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1.
Phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase (PEPCase) from light- and dark-adapted maize leaves was rapidly purified in the presence of L-malate and glycerol to apparent electrophoretic homogeneity by ammonium sulfate fractionation, hydroxylapatite chromatography, and fast-protein liquid chromatography on Mono Q. The resulting preparations were totally devoid of pyruvate, orthophosphate dikinase protein based on immunoblot analysis. Throughout the purification, both forms of PEPCase retained their different enzymatic properties. The specific activity of the light enzyme was consistently about twice that of the dark form when assayed at suboptimal (but physiological) pH (pH 7.0-7.3), and the former was also less sensitive to feedback inhibition by L-malate than that from darkened leaves under various conditions. Covalently bound phosphate and high-performance liquid chromatography-based phosphoamino acid analyses showed that both forms of purified PEPCase were phosphorylated exclusively on serine residues, but the degree of phosphorylation was about 50% greater in the light enzyme. Notably, incubation of purified PEPCase in vitro with exogenous alkaline phosphatase led to an increase in malate sensitivity and a decrease in specific activity of the light form enzyme to levels observed with the dark form, which was essentially not affected by phosphatase treatment. These results with the purified enzyme from light- and dark-adapted maize leaves indicate that the light-induced changes in activity and malate sensitivity of C4 PEPCase are related, at least in part, to the degree of covalent seryl phosphorylation of the protein in vivo.  相似文献   

2.
Illumination of maize leaves increases the phosphorylation state of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase and reduces the sensitivity of the enzyme to feedback inhibition by malate. Red, white and blue light were each found to be equally potent, and the effect of light was blocked by 3(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea. A phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase kinase was partially purified from illuminated maize leaves by a three-step procedure. Phosphorylation of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase by this protein kinase reached 0.7-0.8 molecules/subunit and correlated with a 3- to 4-fold increase in Ki for malate. The protein kinase was inhibited by L-malate, but was insensitive to a number of other potential regulators. Freshly prepared and desalted extracts of darkened maize leaves contained very little kinase activity, but the activity appeared when leaves were illuminated for 30-60 min before extraction. The catalytic subunit of protein phosphatase 2A from rabbit skeletal muscle, but not that of protein phosphatase 1, could dephosphorylate phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase. The protein phosphatases 1 and 2A activities of maize leaves were not affected by illumination. It is suggested that the major means by which light stimulates the phosphorylation of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase is by an increase in the activity of the protein kinase.  相似文献   

3.
Untransformed maize and tobacco plants and tobacco plants constitutively expressing nitrate reductase were grown with sufficient NO(3)- to support maximal growth. Four days prior to treatment the tobacco plants were deprived of nitrogen. Excised maize leaves and tobacco leaf discs were fed with either 40 mM KNO(3) or 40 mM KCl (control) in the light. Phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP) carboxylase (Case) activity was measured at 0.3 mM and 3 mM PEP. The light- induced increase in PEPCase V(max) was greater in maize than tobacco. Furthermore light decreased malate sensitivity in maize (which was N-replete) but not in N-deficient tobacco. NO(3)- treatment increased PEPCase V:(max) values in both species and decreased the sensitivity to inhibition by malate, but effects of NO(3)- were much more pronounced in tobacco than maize. PEPCase kinase activity was, however, greater in maize leaves NO(3)- than in the Cl(-)-treated controls, suggesting that it is responsive to leaf nitrogen supply. A correlation between foliar glutamine content and PEPCase activity was observed. It is concluded that PEPCase is sensitive to N metabolites which favour increased flow through the anapleurotic pathway in both C(3) and C(4) plants.  相似文献   

