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1.
In photorespiration, peroxisomal glutamate:glyoxylate aminotransferase (GGAT) catalyzes the reaction of glutamate and glyoxylate to produce 2-oxoglutarate and glycine. Previous studies demonstrated that alanine aminotransferase-like protein functions as a photorespiratory GGAT. Photorespiratory transamination to glyoxylate, which is mediated by GGAT and serine glyoxylate aminotransferase (SGAT), is believed to play an important role in the biosynthesis and metabolism of major amino acids. To better understand its role in the regulation of amino acid levels, we produced 42 GGAT1 overexpression lines that express different levels of GGAT1 mRNA. The levels of free serine, glycine, and citrulline increased markedly in GGAT1 overexpression lines compared with levels in the wild type, and levels of these amino acids were strongly correlated with levels of GGAT1 mRNA and GGAT activity in the leaves. This accumulation began soon after exposure to light and was repressed under high levels of CO(2). Light and nutrient conditions both affected the amino acid profiles; supplementation with NH(4)NO(3) increased the levels of some amino acids compared with the controls. The results suggest that the photorespiratory aminotransferase reactions catalyzed by GGAT and SGAT are both important regulators of amino acid content.  相似文献   

2.
植物丝氨酸:乙醛酸氨基转移酶(SGAT)与谷氨酸:乙醛酸氨基转移酶(GGAT)主要催乙醛酸的转氨反应,是光呼吸途径中的两种关键酶。此两种酶大都为二聚体,在高等植物体内主要位于过氧化物酶体内,而在真核藻类植物体内则位于线粒体内,对植物的生长发育与抗逆性具有重要影响。本文对SGAT与GGAT在植物光合作用、氨基酸代谢和抗逆性等方面的研究进展进行了综述,以期对SGAT与GGAT的研究有所帮助。  相似文献   

3.
The activity of highly purified L-serine:glyoxylate aminotransferase (SGAT, EC 2.6.1.45) from rye seedlings was inhibited competitively by 5-aminolevulinate (ALA, Ki = 5 mM) SGAT was activated by hematin. Protoporphyrin IX and hematin inhibited irreversibly the activity of highly purified glutamate:glyoxylate aminotransferase (GGAT, EC 2.6.1.2) from rye seedlings. SGAT was found to catalyse transamination between ALA and hydroxypyruvate, whereas GGAT that between ALA and 2-oxoglutarate or pyruvate. It is suggested that SGAT is involved in the process of degradation of the excess ALA which has not been incorporated into porphyrin compounds.  相似文献   

4.
The linked utilization of glycollate and L-serine has been studied in peroxisomal preparations from leaves of spinach beet (Beta vulgaris L.). The generation of glycine from glycollate was found to be balanced by the production of hydroxypyruvate from serine and similarly by 2-oxoglutarate when L-glutamate was substituted for L-serine. In the presence of L-malate and catalytic quantities of NAD+, about 40% of the hydroxypyruvate was converted further to glycerate, whereas with substrate quantities of NADH, this conversion was almost quantitative. CO2 was released from the carboxyl groups of both glycollate and serine. Since the decarboxylation of both substrates was greatly in creased by the catalase inhibitor, 3-amino-1,2,4-triazole, and abolished by bovine liver catalase, it was attributed to the nonenzymic attack of H2O2, generated in glycollate oxidation, upon glyoxylate and hydroxypyruvate respectively. At 25–30° C, about 10% of the glyoxylate and hydroxypyruvate accumulated was decarboxylated, and the release of CO2 from each keto-acid was related to the amounts present. It is suggested that hydroxypyruvate decarboxylation might contribute significantly to photorespiration and provide a metabolic route for the complete oxidation of glycollate, the magnitude of this contribution depending upon the concentrations of glyoxylate and hydroxypyruvate in the peroxisomes.  相似文献   

