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1.
Ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase activase protein prevents the in vitro decline in activity of ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase
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The rate of CO2 fixation by ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (rubisco) following addition of ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate (RuBP) to fully activated enzyme, declined with first-order kinetics, resulting in 50% loss of rubisco activity after 10 to 12 minutes. This in vitro decline in rubisco activity, termed fall-over, was prevented if purified rubisco activase protein and ATP were added, allowing linear rates of CO2 fixation for up to 20 minutes. Rubisco activase could also stimulate rubisco activity if added after fallover had occurred. Gel filtration of the RuBP-rubisco complex to remove unbound RuBP allowed full activation of the enzyme, but the inhibition of activated rubisco during fallover was only partially reversed by gel filtration. Addition of alkaline phosphatase completely restored rubisco activity following fallover. The results suggest that fallover is not caused by binding of RuBP to decarbamylated enzyme, but results from binding of a phosphorylated inhibitor to the active site of rubisco. The inhibitor may be a contaminant in preparations of RuBP or may be formed on the active site but is apparently removed from the enzyme in the presence of the rubisco activase protein. 相似文献
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Ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase activase deficiency delays senescence of ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase but progressively impairs its catalysis during tobacco leaf development. 总被引:4,自引:3,他引:4
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Z He S von Caemmerer G S Hudson G D Price M R Badger T J Andrews 《Plant physiology》1997,115(4):1569-1580
Transgenic tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum L. cv W38) plants with an antisense gene directed against the mRNA of ribulose-1,5-biphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (Rubisco) activase grew more slowly than wild-type plants in a CO2-enriched atmosphere, but eventually attained the same height and number of leaves. Compared with the wild type, the anti-activase plants had reduced CO2 assimilation rates, normal contents of chlorophyll and soluble leaf protein, and much higher Rubisco contents, particularly in older leaves. Activase deficiency greatly delayed the usual developmental decline in Rubisco content seen in wild-type leaves. This effect was much less obvious in another transgenic tobacco with an antisense gene directed against chloroplast-located glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase, which also had reduced photosynthetic rates and delayed development. Although Rubisco carbamylation was reduced in the anti-activase plants, the reduction was not sufficient to explain the reduced photosynthetic rate of older anti-activase leaves. Instead, up to a 10-fold reduction in the catalytic turnover rate of carbamylated Rubisco in vivo appeared to be the main cause. Slower catalytic turnover by carbamylated Rubisco was particularly obvious in high-CO2-grown leaves but was also detectable in air-grown leaves. Rubisco activity measured immediately after rapid extraction of anti-activase leaves was not much less than that predicted from its degree of carbamylation, ruling out slow release of an inhibitor from carbamylated sites as a major cause of the phenomenon. Nor could substrate scarcity or product inhibition account for the impairment. We conclude that activase must have a role in vivo, direct or indirect, in promoting the activity of carbamylated Rubisco in addition to its role in promoting carbamylation. 相似文献
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Dissociation of ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate bound to ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase and its enhancement by ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase activase-mediated hydrolysis of ATP 总被引:3,自引:2,他引:3
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Ribulose bisphosphate (RuBP), a substrate of ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (Rubisco), is an inhibitor of Rubisco activation by carbamylation if bound to the inactive, noncarbamylated form of the enzyme. The effect of Rubisco activase on the dissociation kinetics of RuBP bound to this form of the enzyme was examined and characterized with the use of 3H-labeled RuBP and proteins purified from spinach (Spinacia oleracea L.) In the absence of Rubisco activase and in the presence of a large excess of unlabeled RuBP, the dissociation rate of bound [1-3H]RuBP was much faster after a short (30 second) incubation than after an extended incubation (1 hour). After 1 hour of incubation, the dissociation rate constant (Koff) of the bound RuBP was 4.8 × 10−4 per second, equal to a half-time of about 35 minutes, whereas the rate after only 30 seconds was too fast to be accurately measured. This time-dependent change in the dissociation rate was reflected in the subsequent activation kinetics of Rubisco in the presence of RuBP, CO2, and Mg2+, and in both the absence or presence of Rubisco activase. However, the activation of Rubisco also proceeded