4.
The phosphorylation state and the malate sensitivity of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase (PEPCase, EC 4.1.1.31) in Bryophyllum fedtschenkoi Hamet et Perrier are altered by changes in the ambient temperature. These effects, in turn alter the in-vivo activity of the enzyme. Low temperature (3 °C or less), stabilizes the phosphorylated form of the enzyme, while high temperature (30 °C) promotes its dephosphorylation. The catalytic activity of the phosphorylated and dephosphorylated forms of PEPCase increases with temperature, but the apparent K i values for malate of both forms of the enzyme decrease. Results of experiments with detached leaves maintained in darkness in normal air indicate that the changes in malate sensitivity and phosphorylation state of PEPCase with temperature are of physiological significance. When the phosphorylated form of PEPCase is stabilized by reducing the temperature of leaves 9 h after transfer to constant darkness at 15 °C, a prolonged period of CO2 fixation follows. When leaves are maintained in constant darkness at 15 °C until CO2 output reaches a low steady-state level and the PEPCase is dephosphorylated, reducing the temperature to 3 °C results in a further period of CO2 fixation even though the phosphorylation state of PEPCase does not change.Abbreviations CAM Crassulacean acid metabolism - PEP phosphoenolpyruvate - PEPCase phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase We thank the Agricultural and Food Research Council for financial support for this work.  相似文献   

5.
Leport  Laurent  Kandlbinder  Andrea  Baur  Bernhard  Kaiser  Werner M. 《Planta》1996,198(4):495-501
Phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP) carboxylation was measured as dark 14CO2 fixation in leaves and roots (in vivo) or as PEP carboxylase (PEPCase) activity in desalted leaf and roof extracts (in vitro) from Pisum sativum L. cv. Kleine Rheinländerin. Its relation to the malate content and to the nitrogen source (nitrate or ammonium) was investigated. In tissue from nitrate-grown plants, PEP carboxylation varied diurnally, showing an increase upon illumination and a decrease upon darkening. Diurnal variations in roots were much lower than in leaves. Fixation rates in leaves remained constantly low in continuous darkness or high in continuous light. Dark CO2 fixation of leaf slices also decreased when leaves were preilluminated for 1 h in CO2-free air, suggesting that the modulation of dark CO2 fixation was related to assimilate availability in leaves and roots. Phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase activity was also measured in vitro. However, no difference in maximum enzyme activity was found in extracts from illuminated or darkened leaves, and the response to substrate and effectors (PEP, malate, glucose-6-phosphate, pH) was also identical. The serine/threonine protein kinase inhibitors K252b, H7 and staurosporine, and the protein phosphatase 2A inhibitors okadaic acid and cantharidin, fed through the leaf petiole, did not have the effects on dark CO2 fixation predicted by a regulatory system in which PEPCase is modulated via reversible protein phosphorylation. Therefore, it is suggested that the diurnal modulation of PEP carboxylation in vivo in leaves and roots of pea is not caused by protein phosphorylation, but rather by direct allosteric effects. Upon transfer of plants to ammonium-N or to an N-free nutrient solution, mean daily malate levels in leaves decreased drastically within 4–5 d. At that time, the diurnal oscillations of PEP carboxylation in vivo disappeared and rates remained at the high light-level. The coincidence of the two events suggests that PEPCase was de-regulated because malate levels became very low. The drastic decrease of leaf malate contents upon transfer of plants from nitrate to ammonium nutrition was apparently not caused by increased amino acid or protein synthesis, but probably by higher decarboxylation rates.Abbreviations CAM crassulacean acid metabolism - PEP Phosphoenolpyruvate - PEPCase phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase - PP protein phosphatase - PK protein kinase This work was supported by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft. B. Baur was a recipient of a doctoral grant, and L. Leport recipient of a post-doctoral grant of the DFG. The skilled technical assistance of Eva Wirth and Maria Lesch is gratefully acknowledged.  相似文献   

