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1.
The major component of starch is the branched glucan amylopectin, the branching pattern of which is one of the key factors determining its ability to form semicrystalline starch granules. Here, we investigated the functions of different branching enzyme (BE) types by expressing proteins from maize (Zea mays BE2a), potato (Solanum tuberosum BE1), and Escherichia coli (glycogen BE [EcGLGB]) in Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) mutant plants that are deficient in their endogenous BEs and therefore, cannot make starch. The expression of each of these three BE types restored starch biosynthesis to differing degrees. Full complementation was achieved using the class II BE ZmBE2a, which is most similar to the two endogenous Arabidopsis isoforms. Expression of the class I BE from potato, StBE1, resulted in partial complementation and high amylose starch. Expression of the glycogen BE EcGLGB restored only minimal amounts of starch production, which had unusual chain length distribution, branch point distribution, and granule morphology. Nevertheless, each type of BE together with the starch synthases and debranching enyzmes were able to create crystallization-competent amylopectin polymers. These data add to the knowledge of how the properties of the BE influence the final composition of starch and fine structure of amylopectin.Starch is composed of two glucan polymers: amylopectin and amylose. Amylopectin constitutes around 80% of the mass of most starches and is a large, branched polymer with a tree-like architecture. The positioning and frequency of branch points together with the distribution of chain lengths are thought to be critical factors allowing amylopectin to adopt a semicrystalline state. Within amylopectin molecules, clusters of unbranched chain segments align, and adjacent chains form double helices. These pack into crystalline lamellae that alternate with amorphous regions containing the branch points. Longer chain segments span from one cluster to the next (Zeeman et al., 2010).Amylopectin is synthesized by three enzyme activities. First, starch synthases (SSs) transfer the glucosyl part of ADP-Glc to the nonreducing end of existing glucan chains, forming new α-1,4 glucosidic bonds. Second, branching enzymes (BEs) cleave part of an α-1,4-linked chain and through an inter- or intramolecular transfer reaction, reattach it, creating α-1,6-branch points. This reaction creates additional nonreducing ends on which SSs can act. Third, debranching enzymes (DBEs) hydrolyze some of these branches, tailoring the structure of the polymer to promote its crystallization.Several SS and BE isoforms are involved in starch synthesis in plants. There are five conserved classes of SSs (granule-bound starch synthase [GBSS] and SS1–SS4) and two conserved classes of BEs (classes I and II; also referred to as classes B and A, respectively; Nougué et al., 2014). In addition, plants contain two classes of DBEs: isoamylases (ISAs) and limit dextrinases (LDAs; also called pullulanases). One ISA, a multimeric enzyme composed of either a mixture of ISA1 and ISA2 subunits or just ISA1 subunits, is primarily involved in amylopectin synthesis (James et al., 1995; Mouille et al., 1996; Nakamura et al., 1996; Delatte et al., 2005). The other DBEs (i.e. ISA3 and LDA) are primarily involved in starch degradation (Wattebled et al., 2005; Delatte et al., 2006).Based on the in vitro analysis of purified or recombinant proteins and the phenotypes of mutant plants, the different SS isoforms are proposed to have distinct, albeit overlapping, functions. SS1 is thought to preferentially elongate short chains produced by the branching reactions to between 8 and 12 Glc units (Delvallé et al., 2005; Fujita et al., 2006). SS2 is proposed to elongate such chains farther to about 20 Glc units, optimal for cluster formation (Edwards et al., 1999; Umemoto et al., 2002; Zhang et al., 2008). The precise role of SS3 is less clear, although it has been proposed to generate long, cluster-spanning chains (Fujita et al., 2007). SS4 has a distinct role in initiating and/or coordinating granule formation (Roldán et al., 2007; Crumpton-Taylor et al., 2013).The two different BE classes are also proposed to have distinct functions in amylopectin synthesis. In vitro analyses of maize (Zea mays), rice (Oryza sativa), and potato (Solanum tuberosum) enzymes suggest that the class I enzymes preferentially act on amylose and transfer longer chains, whereas class II enzymes preferentially act on branched substrates, such as amylopectin, and transfer shorter chains (Guan and Preiss, 1993; Rydberg et al., 2001; Nakamura et al., 2010). This knowledge derives largely from experiments where linear or branched substrates were provided to recombinant or purified enzymes and the increased degree of branching was monitored. Similar conclusions were gained by recombinant protein expression in Escherichia coli and yeast (Saccharomyces cerevisiae) strains deficient in their endogenous glycogen BEs (Guan et al., 1995; Seo et al., 2002), where chain elongation by glycogen synthases occurred concurrently with branching.Models have been proposed in which both BE classes help create the final cluster structure of amylopectin: class I BEs initiate branching by transferring long or branched chains, which are subsequently acted on by class II BEs to create more numerous shorter chains. These shorter chains are then elaborated by the SSs to create the clusters (Nakamura et al., 2010). After the branching reactions, a degree of debranching occurs, which is thought to control branch number and positioning and thereby, facilitate amylopectin crystallization (Myers et al., 2000; Zeeman et al., 2010). Several studies have shown that isa1-deficient mutants produce starch with an altered amylopectin, accumulate a related soluble polymer (phytoglycogen), or both (James et al., 1995; Mouille et al., 1996; Nakamura et al., 1996; Delatte et al., 2005).Despite the wide conservation of the two BE classes, major alterations in starch properties are only observed when genes encoding class II enzymes are mutated or repressed. Loss of class I BE activity in maize endosperm, rice endosperm, or potato tuber did not alter starch content and caused only minor differences in amylopectin structure (e.g. the distribution of chain lengths and branch points) and/or starch properties (e.g. gelatinization or digestibility; Safford et al., 1998; Blauth et al., 2002; Satoh et al., 2003; Xia et al., 2011). In contrast, loss of class II BE results in significant changes, such as decreased starch content and a high apparent amylose content. This has been observed in several species, including maize (Stinard et al., 1993), potato (Jobling et al., 1999), pea (Pisum sativum; Bhattacharyya et al., 1990), rice (Mizuno et al., 1993), barley (Hordeum vulgare; Regina et al., 2010), and wheat (Triticum aestivum; Regina et al., 2006). The high apparent amylose content was caused at least in part by the accumulation of less-frequently branched amylopectin that stains with a higher wavelength of maximal absorption (λmax) than that of the wild type (Boyer et al., 1976). In potato, this phenotype was enhanced by the simultaneous suppression of BE1 (Schwall et al., 2000), a result also shown recently in barley (Carciofi et al., 2012).Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) has three genes annotated as BEs, At3g20440 (BE1), At5g03650 (BE2), and At2g36390 (BE3), but it seems that only BE2 and BE3 are active. Both BE2 and BE3 are class II BEs, making Arabidopsis somewhat unusual in not possessing a class I BE. The gene annotated as BE1 encodes a related protein that falls into a separate clade to either class I or II BEs (Dumez et al., 2006; Han et al., 2007; Wang et al., 2010). It was initially suggested that plants with mutations in this gene had a wild-type phenotype (Dumez et al., 2006), but subsequent work indicated that homozygous be1 mutation causes embryo lethality (hence, its alternative name EMBRYO DEFECTIVE2729; Wang et al., 2010). Thus, the function of the protein encoded at At3g20440 is currently unknown but unlikely to be a functional BE.The be2 and be3 single mutants have phenotypes that closely resemble the wild type, indicating that there is a high degree of redundancy between the enzymes. However, be2be3 double mutants lack starch (Dumez et al., 2006). Instead, the plants accumulate large amounts of maltose and other linear malto-oligosaccharides (MOSs). This is presumably because linear chains produced by the SSs are cleaved by starch-degrading enzymes (α- and β-amylases; Dumez et al., 2006). The altered metabolism of these double-mutant plants impedes growth, and they are smaller and paler than the wild type. The precise reason for this is unclear.In addition to mutagenesis, there have been several studies where BEs were overexpressed in transgenic plants. Overexpression of the E. coli glycogen BE (EcGLGB) in potato tubers or rice endosperm resulted in an increased degree of branching of amylopectin (Shewmaker et al., 1994; Kortstee et al., 1996; Kim et al., 2005). Overexpression of endogenous plant BE2 genes has also been performed in both rice and potato, increasing the proportion of shorter amylopectin chains (Tanaka et al., 2004; Brummell et al., 2015), and rice, leading to the accumulation of highly branched, water-soluble polysaccharides (Tanaka et al., 2004). Transgenic expression of genes from different photosynthetic organisms has also shown the degree of functional conservation within the plant BE classes. Sawada et al. (2009) showed that class II BE from Chlorella kessleri could rescue the BE2b-deficient phenotype in rice endosperm.The aim of this work was to investigate the capacity of different types of BEs to mediate starch granule formation by assessing their ability to function in the context of an otherwise intact starch biosynthesis pathway. To do this, we used the Arabidopsis be2be3 double mutants as a line in which to express three types of BEs. We chose BE2a from maize (required for leaf starch synthesis and similar to the endogenous Arabidopsis proteins; Yandeau-Nelson et al., 2011), BE1 from potato (represents the plant class I BEs that Arabidopsis lacks; Safford et al., 1998), and GLGB (the BE from E. coli involved in glycogen biosynthesis). This approach differs from previous investigations, because the activity of each BE type (working in planta with the same set of SSs and DBEs) can be assessed, and the results can be directly compared. In addition, we sought to address whether a glycogen BE was sufficient for starch production—in other words, whether the remaining starch biosynthetic enzymes are capable of generating a crystallization competent polymer, even when partnered with a BE with a different specificity. In previously described transgenic plants expressing E. coli GLGB, the endogenous plant BEs were still present (Shewmaker et al., 1994; Kortstee et al., 1996; Kim et al., 2005).In the transgenic lines generated here, we analyzed glucan synthesis, starch structure, and composition. Our results show that all three BE types can mediate starch granule production but to differing degrees. In each case, the structure of amylopectin and the amylose content depend on the type of BE present, as does starch granule morphology. We discuss the reasons for these differences in relation to previously reported BE properties.  相似文献   