relatively rapidly without Rubisco activase if the RuBP level decreased below the estimated catalytic site concentration. High pH (pH 8.5) and the presence of Mg2+ in the medium also enhanced the dissociation of the bound RuBP from Rubisco in the presence of RuBP. In the presence of Rubisco activase, Mg2+, ATP (but not the nonhydrolyzable analog, adenosine-5′-O-[3-thiotriphosphate]), excess RuBP, and an ATP-regenerating system, the dissociation of [1-3H]RuBP from Rubisco was increased in proportion to the amount of Rubisco activase added. This result indicates that Rubisco activase-mediated hydrolysis of ATP is required for promotion of the enhanced dissociation of the bound RuBP from Rubisco. Furthermore, product analysis by ion-exchange chromatography demonstrated that the release of the bound RuBP, in an unchanged form, was considerably faster than the observed increase in Rubisco activity. Thus, RuBP dissociation was experimentally separated from activation and precedes the subsequent formation of active, carbamylated Rubisco during activation of Rubisco by Rubisco activase. 相似文献
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Alteration of spinach ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase activase activities by site-directed mutagenesis 总被引:3,自引:1,他引:3
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Site-directed mutagenesis was performed on the 1.6 and 1.9 kilobase spinach (Spinacea oleracea) ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (Rubisco) activase cDNAs, encoding the 41 and 45 kilodalton (kD) isoforms of the enzyme, to create single amino acid changes in the putative ATP-binding site of Rubisco activase (Lys-107, Gln-109, and Ser-112) and in an unrelated cysteine residue (Cys-256). Replacement of Lys-107 with Met produced soluble protein with reduced Rubisco activase and ATPase activities in both isoforms. Substituting Ala or Arg for Lys-107 produced insoluble proteins. Rubisco activase activity increased in the 41-kD isoform when Gln-109 was changed to Glu, but activity in the 45-kD isoform was similar to the wild-type enzyme. ATPase activity in the Glu-109 mutations did not parallel the changes in Rubisco activase activity. Rather, a higher ratio of Rubisco activase to ATPase activity occurred in both isoforms. The mutation of Gln-109 to Lys inactivated Rubisco activase activity. Replacement of Ser-112 with Pro created an inactive protein, whereas attempts to replace Ser-112 with Thr were not successful. The mutation of Cys-256 to Ser in the 45-kD isoform reduced both Rubisco activase and ATPase activities. The results indicate that the two activities of Rubisco activase are not tightly coupled and that variations in photosynthetic efficiency may occur in vivo by replacing the wild-type enzyme with mutant enzymes. 相似文献
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D B Knaff 《Trends in biochemical sciences》1989,14(5):159-160
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Species-dependent variation in the interaction of substrate-bound ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (rubisco) and rubisco activase 总被引:1,自引:5,他引:1
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Purified spinach (Spinacea oleracea L.) and barley (Hordeum vulgare L.) ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (Rubisco) activase supported 50 to 100% activation of substrate-bound Rubisco from spinach, barley, wheat (Triticum aestivum L.), soybean (Glycine max L.), pea (Pisum sativum L.), Arabidopsis thaliana, maize (Zea mays L.), and Chlamydomonas reinhardtii but supported only 10 to 35% activation of Rubisco from three Solanaceae species, tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum L.), petunia (Petunia hybrida L.), and tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum L.). Conversely, purified tobacco and petunia Rubisco activase catalyzed 75 to 100% activation of substrate-bound Rubisco from the three Solanacee species but only 10 to 25% activation of substrate-bound Rubisco from the other species. Thus, the interaction between substrate-bound Rubisco and Rubisco activase is species dependent. The species dependence observed is consistent with phylogenetic relationships previously derived from plant morphological characteristics and from nucleotide and amino acid sequence comparisons of the two Rubisco subunits. Species dependence in the Rubisco-Rubisco activase interaction and the absence of major anomalies in the deduced amino acid sequence of tobacco Rubisco activase compared to sequences in non-Solanaceae species suggest that Rubisco and Rubisco activase may have coevolved such that amino acid changes that have arisen by evolutionary divergence in one of these enzymes through spontaneous mutation or selection pressure have led to compensatory changes in the other enzyme. 相似文献
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Ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (RuBP carboxylase, EC 4.1.1.39) has been purified from orange [ Citrus sinensis (L.) Osbeck cv. Washington Navel] leaves using sucrose gradient centrifugation in a fixed angle rotor. Following sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE), two major bands corresponding to the two subunits of RuBP carboxylase were found. The large subunit coincided with the polypeptide band that has been previously reported to be preferentially mobilized during the spring and summer flush periods.