6.
In vitro phosphorylation of maize leaf phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase   总被引:3,自引:2,他引:1  
Budde RJ  Chollet R 《Plant physiology》1986,82(4):1107-1114
Autoradiography of total soluble maize (Zea mays) leaf proteins incubated with 32P-labeled adenylates and separated by denaturing electrophoresis revealed that many polypeptides were phosphorylated in vitro by endogenous protein kinase(s). The most intense band was at 94 to 100 kilodaltons and was observed when using either [γ-32P]ATP or [β-32P]ADP as the phosphate donor. This band was comprised of the subunits of both pyruvate, Pi dikinase (PPDK) and phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase (PEPCase). PPDK activity was previously shown to be dark/light-regulated via a novel ADP-dependent phosphorylation/Pi-dependent dephosphorylation of a threonyl residue. The identity of the acid-stable 94 to 100 kilodalton band phosphorylated by ATP was established unequivocally as PEPCase by two-dimensional gel electrophoresis and immunoblotting. The phosphorylated amino acid was a serine residue, as determined by two-dimensional thin-layer electrophoresis. While the in vitro phosphorylation of PEPCase from illuminated maize leaves by an endogenous protein kinase resulted in a partial inactivation (~25%) of the enzyme when assayed at pH 7 and subsaturating levels of PEP, effector modulation by l-malate and glucose-6-phosphate was relatively unaffected. Changes in the aggregation state of maize PEPCase (homotetrameric native structure) were studied by nondenaturing electrophoresis and immunoblotting. Enzyme from leaves of illuminated plants dissociated upon dilution, whereas the protein from darkened tissue did not dissociate, thus indicating a physical difference between the enzyme from light- versus dark-adapted maize plants.  相似文献   

7.
The effect of Pi on the properties of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase (PEPC) from Amaranthus hypochondriacus, a NAD-ME type C4 plant, was studied in leaf extracts as well as with purified protein. Efforts were also made to modulate the Pi status of the leaf by feeding leaves with either Pi or mannose. Inclusion of 30 mM Pi during the assay enhanced the enzyme activity in leaf extracts or of purified protein by >2-fold. The effect of Pi on the enzyme purified from dark-adapted leaves was more pronounced than that from light-adapted ones. The Ki for malate increased >2.3-fold and >1.9-fold by Pi in the enzyme purified from dark-adapted leaves and light-adapted leaves, respectively. Pi also induced an almost 50-60% increase in Km for PEP or Ka for glucose-6-phosphate. Feeding the leaves with Pi also increased the activity of PEPC in leaf extracts, while decreasing the malate sensitivity of the enzyme. On the other hand, Pi sequestering by mannose marginally decreased the activity, while markedly suppressing the light activation, of PEPC. There was no change in phosphorylation of PEPC in leaves of A. hypochondriacus due to the feeding of 30 mM Pi. However, feeding with mannose decreased the light-enhanced phosphorylation of PEPC. The marked decrease in malate sensitivity of PEPC with no change in phosphorylation state indicates that the changes induced by Pi are independent of the phosphorylation of PEPC. It is suggested here that Pi is an important factor in regulating PEPC in vivo and could also be used as a tool to analyse the properties of PEPC.  相似文献   

8.
Seasonal changes in the activity of phospho enol pyruvate carboxylase (PEPCase, EC 4.1.1.31), a key enzyme in the interaction of carbohydrate and nitrogen metabolism, were studied in leaves of the C3 semiparasitic mistletoe, Viscum album, growing on different host trees. Maximum extractable PEPCase activities were higher in leaves of mistletoes growing on Betula pendula and Alnus glutinosa hosts compared with those on the conifers, Abies alba and Larix decidua . Independent of host, maximum extractable PEPCase activities were high in spring and autumn while low in summer. Samples with higher PEPCase activities showed higher amounts of PEPCase protein and higher PEPCase mRNA levels. A curvilinear correlation between leaf total nitrogen content and the maximum extractable PEPCase activity as well as PEPCase mRNA level suggested that nitrogen might affect the activity of PEPCase of mistletoe by up-regulating gene expression. In addition to extractable activity, seasonal changes of the PEPCase activation state, the ratio of activities resulting from limited:non-limited assays, were found, which was correlated to the variation of malate content in leaves of mistletoe. ATP-dependent activation of PEPCase was characterized by an increase in I0.5( l -malate), indicating that PEPCase of leaves of mistletoes is probably regulated via phosphorylation.  相似文献   