2.
A minimum of four soluble starch synthase families have been documented in all starch-storing green plants. These activities are involved in amylopectin synthesis and are extremely well conserved throughout the plant kingdom. Mutants or transgenic plants defective for SSII and SSIII isoforms have been previously shown to have a large and specific impact on the synthesis of amylopectin while the function of the SSI type of enzymes has remained elusive. We report here that Arabidopsis mutants, lacking a plastidial starch synthase isoform belonging to the SSI family, display a major and novel type of structural alteration within their amylopectin. Comparative analysis of beta-limit dextrins for both wild type and mutant amylopectins suggests a specific and crucial function of SSI during the synthesis of transient starch in Arabidopsis leaves. Considering our own characterization of SSI activity and the previously described kinetic properties of maize SSI, our results suggest that the function of SSI is mainly involved in the synthesis of small outer chains during amylopectin cluster synthesis.  相似文献   

3.
Four starch synthase I (SSI)-deficient rice (Oryza sativa) mutant lines were generated using retrotransposon Tos17 insertion. The mutants exhibited different levels of SSI activities and produced significantly lower amounts of SSI protein ranging from 0% to 20% of the wild type. The mutant endosperm amylopectin showed a decrease in chains with degree of polymerization (DP) 8 to 12 and an increase in chains with DP 6 to 7 and DP 16 to 19. The degree of change in amylopectin chain-length distribution was positively correlated with the extent of decrease in SSI activity in the mutants. The structural changes in the amylopectin increased the gelatinization temperature of endosperm starch. Chain-length analysis of amylopectin in the SSI band excised from native-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis/SS activity staining gel showed that SSI preferentially synthesized DP 7 to 11 chains by elongating DP 4 to 7 short chains of glycogen or amylopectin. These results show that SSI distinctly generates DP 8 to 12 chains from short DP 6 to 7 chains emerging from the branch point in the A or B(1) chain of amylopectin. SSI seemingly functions from the very early through the late stage of endosperm development. Yet, the complete absence of SSI, despite being a major SS isozyme in the developing endosperm, had no effect on the size and shape of seeds and starch granules and the crystallinity of endosperm starch, suggesting that other SS enzymes are probably capable of partly compensating SSI function. In summary, this study strongly suggested that amylopectin chains are synthesized by the coordinated actions of SSI, SSIIa, and SSIIIa isoforms.  相似文献   

4.
Several studies have suggested that debranching enzymes (DBEs) are involved in the biosynthesis of amylopectin, the major constituent of starch granules. Our systematic analysis of all DBE mutants of Arabidopsis thaliana demonstrates that when any DBE activity remains, starch granules are still synthesized, albeit with altered amylopectin structure. Quadruple mutants lacking all four DBE proteins (Isoamylase1 [ISA1], ISA2, and ISA3, and Limit-Dextrinase) are devoid of starch granules and instead accumulate highly branched glucans, distinct from amylopectin and from previously described phytoglycogen. A fraction of these glucans are present as discrete, insoluble, nanometer-scale particles, but the structure and properties of this material are radically altered compared with wild-type amylopectin. Superficially, these data support the hypothesis that debranching is required for amylopectin synthesis. However, our analyses show that soluble glucans in the quadruple DBE mutant are degraded by α- and β-amylases during periods of net accumulation, giving rise to maltose and branched malto-oligosaccharides. The additional loss of the chloroplastic α-amylase AMY3 partially reverts the phenotype of the quadruple DBE mutant, restoring starch granule biosynthesis. We propose that DBEs function in normal amylopectin synthesis by promoting amylopectin crystallization but conclude that they are not mandatory for starch granule synthesis.  相似文献   

5.
It is widely known that some of the starch synthases and starch-branching enzymes are trapped inside the starch granule matrix during the course of starch deposition in amyloplasts. The objective of this study was to use maize SSI to further our understanding of the protein domains involved in starch granule entrapment and identify the chain-length specificities of the enzyme. Using affinity gel electrophoresis, we measured the dissociation constants of maize SSI and its truncated forms using various glucans. The enzyme has a high degree of specificity in terms of its substrate-enzyme dissociation constant, but has a greatly elevated affinity for increasing chain lengths of alpha-1, 4 glucans. Deletion of the N-terminal arm of SSI did not affect the Kd value. Further small deletions of either N- or C-terminal domains resulted in a complete loss of any measurable affinity for its substrate, suggesting that the starch-affinity domain of SSI is not discrete from the catalytic domain. Greater affinity was displayed for the amylopectin fraction of starch as compared to amylose, whereas glycogen revealed the lowest affinity. However, when the outer chain lengths (OCL) of glycogen were extended using the phosphorylase enzyme, we found an increase in affinity for SSI between an average OCL of 7 and 14, and then an apparently exponential increase to an average OCL of 21. On the other hand, the catalytic ability of SSI was reduced several-fold using these glucans with extended chain lengths as substrates, and most of the label from [14C]ADPG was incorporated into shorter chains of dp < 10. We conclude that the rate of catalysis of SSI enzyme decreases with the OCL of its glucan substrate, and it has a very high affinity for the longer glucan chains of dp approximately 20, rendering the enzyme catalytically incapable at longer chain lengths. Based on the observations in this study, we propose that during amylopectin synthesis shorter A and B1 chains are extended by SSI up to a critical chain length that soon becomes unsuitable for catalysis by SSI and hence cannot be elongated further by this enzyme. Instead, SSI is likely to become entrapped as a relatively inactive protein within the starch granule. Further glucan extension for continuation of amylopectin synthesis must require a handover to other SS enzymes which can extend the glucan chains further or for branching by branching enzymes. If this is correct, this proposal provides a biochemical basis to explain how the specificities of various SS enzymes determine and set the limitations on the length of A, B, C chains in the starch granule.  相似文献   