The degradation of RuBP carboxylase during autodigestion of Citrus leaf extracts, investigated by SDS-PAGE, occurred mainly at acidic (2.5-5.5) pH. The two subunits showed differences in the rate of degradation, the smaller being more rapidly hydrolyzed than the larger. At least four proteolytic activities were identified by means of inhibitor experiments: 1) a pepstatin A-sensitive activity that acts on both RuBP carboxylase subunits, 2) a mercurial ( p -hydroxymercuribenzoate and p -chloromercuriphenylsulfonate)-sensitive activity that degrades only the small subunit, 3) an EDTA-sensitive activity that hydrolyzes both the large and small subunits, and 4) a mercurial-stimulated activity that acts only on the large subunit. It is suggested that the last two proteases may be responsible for the degradation of RuBP carboxylase observed in vivo during the periods of mobilization of leaf protein in Citrus . 相似文献
The degradation of RuBP carboxylase during autodigestion of Citrus leaf extracts, investigated by SDS-PAGE, occurred mainly at acidic (2.5-5.5) pH. The two subunits showed differences in the rate of degradation, the smaller being more rapidly hydrolyzed than the larger. At least four proteolytic activities were identified by means of inhibitor experiments: 1) a pepstatin A-sensitive activity that acts on both RuBP carboxylase subunits, 2) a mercurial ( p -hydroxymercuribenzoate and p -chloromercuriphenylsulfonate)-sensitive activity that degrades only the small subunit, 3) an EDTA-sensitive activity that hydrolyzes both the large and small subunits, and 4) a mercurial-stimulated activity that acts only on the large subunit. It is suggested that the last two proteases may be responsible for the degradation of RuBP carboxylase observed in vivo during the periods of mobilization of leaf protein in Citrus . 相似文献
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Covalent modification of a highly reactive and essential lysine residue of ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase activase.
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M E Salvucci 《Plant physiology》1993,103(2):501-508
Chemical modification of ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (Rubisco) activase with water-soluble N-hydroxysuccinimide esters was used to identify a reactive lysyl residue that is essential for activity. Incubation of Rubisco activase with sulfosuccinimidyl-7-amino-4-methylcoumarin-3-acetate (AMCA-sulfo-NHS) or sulfosuccinimidyl-acetate (sulfo-NHS-acetate) caused progressive inactivation of ATPase activity and concomitant loss of the ability to activate Rubisco. AMCA-sulfo-NHS was the more potent inactivator of Rubisco activase, exhibiting a second-order rate constant for inactivation of 239 M-1 s-1 compared to 21 M-1 s-1 for sulfo-NHS-acetate. Inactivation of enzyme activity by AMCA-sulfo-NHS correlated with the incorporation of 1.9 mol of AMCA per mol of 42-kD Rubisco activase monomer. ADP, a competitive inhibitor of Rubisco activase, afforded considerable protection against inactivation of Rubisco activase and decreased the amount of AMCA incorporated into the Rubisco activase monomer. Sequence analysis of the major labeled peptide from AMCA-sulfo-NHS-modified enzyme showed that the primary site of modification was lysine-247 (K247) in the tetrapeptide methionine-glutamic acid-lysine-phenylalanine. Upon complete inactivation of ATPase activity, modification of K247 accounted for 1 mol of AMCA incorporated per mol of Rubisco activase monomer. Photoaffinity labeling of AMCA-sulfo-NHS- and sulfo-NHS-acetate-modified Rubisco activase with ATP analogs derivatized on either the adenine base or on the gamma-phosphate showed that K247 is not essential for the binding of adenine nucleotides per se. Instead, the data indicated that the essentiality of K247 is probably due to an involvement of this highly reactive, species-invariant residue in an obligatory interaction that occurs between the protein and the nucleotide phosphate during catalysis. 相似文献