9.
Nitrate reductase (NR; EC 1.6.6.1) activity increased at the beginning of the photoperiod in mature green maize (Zea mays L.) leaves as a result of increased enzyme protein level and protein dephosphorylation. In vitro experiments suggested that phosphorylation of maize leaf NR affected sensitivity to Mg2+ inhibition, as shown previously in spinach. When excised leaves were fed 32P-labeled inorganic phosphate, NR was phosphorylated on seryl residues in both the light and dark. Tryptic peptide mapping of NR labeled in vivo indicated three major 32P-phosphopeptide fragments, and labeling of all three was reduced when leaves were illuminated. Maize leaf NR mRNA levels that were low at the end of the dark period peaked within 2 h in the light and decreased thereafter, and NR activity generally remained high. It appears that light signals, rather than an endogenous rhythm, account primarily for diurnal variations in NR mRNA levels. Overall, regulation of NR activity in mature maize leaves in response to light signals appears to involve control of gene expression, enzyme protein synthesis, and reversible protein phosphorylation.  相似文献   

10.
Light modulation of maize leaf phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase   总被引:4,自引:3,他引:1       下载免费PDF全文
Phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase (PEPC) was extracted from maize (Zea mays L. cv Golden Cross Bantam T51) leaves harvested in the dark or light and was partially purified by (NH4)2SO4 fractionation and gel filtration to yield preparations that were 80% homogeneous. Malate sensitivity, PEPC activity, and PEPC protein (measured immunochemically) were monitored during purification. As reported previously, PEPC from dark leaves was more sensitive to malate inhibition compared to enzyme extracted from light leaves. Extraction and purification in the presence of malate stabilized the characteristics of the two forms. During gel filtration on Sephacryl S-300, all of the PEPC activity and PEPC protein emerged in a single high molecular weight peak, indicating that no inactive dissociated forms (dimers, monomers) were present. However, there was a slight difference between the light and dark enzymes in elution volume during gel filtration. In addition, specific activity (units at pH 7/milligram PEPC protein) decreased through the peak for both enzyme samples; because the dark enzyme emerged at a slightly higher elution volume, it contained enzyme with a relatively lower specific activity. The variation in specific activity of the dark enzyme corresponded with changes in malate sensitivity. Immunoblotting of samples with different specific activity and malate sensitivity, obtained from gel filtration, revealed only a single polypeptide with a relative molecular mass of 100,000. When the enzyme was extracted and purified in the absence of malate, characteristic differences of the light and dark enzymes were lost, the enzymes eluted at the same volume during gel filtration, and specific activity was constant through the peak. We conclude that maize leaf PEPC exists in situ as a tetramer of a single polypeptide and that subtle conformation changes can affect both enzymic activity and sensitivity to malate inhibition.  相似文献   

11.
Studies were conducted to determine the potential for regulationof maize leaf sucrose-phosphate synthase (SPS) by protein phosphorylation.Highly activated enzyme, in desalted crude leaf extracts preparedfrom illuminated leaves, was inactivated in vitro in a time-and ATP-de-pendent manner. Partial purification of SPS by polyethyleneglycol fractionation and Mono Q chromatography yielded enzymethat was not ATP-inactivated, possibly due to elimination ofcontaminating protein kinase. We used the partially purifiedSPS as substrate to identify an endogenous protein kinase. Theprotein kinase catalyzed the time- and ATP-dependent inacti-vationof SPS, and the apparent Km for Mg-ATP was estimated to be approximately10µM. The partially purified maize SPS protein was phosphorylatedin vitro using [y-32P]ATP and either the endogenous proteinkinase or the catalytic subunit of cAMP-dependent protein kinase.The incorporation of radiolabel was closely paralleled by inactivationof the enzyme. These results provide the first evidence forregulation of maize leaf SPS by protein phosphorylation, whichwe postulate is the mechanism of light-dark regulation in vivo. (Received October 23, 1990; Accepted January 7, 1991)  相似文献   