6.
Branching enzymes (BEs) are essential in the biosynthesis of starch and glycogen and play critical roles in determining the fine structure of these polymers. The substrates of these BEs are long carbohydrate chains that interact with these enzymes via multiple binding sites on the enzyme’s surface. By controlling the branched-chain length distribution, BEs can mediate the physiological properties of starch and glycogen moieties; however, the mechanism and structural determinants of this specificity remain mysterious. In this study, we identify a large dodecaose binding surface on rice BE I (BEI) that reaches from the outside of the active site to the active site of the enzyme. Mutagenesis activity assays confirm the importance of this binding site in enzyme catalysis, from which we conclude that it is likely the acceptor chain binding site. Comparison of the structures of BE from Cyanothece and BE1 from rice allowed us to model the location of the donor-binding site. We also identified two loops that likely interact with the donor chain and whose sequences diverge between plant BE1, which tends to transfer longer chains, and BEIIb, which transfers exclusively much shorter chains. When the sequences of these loops were swapped with the BEIIb sequence, rice BE1 also became a short-chain transferring enzyme, demonstrating the key role these loops play in specificity. Taken together, these results provide a more complete picture of the structure, selectivity, and activity of BEs.  相似文献   

7.
Starch is made up of amylose (linear alpha-1,4-polyglucans) and amylopectin (alpha-1,6-branched polyglucans). Amylopectin has a distinct fine structure called multiple cluster structure and is synthesized by multiple subunits or isoforms of four classes of enzymes: ADPglucose pyrophosphorylase, soluble starch synthase (SS), starch branching enzyme (BE), and starch debranching enzyme (DBE). In the present paper, based on analyses of mutants and transgenic lines of rice in which each enzyme activity is affected, the contribution of the individual isoform to the fine structure of amylopectin in rice endosperm is evaluated, and a new model referred to as the "two-step branching and improper branch clearing model" is proposed to explain how amylopectin is synthesized. The model emphasizes that two sets of reactions, alpha-1,6-branch formation and the subsequent alpha-1,4-chain elongation, are catalyzed by distinct BE and SS isoforms, respectively, are fundamental to the construction of the cluster structure. The model also assesses the role of DBE, namely isoamylase or in addition pullulanase, to remove unnecessary alpha-1,6-glucosidic linkages that are occasionally formed at improper positions apart from two densely branched regions of the cluster.  相似文献   

8.
9.
Three isoforms of starch synthase (SS) were shown to be present in soluble potato tuber extracts by activity staining after native gel electrophoresis. A cDNA encoding SSI from rice was used as a probe to clone a corresponding cDNA from potato. The deduced amino acid sequence identified the protein as an SS from potato with an Mr of 70.6 kDa for the immature enzyme including its transit peptide. This novel isoform was designated SSI. An analysis of the expression pattern of the gene indicated that SSI is predominantly expressed in sink and source leaves, and, to a lower extent in tubers. In several independent transgenic potato lines, where the expression of SSI was repressed using the antisense approach, the activity of a specific SS isoform was reduced to non-detectable levels as determined through activity staining after native gel electrophoresis. The reduction in the amount of this isoform of SS did not lead to any detectable changes in starch structure, probably due to the fact that this isoform only represents a minor activity in potato tubers. Received: 19 August 1998 / Accepted: 17 December 1998  相似文献   

10.
Synthesized by glycogen synthase and starch synthases (SS) using ADP-glucose as the sugar donor molecule, glycogen and starch accumulate as predominant storage carbohydrates in most bacteria and plants, respectively. We have recently shown that the so-called “starch-less” Arabidopsis thaliana adg1–1 and aps1 mutants impaired in ADP-glucose pyrophosphorylase do indeed accumulate low starch content in normal growth conditions, and relatively high starch content when plants were cultured in the presence of microbial volatiles. Our results were strongly supported by data obtained using a highly sensitive method for confocal fluorescence microscopic visualization of iodine stained starch granules. Using Arabidopsis leaves from WT plants, aps1 plants, ss3/ss4 plants lacking both class III and class IV SS, gbss plants lacking the granule-bound SS, and sus1/sus2/sus3/sus4 plants lacking four genes that code for proteins with sucrose synthase activity, in this work we precisely describe the method for preparation of plant samples for starch microscopic examination. Furthermore, we show that this method can be used to visualize glycogen in bacteria, and pure starch granules, amylose and amylopectin.  相似文献   

11.