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Ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase [Rbu(1,5)P2CO] from plant sources shows a biphasic reaction course when assayed with more than 2 mM ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate [Rbu(1,5)P2]. In the burst, Rbu(1,5)P2CO has its substrate-binding sites occupied with Rbu(1,5)P2 for the initial few minutes, then both substrate-binding and regulatory sites are occupied by Rbu(1,5)P2 in the subsequent linear phase, at physiological concentrations of Rbu(1,5)P2 [A. Yokota (1991) J. Biochem. (Tokyo) 110, 246-252]. This study attempts the characterization of spinach Rbu(1,5)P2CO carrying Rbu(1,5)P2 at the regulatory sites and the interaction of Rbu(1,5)P2CO activase with Rbu(1,5)P2CO purified with poly(ethylene glycol) 4000 without denaturation. Binding of Rbu(1,5)P2 to the regulatory sites strongly influences the temperature dependence of the carboxylase activity of Rbu(1,5)P2CO. The activation energy of Rbu(1,5)P2CO with Rbu(1,5)P2 at the regulatory sites was 40% larger than that without Rbu(1,5)P2 over 30 degrees C, although the binding did not affect the activation energy below this temperature. This caused the almost linear reaction course of the carboxylase reaction at 50 degrees C. The optimum pH for the activity of Rbu(1,5)P2CO carrying Rbu(1,5)P2 at the sites was 8.0-8.2, and increased by about pH 0.2 from that of Rbu(1,5)P2CO without Rbu(1,5)P2. The ratio of the activity of the former form to that of the latter increased with increasing pH with an inflection point at pH 8.1. The increase in the ratio was accompanied by a decrease in the hysteric conformational change of Rbu(1,5)P2CO. The ATP-hydrolyzing activity inherent to Rbu(1,5)P2CO activase was stimulated about twofold by 3-5 mM Rbu(1,5)P2. Rbu(1,5)P2CO in the inactive complex with Rbu(1,5)P2 experienced hysteresis and bound Rbu(1,5)P2 at the regulatory sites during activation in the presence of Rbu(1,5)P2CO activase. Evidence was obtained that Rbu(1,5)P2CO activase promoted the activation of Rbu(1,5)P2CO through binding to the large subunits of Rbu(1,5)P2CO. 相似文献
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Changes in chlorophyll content, ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (Rubisco) binding protein (RBP), Rubisco activase (RA), Rubisco large (LS) and small (SS) subunits, and electrolyte leakage were investigated in wheat leaf segments during heat stress (HS) for 1 h and for 24 h at 40 °C in darkness or in light, as well as after recovery from heat stress (HSR) for 24 h at 25 °C in light. The 24-h HS treatment in darkness decreased irreversibly photosynthetic pigments, soluble proteins, RBP, RA, Rubisco LS and SS. An increase in RA and RBP protein contents was observed under 24-h HS and HSR in light. This increase was in accordance with their role as chaperones and the function of RBP as a heat shock protein.This work was partially supported by Swiss National Science Foundation (Project 31-55289.98). 相似文献
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Spreitzer RJ 《Archives of biochemistry and biophysics》2003,414(2):141-149
Ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (Rubisco) catalyzes the rate-limiting step of CO2 fixation in photosynthesis, but O2 competes with CO2 for substrate ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate, leading to the loss of fixed carbon. Interest in genetically engineering improvements in carboxylation catalytic efficiency and CO2/O2 specificity has focused on the chloroplast-encoded large subunit because it contains the active site. However, there is another type of subunit in the holoenzyme of plants, which, like the large subunit, is present in eight copies. The role of these nuclear-encoded small subunits in Rubisco structure and function is poorly understood. Small subunits may have originated during evolution to concentrate large-subunit active sites, but the extensive divergence of structures among prokaryotes, algae, and land plants seems to indicate that small subunits have more-specialized functions. Furthermore, plants and green algae contain families of differentially expressed