5.
Heterozygous mutants of barley (Hordeum vulgare L. cv. Maris Mink) with decreased activities of chloroplastic glutamine synthetase (GS) between 97 and 47% of the wild type and ferredoxin dependent glutamate synthase (Fd-GOGAT) down to 64% of the wild type have been used to study aspects of glyoxylate metabolism and the effect of glyoxylate on the activation state of ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (Rubisco) in vivo. In the leaf, the extractable activities of serine:glyoxylate aminotransferase decreased with a decrease in GS whereas activities of glutamate and alanine:glyoxylate aminotransferase increased, pointing to a re direction of amino donors from serine to glutamate and alanine. Under ambient conditions, the leaf contents of glutamate and alanine declined continuously with a decrease in GS, in parallel with the decrease in total amino acids. Glycine, serine and asparagine contents decreased with a decrease in GS to approximately 70% of the wild type, but increased again with a further decrease in GS. At high irradiances and at low CO2 concentrations, glyoxylate contents exhibited a pronounced minimum between 60% and 80% GS. With a further decrease in GS, glyoxylate contents recovered and approached values similar to the wild type. The activation state of Rubisco showed a negative correlation with glyoxylate contents, indicating that a decrease in GS feeds back on the first step of carbon assimilation and photorespiration. The activation state of stromal fructose-1,6-bisphosphatase was unaffected by a decrease in GS or Fd-GOGAT, whereas the activation state of NADP dependent malate dehydrogenase changed in a complex manner. The CO2photocompensation point, *, was appreciably increased in mutants with 47% GS. Mitochondrial respiration in the light (Rd) was reduced with a decrease in GS. Relative rates of CO2 release into CO2-free air between the wild type and the 47%-GS mutant correlated with determinations of *. These data are consistent with the view that when GS is decreased there is an increased oxidative decarboxylation of glyoxylate resulting from a decreased availability of amino donors for the transamination of glyoxylate to glycine, and that when GS activities are lower than 70% of the wild type an additional mechanism operates to reduce the photorespiratory loss of ammonia.Abbreviations AGAT nine:glyoxylate aminotransferase - FBPase fructose-1,6-bisphosphatase - Fd-GOGAT ferredoxin dependent glutamate synthase - GGAT glutamate:glyoxylate aminotransferase - GS glutamine synthetase - MDH malate dehydrogenase - PFD photon flux density - Rubisco ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase-oxygenase - SGAT serine:glyoxylate aminotransferase This research was supported by the Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council initiative on the Biochemistry of Metabolic Regulation in Plants (PG 50/555).  相似文献   

6.
In the photorespiratory process, peroxisomal glutamate:glyoxylate aminotransferase (GGAT) catalyzes the reaction of glutamate and glyoxylate to 2-oxoglutarate and glycine. Although GGAT has been assumed to play important roles for the transamination in photorespiratory carbon cycles, the gene encoding GGAT has not been identified. Here, we report that an alanine:2-oxoglutarate aminotransferase (AOAT)-like protein functions as GGAT in peroxisomes. Arabidopsis has four genes encoding AOAT-like proteins and two of them (namely AOAT1 and AOAT2) contain peroxisomal targeting signal 1 (PTS1). The expression analysis of mRNA encoding AOATs and EST information suggested that AOAT1 was the major protein in green leaves. When AOAT1 fused to green fluorescent protein (GFP) was expressed in BY-2 cells, it was found to be localized to peroxisomes depending on PTS1. By screening of Arabidopsis T-DNA insertion lines, an AOAT1 knockout line (aoat1-1) was isolated. The activity of GGAT and alanine:glyoxylate aminotransferase (AGAT) in the above-ground tissues of aoat1-1 was reduced drastically and, AOAT and glutamate:pyruvate aminotransferase (GPAT) activity also decreased. Peroxisomal GGAT was detected in the wild type but not in aoat1-1. The growth rate was repressed in aoat1-1 grown under high irradiation or without sugar, though differences were slight in aoat1-1 grown under low irradiation, high-CO2 (0.3%) or high-sugar (3% sucrose) conditions. These phenotypes resembled those of photorespiration-deficient mutants. Glutamate levels increased and serine levels decreased in aoat1-1 grown in normal air conditions. Based on these results, it was concluded that AOAT1 is targeted to peroxisomes, functions as a photorespiratory GGAT, plays a markedly important role for plant growth and the metabolism of amino acids.  相似文献   