Background  

Starch is of great importance to humans as a food and biomaterial, and the amount and structure of starch made in plants is determined in part by starch synthase (SS) activity. Five SS isoforms, SSI, II, III, IV and Granule Bound SSI, have been identified, each with a unique catalytic role in starch synthesis. The basic mode of action of SSs is known; however our knowledge of several aspects of SS enzymology at the structural and mechanistic level is incomplete. To gain a better understanding of the differences in SS sequences that underscore their specificity, the previously uncharacterised SSIVb from wheat was cloned and extensive bioinformatics analyses of this and other SSs sequences were done.  相似文献   

12.
Tapioca starch was modified using branching enzyme (BE) isolated from Bacillus subtilis 168 and Bacillus stearothermophilus maltogenic amylase (BSMA), and their molecular fine structure and susceptibility to amylolytic enzymes were investigated. By BE treatment, the molecular weight decreased from 3.1 × 108 to 1.7 × 106, the number of shorter branch chains (DP 6–12) increased, the number of longer branch chains (DP >25) decreased, and amylose content decreased from 18.9% to 0.75%. This indicated that α–1,4 linkages of amylose and amylopectin were cleaved, and moiety of glycosyl residues were transferred to another amylose and amylopectin to produce branched glucan and BE-treated tapioca starch by forming α–1,6 branch linkages. The product was further modified with BSMA to produce highly-branched tapioca starch with 9.7% of extra branch points. When subject to digestion with human pancreatic α-amylase (HPA), porcine pancreatic α-amylase (PPA) and glucoamylase, highly-branched tapioca starch gave significantly lowered α-amylase susceptibility (7.5 times, 14.4 times and 3.9 times, respectively), compared to native tapioca starch.  相似文献   

