild type.  相似文献   

17.
18.
Water stress stimulates sucrose synthesis and inhibits starch and cell-wall synthesis in tissue slices of growing potato (Solanum tuberosum L. cv. Desirée) tubers. Based on the analysis of fluxes and metabolites, Geigenberger et al. (1997, Planta 201: 502–518) proposed that water deficits up to −0.72 MPa stimulate sucrose synthesis, leading to decreased starch synthesis as a result of the resulting decline of phosphorylated metabolite levels, whereas more-severe water deficits directly inhibit the use of ADP-glucose. Potato plants with decreased expression of adenosine 5′-diphosphoglucose pyrophosphorylase (AGPase) have been used to test the prediction that the contribution of AGPase to the control of starch synthesis should decrease in severely water-stressed tuber material. Freshly cut slices from wild-type and antisense tubers were incubated at a range of mannitol concentrations (20, 300 and 500 mM) and the metabolism of [14C]glucose was analysed. A 86–97% reduction of AGPase activity led to a major but non-stoichiometric inhibition of starch accumulation in intact growing tubers attached to the plant (40–85%), and an inhibition of starch synthesis in non-stressed tuber slices incubated in 20 mM mannitol (60–80%). The inhibition of starch synthesis was accompanied by a 2- to 8-fold increase in the levels of sugars in intact tubers and a 2- to 3-fold stimulation of sucrose synthesis in tuber slices, whereas respiration and cell-wall synthesis were not significantly affected. The strong impact of AGPase on carbon partitioning in non-stressed tubers and tuber slices was retained in slices subjected to moderate water deficit (300 mM mannitol, corresponding to −0.72 MPa). In discs incubated in 500 mM mannitol (corresponding to −1.2 MPa) this response was modified. A 80–97% reduction of AGPase resulted in only a 0–40% inhibition of starch synthesis. Further, the water stress-induced stimulation of sucrose synthesis was abolished in the transformants. The results provide direct evidence that the contribution of AGPase to the control of starch synthesis can be modified by environmental factors, leading to a lower degree of control during severe water deficits. There was also a dramatic decrease in the labelling of cell-wall components in wild-type tuber slices incubated with 300 or 500 mM mannitol. The water stress-induced inhibition of cell-wall synthesis occurred independently of AGPase expression and the accompanying changes in starch and sucrose metabolism, indicating a direct inhibition of cell-wall synthesis in response to water stress. Received: 24 February 1999 / Accepted: 28 May 1999  相似文献   

19.
Evidence from a number of plant tissues suggests that phosphoglucomutase (PGM) is present in both the cytosol and the plastid. The cytosolic and plastidic isoforms of PGM have been partially purified from wheat endosperm (Triticum aestivum L. cv. Axona). Both isoforms required glucose 1,6-bisphosphate for their activity with K(a) values of 4.5 micro M and 3.8 micro M for cytosolic and plastidic isoforms, respectively, and followed normal Michaelis-Menten kinetics with glucose 1-phosphate as the substrate with K(m) values of 0.1 mM and 0.12 mM for the cytosolic and plastidic isoforms, respectively. A cDNA clone was isolated from wheat endosperm that encodes the cytosolic isoform of PGM. The deduced amino acid sequence shows significant homology to PGMs from eukaryotic and prokaryotic sources. PGM activity was measured in whole cell extracts and in amyloplasts isolated during the development of wheat endosperm. Results indicate an approximate 80% reduction in measurable activity of plastidial and cytosolic PGM between 8 d and 30 d post-anthesis. Northern analysis showed a reduction in cytosolic PGM mRNA accumulation during the same period of development. The implications of the changes in PGM activity during the synthesis of starch in developing endosperm are discussed.  相似文献   

20.
We have previously described the generation of transgenic potato ( Solanum tuberosum L. cv. Desiree) lines expressing the S. tuberosum plastidial phosphoglucomutase ( StpPGM) gene in the antisense orientation under the control of the 35S promoter and characterised heterotrophic metabolism in these lines [E. Tauberger et al. (2000) Plant J 23:43-53]. The aim of the current work was to examine the role of plastidial phosphoglucomutase (pPGM, EC 5.4.2.2) in photosynthetic carbon partitioning. Here we characterise the metabolism of leaves of the same lines and show that reducing the activity of this enzyme has profound effects on carbon partitioning, characterised by a strong (up to 50%) reduction in the rate of starch accumulation accompanied by a minor reduction in the rate of sucrose accumulation. Gas-exchange and (14)CO(2)-feeding experiments revealed that the transgenic lines exhibited a decreased rate of photosynthesis and a corresponding reduced assimilation of radiolabel into starch, even in lines exhibiting only a minor decrease in pPGM activity. In illuminated leaves, decreasing the amount of pPGM resulted in decreased amounts of triose-phosphates, hexose-phosphates and inorganic phosphate without changes in the level of 3-phosphoglycerate. Most importantly, the deduced ratio of phosphoesters to inorganic phosphate increased, indicating the likelihood that photosynthesis was phosphate-limited in these lines. Determination of a more complete metabolic profile of leaf material from these lines revealed a large number of changes in the levels of amino and organic acids, consistent with an inhibition of triose-phosphate export from the chloroplast, but little change in the energy status of the transformants. We discuss the implications of these changes with respect to both consequences of inhibiting starch synthesis and of inhibiting photosynthesis, and conclude that a high activity of pPGM is required both to prevent phosphate limitation of photosynthesis and for co-ordination of plastidially and cytosolically compartmented photosynthetic metabolism.  相似文献   

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