7.
The photorespiratory enzyme L-serine:glyoxylate amino- transferase (SGAT; EC 2.6.1.45) was purified from Arabidopsis thaliana leaves. The f'mal enzyme was approximately 80 % pure as revealed by sodium dodecyl sulfatepolyacrylamide gel electrophoresis with silver staining. The identity of the enzyme was confirmed by LC/MS/MS analysis. The molecular mass estimated by gel filtration chromato- graphy on Sephadex G-150 under non-denaturing conditions, mass spectrometry (matrix-assisted laser desorption/ ionization/time of flight technique) and sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis was 82.4 kDa, 42.0 kDa, and 39.8 kDa, respectively, indicating dimer as the active form. The optimum pH value was 9.2. The enzyme activity was inhibited by aminooxyacetate and β-chloro-L-alanine both compounds reacting with the carbonyl group of pyridoxal phosphate. The enzyme's transaminating activity with L-alanine and glyoxylate as substrates was approximately 55 % of that observed with L-serine and glyoxylate. The lower Kmvalue (1.25 mM) for L-alanine, compared with that of other plant SGATs, and the kcat/Km(Ala) ratio being approxi- mately 2-fold higher than kcat/Km(Ser) suggested that, during photorespiration, Ala and Ser are used by Arabidopsis SGAT with equal efficiency as amino group donors for glyoxylate. The equilibrium constant (Keq), derived from the Haldane relation, for the transamination reaction between L-serine and glyoxylate with the formation of hydroxypyruvate and glycine was 79.1, strongly favoring glycine synthesis. However, it was accompanied by a low Km value of 2.83 mM for glycine. A comparison of some kinetic properties of the studied enzymes with the recombinant Arabidopsis SGATs previously obtained revealed substantial differences. The ratio of the velocity of the transamination reaction with L-alanine and glyoxylate as substrates versus that with L-serine and glyoxylate was 1:1.8 for the native enzyme, whereas it was 1:7 for the recombinant SGAT. Native SGAT showed a much lower Km value for L-alanine compared to the recombinant enzyme.  相似文献   

8.
A mutant of Hordeum vulgare L. (LaPr 85/84) deficient in serine: glyoxylate aminotransferase (EC 2.6.1.45) activity has been isolated. The plant also lacks serine: pyruvate aminotransferase and asparagine: glyoxylate aminotransferase activities. Genetic analysis of the mutation strongly indicates that these three activities are all carried on the same enzyme protein. The mutant is incapable of normal rates of photosynthesis in air but can be maintained at 0.7% CO2. The rate of photosynthesis cannot be restored by supplying hydroxypyruvate, glycerate, glutamate or ammonium sulphate through the xylem stream. This photorespiratory mutant demonstrates convincingly that photorespiration still occurs under conditions in which photosynthesis becomes insensitive to oxygen levels. Two major peaks and one minor peak of serine: glyoxylate aminotransferase activity can be separated in extracts of leaves of wild-type barley by diethylaminoethyl-sephacel chromatography. All three peaks are missing from the mutant, LaPr 85/84. The mutant showed the expected rate (50%) of ammonia release during photorespiration but produced CO2 at twice the wild-type rate when it was fed [14C]glyoxylate. The large accumulation of serine detected in the mutant under photorespiratory conditions shows the importance of the enzyme activity in vivo. The effect of the mutation on transient changes in chlorophyll a fluorescence initiated by changing the atmospheric CO2 concentration are presented and the role of the enzyme activity under nonphotorespiratory conditions is discussed.Abbreviations DEAE diethylaminoethyl - PFR photon fluence rate - SGAT serine:glyoxylate aminotransferase  相似文献   