13.
The major component of starch is the branched glucan amylopectin. Structural features of amylopectin, such as the branching pattern and the chain length distribution, are thought to be key factors that enable it to form semicrystalline starch granules. We varied both structural parameters by creating Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) mutants lacking combinations of starch synthases (SSs) SS1, SS2, and SS3 (to vary chain lengths) and the debranching enzyme ISOAMYLASE1-ISOAMYLASE2 (ISA; to alter branching pattern). The isa mutant accumulates primarily phytoglycogen in leaf mesophyll cells, with only small amounts of starch in other cell types (epidermis and bundle sheath cells). This balance can be significantly shifted by mutating different SSs. Mutation of SS1 promoted starch synthesis, restoring granules in mesophyll cell plastids. Mutation of SS2 decreased starch synthesis, abolishing granules in epidermal and bundle sheath cells. Thus, the types of SSs present affect the crystallinity and thus the solubility of the glucans made, compensating for or compounding the effects of an aberrant branching pattern. Interestingly, ss2 mutant plants contained small amounts of phytoglycogen in addition to aberrant starch. Likewise, ss2ss3 plants contained phytoglycogen, but were almost devoid of glucan despite retaining other SS isoforms. Surprisingly, glucan production was restored in the ss2ss3isa triple mutants, indicating that SS activity in ss2ss3 per se is not limiting but that the isoamylase suppresses glucan accumulation. We conclude that loss of only SSs can cause phytoglycogen production. This is readily degraded by isoamylase and other enzymes so it does not accumulate and was previously unnoticed.Starch, the major storage carbohydrate in plants, is composed of two α-1,4- and α-1,6-linked glucan polymers: moderately branched amylopectin and predominantly linear amylose. Amylopectin, which constitutes approximately 80% of most starches, is synthesized by three enzyme activities. Starch synthases (SSs) transfer the glucosyl moiety of ADP-Glc to a glucan chain, forming a new α-1,4 glucosidic linkage, extending the linear chains. Branching enzymes (BEs) cleave some α-1,4 linkages and reattach chains of six Glc units or more via α-1,6 linkages, creating branch points. Debranching enzymes (DBEs) hydrolyze some of these branches, tailoring the structure of the polymer. However, the way in which the individual enzymes work together to create crystallization-competent amylopectin remains unclear.The coordinated actions of SSs, BEs, and DBEs are thought to produce a glucan with a tree-like architecture in which the branch points are nonrandomly positioned. According to models of amylopectin, clusters of unbranched chain segments are formed. Within these clusters, adjacent chains form double helices, which align in parallel giving rise to crystalline lamellae. These alternate with amorphous lamellae containing the branch points and chain segments that span the clusters (Zeeman et al., 2010). In the context of this amylopectin model, glucan chains can be categorized according to their length and connection to other chains. The A chains are external chains that do not carry other branches. The B chains carry one or more branches (either an A chain or another B chain) and have both external and internal segments. The B chains can span one or more clusters (e.g. a B1 chain spans one cluster). The C chain is the single chain that has a reducing end (Manners, 1989). The A chains tend to be the shortest, having an average chain length (ACL) of 12 to 16, depending on the species (Hizukuri, 1986). Together with the B1 chains, the A chains are thought to make up the crystalline clusters. Longer chains such as B2 chains (ACL 20–24) or B3 chains (ACL 42–48) are presumed to connect clusters (Hizukuri, 1986). Amylose is a distinct polymer synthesized within the amylopectin matrix by granule-bound SS (Tatge et al., 1999). Mutants lacking granule-bound SS also lack amylose but still make starch granules, showing that amylose synthesis is not required for this (Zeeman et al., 2010).The structural properties of amylopectin contrast with those of glycogen, the Glc polymer synthesized in organisms such as fungi, animals, and most bacteria. Glycogen also consists of α-1,4-linked Glc chains with α-1,6-linked branches, but differs in three major ways from amylopectin. First, its external branches are considerably shorter (6–8 Glc units compared with 12–16 in amylopectin). Second, the branch frequency (10%) is twice as high as in amylopectin. Third, its branch points are assumed to be distributed homogeneously, whereas branching in amylopectin is thought to be nonhomogeneous. These differences prevent the formation and parallel alignment of double helices in glycogen, rendering it soluble. Glycogen synthesis requires only a single glycogen synthase enzyme and a single glycogen BE, whereas several SS and BE isoforms are involved in amylopectin synthesis. In Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana), there are four SSs (SS1–SS4) and two BEs (BE2 and BE3; Li et al., 2003; Streb and Zeeman, 2012). In addition, Arabidopsis has three DBEs. ISOAMYLASE1-ISOAMYLASE2 (hereafter referred to simply as ISA), a heteromultimeric enzyme composed of the two subunits ISA1 and ISA2, is implicated in amylopectin synthesis (Delatte et al., 2005). The other two DBEs, ISA3 and LIMIT DEXTRINASE (LDA), are implicated in starch degradation (Delatte et al., 2006).Loss of specific SS isoforms has different effects on the starch amount, amylopectin chain length distribution (CLD), and starch granule morphology, suggesting distinct functions for each isoform. For example, amylopectin from SS1-deficient mutants of Arabidopsis (Delvallé et al., 2005; Szydlowski et al., 2011) and rice (Oryza sativa; Fujita et al., 2006) has fewer chains with a degree of polymerization (DP; i.e. chain length) between 8 and 12 and more chains with a DP between 17 and 20 compared with the wild-type starches. This is consistent with in vitro