12.
In C4 plants, the photosynthetic enzyme phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase (PEPCase; EC 4.1.1.31) is subjected to a phosphorylation process via the light-dependent up-regulation of a Ca2+-independent PEPCase-kinase. The present work aimed to study the effect of salt stress on PEPCase phosphorylation in Sorghum vulgare Pers. leaves. The growth of salt-treated plants was reduced compared with that of the control plants. PEPCase activity modestly increased (around 20-40%) whereas PEPCase phosphorylation was markedly enhanced, on a protein basis, in extracts from illuminated leaves. The enhanced protein kinase activity was found to display a low molecular mass in the range 32-35 kDa, to be independent of Ca2+ and to be up-regulated by light. Furthermore, up-regulation was blocked in vivo by the cytosolic protein synthesis inhibitor cycloheximide. Collectively, these data demonstrated that salinity stress altered the Ca2+-independent PEPCase-kinase, presumably by increasing the mesophyll content of the enzyme. Potassium chloride, but not abscisic acid, mimicked the effect of NaCl on PEPCase-kinase activity.  相似文献   

13.
The regulation of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase (PEPCase, EC. 4.1.1.31) and PEPCase kinase was investigated using barley (Hordeum vulgare L.) mesophyll protoplasts. Incubation of protoplasts in the light resulted in a reduction in the sensitivity of PEPCase to the inhibitor L-malate; PEPCase from protoplasts incubated in the light for 1 h was inhibited 48±2% by 2mM malate, whereas the enzyme from protoplasts incubated for 1 h in the dark was inhibited by 67±2%. Light-induced reduction of sensitivity of PEPCase to malate was decreased by cycloheximide (CHM), indicating the involvement of protein synthesis. The PEPCase kinase in protoplasts increased with time after isolation in darkness, and increased still further following light treatment. The increase in kinase activity in the light was sensitive to CHM. When protoplasts were illuminated in the presence of EGTA and the calcium ionophore A23187 to reduce intracellular Ca2+, the reduction in the senstivity of PEPCase to malate was enhanced, though no more PEPCase kinase activity was detected than in protoplasts illuminated in the absence of EGTA and A23187. Incubation with 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea (DCMU) had no effect on the light-induced reduction of sensitivity of PEPCase to malate inhibition or on light-activation of PEPCase kinase. These results indicate that there is a constitutive PEPCase kinase activity in C3 leaf tissue, that there is another kinase which is light-activated in a CHMsensitive way, that the sensitivity of PEPCase to its inhibitor may not always be correlated with apparent PEPCase kinase actvity, and that PEPCase and PEPCase kinase are regulated in a different manner in C3 protoplasts than in C4 protoplasts or leaf tissue.Abbreviations CAM Crassulacean acid metabolism - Chl chlorophyll - CHM cycloheximide - DCMU 3-(3,4-dichloro-phenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea - PEP phosphoenolpyruvate - PEPCase PEP carboxylase  相似文献   