9.
The effect of glycidate (2,3-epoxypropionate), an inhibitor of glycolate synthesis and photorespiration in leaf tissue, was studied on glutamate:glyoxylate and serine:glyoxylate aminotransferases and glycine decarboxylase activities in particulate preparations obtained from tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum L.) callus and leaves. Glycidate specifically and effectively inhibited glutamate:glyoxylate aminotransferase. The inhibition was dependent on glycidate concentration and, to a lesser extent, on substrate concentration. The enzyme was not protected by either substrate. Even with saturating substrate concentrations the glycidate inhibition was only partially reversed. Under the in vitro assay conditions, glycidate inhibition of the aminotransferase was reversible. Glutamate:glyoxylate aminotransferase is the only enzyme of the glycolate pathway thus far examined which is severely inhibited by glycidate. However, in leaf discs, pretreatment with glycidate decreased both glutamate:glyoxylate and serine:glyoxylate aminotransferase activities suggesting binding by glycidate in vivo.

Glycidate increased the pool sizes of both glutamate and glyoxylate in leaf discs. It has been shown that increases in concentration of either of these metabolites decrease photorespiration and glycolate synthesis and increase net photosynthesis. It is proposed that glycidate inhibits photorespiration indirectly by increasing the internal concentrations of glutamate and glyoxylate, as a consequence of the inhibition of glutamate:glyoxylate aminotransferase activity.

  相似文献   

10.
Glyoxylate transamination in intact leaf peroxisomes   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2       下载免费PDF全文
Intact spinach (Spinacia oleracea L.) leaf peroxisomes were supplied with glycolate and one to three of the amino acids serine, glutamate, and alanine, and the amount of the respective α-keto acids formed in glyoxylate transamination was assayed. At 1 millimolar glycolate and 1 millimolar each of the three amino acids in combination, the transamination reaction reached saturation; reduction of either glycolate or amino acid concentration decreased the activity. The relative serine, glutamate, and alanine transamination at equal amino acid concentrations was roughly 40, 30, and 30%, respectively. The three amino acids exhibited mutual inhibition to one another in transamination due to the competition for the supply of glyoxylate. In addition to this competition for glyoxylate, competitive inhibition at the active site of enzymes occurred between glutamate and alanine, but not between serine and glutamate or alanine. Alteration of the relative concentrations of the three amino acids changed their relative transamination. Similar work was performed with intact oat (Avena sativa L.) leaf peroxisomes. At 1 millimolar of each of the three amino acids in combination, the relative serine, glutamate, and alanine transamination was roughly 60, 23, and 17%, respectively. Similarly, alteration of the relative concentration of the three amino acids changed their relative transamination. The contents of the three amino acids in leaf extracts were analyzed, and the relative contribution of the three amino acids in glycine production in photorespiration was assessed and discussed.  相似文献   

11.
Rhodopseudomonas acidophila strain 7050 achieved balanced growth when provided with either asparagine or glutamine as nitrogen source. Under these growth conditions R. acidophila synthesized a mixed amidase which exhibited similar activity (223–422 nmol/min·mg protein) against either nitrogen source. Determination of the free intracellular amino acid pools show that deamidation of asparagine and glutamine resulted in elevated levels of both aspartate and glutamate. Cell-free extracts of R. acidophila showed significant aminotransferase activity, particulary glutamine-oxaloacetate aminotransferase (89.7–209.3 nmol/min·mg protein), glycine oxaloacetate aminotransferase (135–227 nmol/min ·mg protein), alanine glyoxylate aminotransferase (66.3–163.2 nmol/min·mg protein) and serineglyoxylate aminotransferase (57.1–68.4 nmol/min ·mg protein). Short term labelling experiments using 14C-glyoxylate show that glycine plays an important role in amino nitrogen transfer in R. acidophila and that the enzymes for the metabolism of glyoxylate via glycine, serine and hydroxypyruvate were present in cell-free extracts. These data confirm that R. acidophila can satisfy all its' nitrogen requirements by transamination.Abbreviations GDH glutamate dehydrogenase - GS glutamine synthetase - GOGAT glutamate synthase - MSO methionine sulfoximine - GOT glutamate—oxaloacetate aminotransferase - GPT glutamate-pyruvate aminotransferase - AGAT alanineglyoxylate aminotransferase - GOAT glycine-oxaloacetate aminotransferase - GOGAT glycine-2-oxoglutarate aminotransferase - AOAT alanine-oxaloacetate aminotransferase - SGAT serineglyoxylate aminotransferase - INH isonicotinylhydrazide  相似文献   