data for the maize (Zea mays; Commuri and Keeling, 2001) and rice SSI enzymes (Fujita et al., 2006), which preferentially elongate short chains of DP 6 or 7 up to a length of DP 10. This indicates that SSI functions to elongate the short chains created by BEs by a few Glc units (Commuri and Keeling, 2001; Delvallé et al., 2005). Comparable studies in SS2-deficient mutants reveal amylopectin with more chains with DP 6 to 11, but depletion in chains with DP 13 to 20 compared with the corresponding wild-type amylopectins. Thus, SS2 is suggested to elongate shorter chains (e.g. those made by SS1) to a length of between DP 13 and 20 (Edwards et al., 1999; Yamamori et al., 2000; Umemoto et al., 2002; Morell et al., 2003; Zhang et al., 2004, 2008). SS3 was proposed to be important for the generation of long, cluster-spanning chains (Jeon et al., 2010; Tetlow and Emes, 2011), as well as contributing to A chain and B1 chain elongation (Edwards et al., 1999; Zhang et al., 2005, 2008). By contrast, SS4 appears to have a specialized role in initiating or coordinating granule formation (Roldán et al., 2007; Crumpton-Taylor et al., 2012, 2013). Arabidopsis ss4 mutants have just one round starch granule per chloroplast rather than five or more lenticular granules observed in the wild type.Partial loss of BE activity in maize (Stinard et al., 1993), rice (Mizuno et al., 1993), and potato (Solanum tuberosum; Schwall et al., 2000) leads to starches with high apparent amylose, most likely caused by the accumulation of less frequently branched amylopectin. A total lack of branching activity in Arabidopsis be2be3 mutants, however, abolishes starch production. Instead, maltose accumulates, suggesting that linear glucans are produced, but degraded by α- and β-amylases (Dumez et al., 2006).Loss of DBE of the ISA1 class causes a dramatic phenotype, with production of a soluble glucan (phytoglycogen) in place of starch. This has been observed in starch-synthesizing tissues of several species, including Chlamydomonas reinhardtii cells (Mouille et al., 1996), Arabidopsis leaves (Delatte et al., 2005; Wattebled et al., 2005), and the endosperms of maize (Zea Mays; James et al., 1995), rice (Oryza sativa; Nakamura et al., 1997), and barley (Hordeum vulgare) seeds (Burton et al., 2002). Phytoglycogen has structural similarities to glycogen in that both are water soluble and have a higher branch frequency than amylopectin. Accordingly, it was proposed that the trimming of glucans produced by SS and BE isoforms by ISA1 removes branches that interfere with the formation of secondary and tertiary structures (i.e. organized arrays of double helices), thereby facilitating amylopectin biosynthesis and crystallization (Ball et al., 1996). Compared with ISA1, the other two DBEs (LDA and ISA3) have different substrate specificities, both preferring substrates with short outer chains, such as β-limit dextrins, suggesting that their role is primarily in starch degradation. Consistently, mutating these genes in Arabidopsis causes a starch-excess phenotype rather than phytoglycogen accumulation (Delatte et al., 2006).Although it is now widely accepted that a degree of debranching occurs to control branch number and positioning in amylopectin, the importance of this for crystalline starch production is still uncertain. Several studies have shown that some cell types in isa1-deficient mutants still produce some starch (e.g. epidermal and bundle sheath cells in Arabidopsis mutants; Delatte et al., 2005), indicating that other factors can also affect the partitioning between phytoglycogen and starch.No starch granules are made in the Arabidopsis isa1isa2isa3lda quadruple mutant, which lacks all three DBEs (Streb et al., 2008). Although suggestive of redundancy between the DBEs, the loss of each enzyme has distinct effects on amylopectin or phytoglycogen structure, consistent with their different substrate specificities. Furthermore, the loss of starch granules in isa1isa2isa3lda was shown to be at least partly due to the actions of α-amylase; typical α-amylolytic products (short malto-oligosaccharides) accumulated alongside phytoglycogen. Mutation of the gene encoding the chloroplastic α-AMYLASE3 (AMY3) eliminated these short malto-oligosaccharides and restored starch granule biosynthesis in all cell types examined. This unexpected result showed that crystalline glucans can be produced in the absence of DBE activity, despite an altered branching pattern. Streb et al. (2008) proposed that AMY3 shortens external chains of the glucans made by SSs and BEs so that they cannot form double helices with their neighbors. This idea is consistent with models for amylopectin, in which a suitable CLD is a critical factor in the formation of the secondary and higher-order crystalline structures (Gidley and Bulpin, 1987; Pfannemüller, 1987). Thus, factors that affect the CLD, such as a failure to sufficiently elongate new branches or concomitant chain degradation by amylases, should also affect crystallinity. Indeed, early studies of maize mutants (that were subsequently shown to be affected in DBE and SS activities) reported that loss of SS in a DBE mutant background altered the ratio of starch to phytoglycogen compared with the DBE mutants alone (Cameron and Cole, 1954; Creech, 1965).The aim of this work was to use genetics to systematically vary both branch point position and chain lengths and determine the impact on glucan amount, structure, and starch granule formation in Arabidopsis. We analyzed mutants lacking combinations of SSs (to vary chain lengths) in the absence of the debranching enzyme ISA1-ISA2 (to change branch point distribution/frequency). This revealed that the length of external chains is a key factor in the production of a crystallization-competent glucan. Remarkably, our results also provide evidence for phytoglycogen production due to mutations just in SSs. Our results indicate that this phenomenon is largely masked by the presence of ISA1-ISA2, which degrades the aberrant glucan instead of trimming it to amylopectin.  相似文献   