14.
A protein kinase which phosphorylates pyruvate kinase (PK) in vitro was purified and characterized from the foot muscle of the anoxia-tolerant gastropod mollusc Busycon canaliculatum. Purification involved four steps: poly(ethylene glycol) fractionation, affinity chromatography on Blue agarose, ion-exchange chromatography on phosphocellulose and preparative isoelectric focusing (pI = 5.5). The activity was monitored by following changes in pyruvate kinase I50 values for L-alanine which have previously been linked to changes in the degree of enzyme phosphorylation. The correlation between enzyme phosphorylation and changes in the L-alanine inhibition constant was also directly demonstrated in the present paper by radioactively labelling PK with [tau-32P]ATP. The final purified protein kinase solution gave a single band on SDS-gel electrophoresis with a molecular weight of 37,000 +/- 2000. Kinetic analysis of the purified protein kinase (PK-kinase) showed a pH optimum of 7.0, an absolute requirement for magnesium ions (Km = 1.29 mM), a relatively high affinity for MgATP (Km = 57 microM), and inhibition by increasing salt concentrations (I50 = 55 mM KCl). The protein kinase activity was not affected by either spermine, heparin, cAMP, cGMP or concentrations of CaCl2 less than 10 mM. The enzyme did not phosphorylate either phosphofructokinase or glycogen phosphorylase, two enzymes that are also phosphorylated during anoxia in whelks. The purified enzyme is different from the catalytic subunit of cAMP-dependent protein kinase as shown by the inability of cAMP to stimulate the protein kinase at all stages of the preparation; cAMP did not activate either crude enzyme, the 7% poly(ethylene glycol) supernatant, or any of the column eluant peak fractions when measured by changes in pyruvate kinase kinetic parameters.  相似文献   

15.
In maize leaves, pyruvate, orthophosphate dikinase (PPDK) is deactivated in the dark and reactivated in the light. Studies in vitro using purified PPDK and a partially purified regulatory protein from maize confirmed previous reports correlating deactivation/reactivation with the reversible phosphorylation/dephosphorylation of a threonyl residue. By monitoring the stability of the exogenous 32P-labeled adenylate substrates during deactivation, we have firmly established ADP as the specific phosphate donor. In isolated maize leaf mesophyll protoplasts preilluminated with 32Pi, we observed a three- to fivefold higher PPDK activity in situ in the light, and a corresponding three- to fivefold higher level of phosphorylation of the 94-kDa PPDK protomer in the dark. HPLC-based phosphoamino acid analysis of PPDK purified from maize leaves of both light- and dark-adapted plants revealed the presence of P-serine. The inactive enzyme from dark-adapted plants (inactivated in vivo) also contained P-threonine. Total phosphate content of PPDK purified from leaves of light-adapted plants was approximately 0.5 mol/mol protomer, and 1.5 mol/mol protomer from leaves of dark-adapted plants. Since the difference between enzyme purified from light-adapted (active PPDK) and dark-adapted (inactive PPDK) plants is the presence of P-threonine in the latter, this suggests an inactivation stoichiometry in vivo of 1 mol P-threonine/mol 94-kDa protomer. These complementary studies with maize leaf PPDK in vitro, in situ, and in vivo provide convincing evidence for the dark/light regulation of this key C4-photosynthesis enzyme by reversible phosphorylation.  相似文献   

16.
Illumination increased markedly the affinity to bicarbonate of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase (PEPC; EC 4.1.1.31) in leaves of Amaranthus hypochondriacus L., a C4 plant. When leaves were illuminated, the apparent Km for (HCO3-) of PEPC decreased by about 50% concurrent with a 2- to 5-fold increase in Vmax and 3- to 4-fold increase in Ki for malate. The inclusion of ethoxyzolamide, an inhibitor of carbonic anhydrase, during the assay had no effect on kinetic and regulatory properties of PEPC indicating that carbonic anhydrase was not involved during light-induced sensitization of PEPC to HCO3-. Pretreatment of leaf discs with cycloheximide (CHX), a cytosolic protein synthesis inhibitor, suppressed significantly the light-enhanced decrease in apparent Km (HCO3-). Further, in vitro phosphorylation of purified dark-form PEPC by protein kinase A (PKA) decreased the apparent Km (HCO3-) of the enzyme, in addition increasing Ki (malate) as expected. Such changes, due to in vitro phosphorylation of purified PEPC by PKA, occurred only with wild-type PEPC, but not in the mutant form of maize (S15D) which is already a mimic of the phosphorylated enzyme. These results suggest that phosphorylation of the enzyme is important during the sensitization of PEPC to HCO3- by illumination in C4 leaves. Since illumination is expected to increase the cytosolic pH and the availability of dissolved HCO3- in mesophyll cells, the sensitization by light of PEPC to HCO3- could be physiologically quite significant.  相似文献   