small subunits, raising the possibility that these subunits may regulate the structure or function of Rubisco. Studies of interspecific hybrid enzymes have indicated that small subunits are required for maximal catalysis and, in several cases, contribute to CO2/O2 specificity. Although small-subunit genetic engineering remains difficult in land plants, directed mutagenesis of cyanobacterial and green-algal genes has identified specific structural regions that influence catalytic efficiency and CO2/O2 specificity. It is thus apparent that small subunits will need to be taken into account as strategies are developed for creating better Rubisco enzymes. 相似文献
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Structural framework for catalysis and regulation in ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase
Ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (Rubisco) is the enzyme assimilating CO2 in biology. Despite serious efforts, using many different methods, a detailed understanding of activity and regulation in Rubisco still eludes us. New results in X-ray crystallography may provide a structural framework on which to base experimental approaches for more detailed analyses of the function of Rubisco at the molecular level. This article gives a critical review of the field and summarizes recent results from structural studies of Rubisco. 相似文献
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Dissociation of ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase from spinach by urea 总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3
The dissociation of D-ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase from spinach, which consists of eight large subunits (L, 53 kDa) and eight small subunits (S, 14 kDa) and thus has a quarternary structure L8S8, has been investigated using a variety of physical techniques. Gel chromatography using Sephadex G-100 indicates the quantitative dissociation of the small subunit S from the complex at 3-4 M urea (50 mM Tris/Cl pH 8.0, 0.5 mM EDTA, 1 mM dithiothreitol and 5 mM 2-mercaptoethanol). The dissociated S is monomeric. Analytical ultracentrifuge studies show that the core of large subunits, L, remaining at 3-4 M urea sediments with S20, w = 15.0 S, whereas the intact enzyme (L8S8) sediments with S20, w = 17.7S. The observed value is consistent with a quarternary structure L8. The dissociation reaction in 3-4 M urea can thus be represented by L8S8----L8 + 8S. At urea concentrations c greater than 5 M the L8 core dissociates into monomeric, unfolded large subunits. A large decrease in fluorescence emission intensity accompanies the dissociation of the small subunit S. This change is completed at 4 M urea. No changes are observed upon dissociating the L8 core. The kinetics of dissociation of the small subunit, as monitored by fluorescence spectroscopy, closely follow the kinetics of loss of carboxylase activity of the enzyme. Studies of the circular dichroism of D-ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase in the wavelength region 200-260 nm indicate two conformational transitions. The first one ([0]220 from -8000 to -3500 deg cm2 dmol-1) is completed at 4 M urea and corresponds to the dissociation of the small subunit and coupled conformational changes. The second one ([0]220 from -3500 to -1200 deg cm2 dmol-1) is completed at 6 M urea and reflects the dissociation and unfolding of large subunits from the core. The effect of activation of the enzyme by addition of MgCl2 (10 mM) and NaHCO3 (10 mM) on these conformational transitions was investigated. The first conformational transition is then shifted to higher urea concentrations: a single transition ([0]220 from -8000 to -1200 deg cm2 dmol-1) is observed for the activated enzyme. From the urea dissociation experiments we conclude that both large (L) and small (S) subunits are important for carboxylase activity of spinach D-ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase: the L-S subunit interactions tighten upon activation and dissociation of S leads to a coupled, proportional loss of enzyme activity. 相似文献