14.
Zhang X  Myers AM  James MG 《Plant physiology》2005,138(2):663-674
The role of starch synthase (SS) III (SSIII) in the synthesis of transient starch in Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) was investigated by characterizing the effects of two insertion mutations at the AtSS3 gene locus. Both mutations, termed Atss3-1 and Atss3-2, condition complete loss of SSIII activity and prevent normal gene expression at both the mRNA and protein levels. The mutations cause a starch excess phenotype in leaves during the light period of the growth cycle due to an apparent increase in the rate of starch synthesis. In addition, both mutations alter the physical structure of leaf starch. Significant increases were noted in the mutants in the frequency of linear chains in amylopectin with a degree of polymerization greater than approximately 60, and relatively small changes were observed in chains of degree of polymerization 4 to 50. Furthermore, starch in the Atss3-1 and Atss3-2 mutants has a higher phosphate content, approximately two times that of wild-type leaf starch. Total SS activity is increased in both Atss3 mutants and a specific SS activity appears to be up-regulated. The data indicate that, in addition to its expected direct role in starch assembly, SSIII also has a negative regulatory function in the biosynthesis of transient starch in Arabidopsis.  相似文献   

15.
One isoform of the branching enzyme (BE; EC 2.4.1.18) of potato (Solarium tuberosum L.) is known and catalyses the formation of α-1,6 bonds in a glucan chain, resulting in the branched starch component amylopectin. Constructs containing the antisense or sense-orientated distal 1.5-kb part of a cDNA for potato BE were used to transform the amylose-free (amf) mutant of potato, the starch of which stains red with iodine. The expression of the endogenous BE gene was inhibited either largely or fully as judged by the decrease or absence of the BE mRNA and protein. This resulted in a low percentage of starch granules with a small blue core and large red outer layer. There was no effect on the amylose content, degree of branching or λmax of the iodine-stained starch. However, when the physico-chemical properties of the different starch suspensions were assessed, differences were observed, which although small indicated that starch in the transformants was different from that of theamf mutant.  相似文献   

16.
Toxoplasma gondii is a ubiquitous pathogen infecting one-third of the global population. A significant fraction of toxoplasmosis cases is caused by reactivation of existing chronic infections. The encysted bradyzoites during chronic infection accumulate high levels of amylopectin that is barely present in fast-replicating tachyzoites. However, the physiological significance of amylopectin is not fully understood. Here, we identified a starch synthase (SS) that is required for amylopectin synthesis in T. gondii. Genetic ablation of SS abolished amylopectin production, reduced tachyzoite proliferation, and impaired the recrudescence of bradyzoites to tachyzoites. Disruption of the parasite Ca2+-dependent protein kinase 2 (CDPK2) was previously shown to cause massive amylopectin accumulation and bradyzoite death. Therefore, the Δcdpk2 mutant is thought to be a vaccine candidate. Notably, deleting SS in a Δcdpk2 mutant completely abolished starch accrual and restored cyst formation as well as virulence in mice. Together these results suggest that regulated amylopectin production is critical for the optimal growth, development and virulence of Toxoplasma. Not least, our data underscore a potential drawback of the Δcdpk2 mutant as a vaccine candidate as it may regain full virulence by mutating amylopectin synthesis genes like SS.  相似文献   