17.
The phosphoenolpyruvate (PPrv) carboxylase isozyme involved in C4 photosynthesis undergoes a day/night reversible phosphorylation process in leaves of the C4 plant, Sorghum. Ser8 of the target enzyme oscillates between a high (light) and a low (dark) phosphorylation status. Both in vivo and in vitro, phosphorylation of dark-form carboxylase was accompanied by an increase in the apparent Ki of the feedback inhibitor L-malate and an increase in Vmax. Feeding detached leaves various photosynthetic inhibitors, i.e. 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea, gramicidin and DL-glyceraldehyde, prevented PPrv carboxylase phosphorylation in the light, thus suggesting that the cascade involves the photosynthetic apparatus as the light signal receptor, and presumably has the electron transfer chain and the Calvin-Benson cycle as components in the signal-transduction chain. Two protein-serine kinases capable of phosphorylating PPrv carboxylase in vitro have been partially purified from light-adapted leaves. One was isolated on a calmodulin-Sepharose column; it was calcium-dependent but did not require calmodulin for activity. The other was purified on a blue-dextran-agarose column and the only Me2+ required for activity was Mg2+. In reconstituted phosphorylation assays, only the latter caused the expected decrease in malate sensitivity of PPrv carboxylase suggesting that this protein is the genuine PPrv-carboxylase-kinase. Desalted extracts from light-adapted leaves possessed a considerably greater phosphorylation capacity with immunopurified dephosphorylated PPrv carboxylase as substrate than did dark extracts. This light stimulation was insensitive to type 2A protein phosphatase inhibitors, okadaic acid and microcystin-LR, which suggests that the kinase is a controlled step in the cascade which leads to phosphorylation of PPrv carboxylase. The higher phosphorylation capacity of light-adapted leaf tissue was nullified by pretreatment with the cytosolic protein synthesis inhibitor, cycloheximide. Thus, protein turnover is involved as part of the mechanism controlling the activity of the kinase purified on blue-dextran-agarose. However, no information is available with respect to the specific nature of the link between the above-mentioned light transducing steps and the protein kinase that achieves the physiological response. Finally, the in vivo phosphorylation site (Ser8) in the N-terminal region of the C4 type Sorghum PPrv carboxylase is also present in a non-photosynthetic form of the Sorghum enzyme (Ser7), as deduced by cDNA sequence analysis.  相似文献   

18.
In the present work, the effect of LiCl on phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase kinase (PEPCase-k), C4 phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase (PEPCase: EC 4.1.1.31) and its phosphorylation process has been investigated in illuminated leaf disks and leaves of the C4 plant Sorghum vulgare. Although this salt induced severe damages to older leaves, it did not significantly alter the physiological parameters (photosynthesis, transpiration rate, intercellular CO2 concentration) of young leaves. An immunological approach was used to demonstrate that the PEPCase-k protein accumulated rapidly in illuminated leaf tissues, consistent with the increase in its catalytic activity. In vivo, LiCl was shown to strongly enhance the light effect on PEPCase-k protein content, this process being dependent on protein synthesis. In marked contrast, the salt was found to inhibit the PEPCase-k activity in reconstituted assays and to decrease the C4 PEPCase content and phosphorylation state in LiCl treated plants. Short-term (15 min) LiCl treatment increased IP3 levels, PPCK gene expression, and PEPCase-k accumulation. Extending the treatment (1 h) markedly decreased IP3 and PPCK gene expression, while PEPCase-k activity was kept high. The cytosolic protein synthesis inhibitor cycloheximide (CHX), which blocked the light-dependent up-regulation of the kinase in control plants, was found not to be active on this process in preilluminated, LiCl-treated leaves. This suggested that the salt causes the kinase turnover to be altered, presumably by decreasing degradation of the corresponding polypeptide. Taken together, these results establish PEPCase-k and PEPCase phosphorylation as lithium targets in higher plants and that this salt can provide a means to investigate further the organization and functioning of the cascade controlling the activity of both enzymes.  相似文献   