17.
Three genes, BE1, BE2, and BE3, which potentially encode isoforms of starch branching enzymes, have been found in the genome of Arabidopsis thaliana. Although no impact on starch structure was observed in null be1 mutants, modifications in amylopectin structure analogous to those of other branching enzyme II mutants were detected in be2 and be3. No impact on starch content was found in any of the single mutant lines. Moreover, three double mutant combinations were produced (be1 be2, be1 be3, and be2 be3), and the impact of the mutations on starch content and structure was analyzed. Our results suggest that BE1 has no apparent function for the synthesis of starch in the leaves, as both be1 be2 and be1 be3 double mutants display the same phenotype as be2 and be3 separately. However, starch synthesis was abolished in be2 be3, while high levels of alpha-maltose were assayed in the cytosol. This result indicates that the functions of both BE2 and BE3, which belong to class II starch branching enzymes, are largely redundant in Arabidopsis. Moreover, we demonstrate that maltose accumulation depends on the presence of an active ADP-glucose pyrophosphorylase and that the cytosolic transglucosidase DISPROPORTIONATING ENZYME2, required for maltose metabolization, is specific for beta-maltose.  相似文献   

18.
The domestication of starch crops underpinned the development of human civilisation, yet we still do not fully understand how plants make starch. Starch is composed of glucose polymers that are branched (amylopectin) or linear (amylose). The amount of amylose strongly influences the physico-chemical behaviour of starchy foods during cooking and of starch mixtures in non-food manufacturing processes. The GRANULE-BOUND STARCH SYNTHASE (GBSS) is the glucosyltransferase specifically responsible for elongating amylose polymers and was the only protein known to be required for its biosynthesis. Here, we demonstrate that PROTEIN TARGETING TO STARCH (PTST) is also specifically required for amylose synthesis in Arabidopsis. PTST is a plastidial protein possessing an N-terminal coiled coil domain and a C-terminal carbohydrate binding module (CBM). We discovered that Arabidopsis ptst mutants synthesise amylose-free starch and are phenotypically similar to mutants lacking GBSS. Analysis of granule-bound proteins showed a dramatic reduction of GBSS protein in ptst mutant starch granules. Pull-down assays with recombinant proteins in vitro, as well as immunoprecipitation assays in planta, revealed that GBSS physically interacts with PTST via a coiled coil. Furthermore, we show that the CBM domain of PTST, which mediates its interaction with starch granules, is also required for correct GBSS localisation. Fluorescently tagged Arabidopsis GBSS, expressed either in tobacco or Arabidopsis leaves, required the presence of Arabidopsis PTST to localise to starch granules. Mutation of the CBM of PTST caused GBSS to remain in the plastid stroma. PTST fulfils a previously unknown function in targeting GBSS to starch. This sheds new light on the importance of targeting biosynthetic enzymes to sub-cellular sites where their action is required. Importantly, PTST represents a promising new gene target for the biotechnological modification of starch composition, as it is exclusively involved in amylose synthesis.  相似文献   

19.
This study assessed the impact on starch metabolism in Arabidopsis leaves of simultaneously eliminating multiple soluble starch synthases (SS) from among SS1, SS2, and SS3. Double mutant ss1- ss2- or ss1- ss3- lines were generated using confirmed null mutations. These were compared to the wild type, each single mutant, and ss1- ss2- ss3- triple mutant lines grown in standardized environments. Double mutant plants developed similarly to the wild type, although they accumulated less leaf starch in both short-day and long-day diurnal cycles. Despite the reduced levels in the double mutants, lines containing only SS2 and SS4, or SS3 and SS4, are able to produce substantial amounts of starch granules. In both double mutants the residual starch was structurally modified including higher ratios of amylose:amylopectin, altered glucan chain length distribution within amylopectin, abnormal granule morphology, and altered placement of α(1→6) branch linkages relative to the reducing end of each linear chain. The data demonstrate that SS activity affects not only chain elongation but also the net result of branch placement accomplished by the balanced activities of starch branching enzymes and starch debranching enzymes. SS3 was shown partially to overlap in function with SS1 for the generation of short glucan chains within amylopectin. Compensatory functions that, in some instances, allow continued residual starch production in the absence of specific SS classes were identified, probaby accomplished by the granule bound starch synthase GBSS1.  相似文献   

20.
In addition to the exclusively granule-bound starch synthase GBSSI, starch granules also bind significant proportions of other starch biosynthetic enzymes, particularly starch synthases (SS) SSI and SSIIa, and starch branching enzyme (BE) BEIIb. Whether this association is a functional aspect of starch biosynthesis, or results from non-specific entrapment during amylopectin crystallization, is not known. This study utilized genetic, immunological, and proteomic approaches to investigate comprehensively the proteome and phosphoproteome of Zea mays endosperm starch granules. SSIII, BEI, BEIIa, and starch phosphorylase were identified as internal granule-associated proteins in maize endosperm, along with the previously identified proteins GBSS, SSI, SSIIa, and BEIIb. Genetic analyses revealed three instances in which granule association of one protein is affected by the absence of another biosynthetic enzyme. First, eliminating SSIIa caused reduced granule association of SSI and BEIIb, without affecting GBSS abundance. Second, eliminating SSIII caused the appearance of two distinct electrophoretic mobility forms of BEIIb, whereas only a single migration form of BEIIb was observed in wild type or any other mutant granules examined. Third, eliminating BEIIb caused significant increases in the abundance of BEI, BEIIa, SSIII, and starch phosphorylase in the granule, without affecting SSI or SSIIa. Analysis of the granule phosphoproteome with a phosphorylation-specific dye indicated that GBSS, BEIIb, and starch phosphorylase are all phosphorylated as they occur in the granule. These results suggest the possibility that starch metabolic enzymes located in granules are regulated by post-translational modification and/or protein-protein interactions.  相似文献   

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