19.
Reversible seryl-phosphorylation contributes to the light/dark regulation of C4-leaf phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase (PEPC) activity in vivo. The specific regulatory residue that, upon in vitro phosphorylation by a maize-leaf protein-serine kinase(s), leads to an increase in catalytic activity and a decrease in malate-sensitivity of the target enzyme has been recently identified as Ser-15 in 32P-phosphorylated/activated dark-form maize PEPC (J-A Jiao, R Chollet [1990] Arch Biochem Biophys 283: 300-305). In order to ascertain whether this N-terminal seryl residue is, indeed, the in vivo regulatory phosphorylation site, [32P]phosphopeptides were isolated and purified from in vivo 32P-labeled maize and sorghum leaf PEPC and subjected to automated Edman degradation analysis. The results show that purified light-form maize PEPC contains 14-fold more 32P-radioactivity than the corresponding dark-form enzyme on an equal protein basis and, more notably, only a single N-terminal serine residue (Ser-15 in maize PEPC and its structural homolog, Ser-8, in the sorghum enzyme) was found to be 32P-phosphorylated in the light or dark. These in vivo observations, combined with the results from our previous in vitro phosphorylation studies (J-A Jiao, R Chollet [1989] Arch Biochem Biophys 269: 526-535; [1990] Arch Biochem Biophys 283: 300-305), demonstrate that an N-terminal seryl residue in C4 PEPC is, indeed, the regulatory site that undergoes light/dark changes in phosphorylation-status and, thus, plays a major, if not cardinal role in the light-induced changes in catalytic and regulatory properties of this cytoplasmic C4-photosynthesis enzyme in vivo.  相似文献   

20.
Duff S  Chollet R 《Plant physiology》1995,107(3):775-782
Regulation of C3 phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase (PEPC) and its protein-serine/threonine kinase (PEPC-PK) was studied in wheat (Triticum aestivum) leaves that were excised from low-N-grown seedlings and subsequently illuminated and/or supplied with 40 mM KNO3. The apparent phosphorylation status of PEPC was assessed by its sensitivity to L-malate inhibition at suboptimal assay conditions, and the activity state of PEPC-PK was determined by the in vitro 32P labeling of purified maize dephospho-PEPC by [[gamma]-32P]ATP/Mg. Illumination ([plus or minus]NO3-) for 1 h led to about a 4.5-fold increase in the 50% inhibition constant for L-malate, which was reversed by placing the illuminated detached leaves in darkness (minus NO3-). A 1 -h exposure of excised leaves to light, KNO3, or both resulted in relative PEPC-PK activities of 205, 119, and 659%, respectively, of the dark/0 mM KNO3 control tissue. In contrast, almost no activity was observed when a recombinant sorghum phosphorylation-site mutant (S8D) form of PEPC was used as protein substrate in PEPC-PK assays of the light plus KNO3 leaf extracts. In vivo labeling of wheat-leaf PEPC by feeding 32P-labeled orthophosphate showed that PEPC from light plus KNO3 tissue was substantially more phosphorylated than the enzyme in the dark minus-nitrate immunoprecipitates. Immunoblot analysis indicated that no changes in relative PEPC-protein amount occurred within 1 h for any of the treatments. Thus, C3 PEPC activity in these detached wheat leaves appears to be regulated by phosphorylation of a serine residue near the protein's N terminus by a Ca2+ -independent protein kinase in response to a complex interaction in vivo between light and N.  相似文献   

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