12.
Nicholas J. Walton 《Planta》1982,155(3):218-224
Hydrogen peroxide-dependent glyoxylate decarboxylation occurring during glycollate oxidation by pea leaf extracts (Pisum sativum L.) has been studied in relation to the effects of glyoxylate and extract concentration. With a saturating concentration of glycollate, decarboxylation was greatly stimulated by raising the glyoxylate concentration; at 30°C and with approx. 0.04 nkat of glycollate oxidase (as leaf extract) in the reaction mixture, CO2 release in the presence of 5 mM glycollate and 5 mM glyoxylate was equal to about 45% of glycollate oxidation. However, CO2 release at these substrate concentrations was not linearly proportional to the amount of extract supplied and was equal to a diminishing proportion of glycollate oxidation as the amount of extract was increased. This was shown to be due to the low affinity of catalase for H2O2, so that the endogenous catalase was able to destroy a larger proportion of the H2O2 generated at higher extract concentrations. It is argued that although at high glycoxylate concentrations (5–10 mM) in vitro, glyoxylate decarboxylation can be made to equal more than a third of the glycollate oxidised, less than 10% of the glyoxylate generated in vivo is likely to be decarboxylated in peroxisomes where high concentrations of glycollate oxidase and catalase are localised and where high concentrations of glyoxylate are unlikely to be maintained.Abbreviation PHMS pyrid-2-yl--hydroxymethane sulphonic acid  相似文献   

13.
Karsten WE  Ohshiro T  Izumi Y  Cook PF 《Biochemistry》2005,44(48):15930-15936
Serine-glyoxylate aminotransferase (SGAT) from Hyphomicrobium methylovorum is a pyridoxal 5'-phosphate (PLP) enzyme that catalyzes the interconversion of L-serine and glyoxylate to hydroxypyruvate and glycine. The primary deuterium isotope effect using L-serine 2-D is one on (V/K)serine and V in the steady state. Pre-steady-state experiments also indicate that there is no primary deuterium isotope effect with L-serine 2-D. The results suggest there is no rate limitation by abstraction of the alpha proton of L-serine in the SGAT reaction. In the steady-state a solvent deuterium isotope effect of about 2 was measured on (V/K)L-serine and (V/K)ketomalonate and about 5.5 on V. Similar solvent isotope effects were observed in the pre-steady-state for the natural substrates and the alternative substrate ketomalonate. In the pre-steady-state, no reaction intermediates typical of PLP enzymes were observed with the substrates L-serine, glyoxylate, and hydroxypyruvate. The data suggest that breakdown and formation of the ketimine intermediate is the primary rate-limiting step with the natural substrates. In contrast, using the alternative substrate ketomalonate, pre-steady-state experiments display the transient formation of a 490 nm absorbing species typical of a quinonoid intermediate. The solvent isotope effect results also suggest that with ketomalonate as substrate protonation at C(alpha) is the slowest step in the SGAT reaction. This is the first report of a rate-limiting protonation of a quinonoid at C(alpha) of the external Schiff base in an aminotransferase reaction.  相似文献   

14.
N. J. Walton  H. W. Woolhouse 《Planta》1986,167(1):119-128
A comparative study is presented of the activities of enzymes of glycine and serine metabolism in leaves, germinated cotyledons and root apices of pea (Pisum sativum L.). Data are given for aminotransferase activities with glyoxylate, hydroxypyruvate and pyruvate, for enzymes associated with serine synthesis from 3-phosphoglycerate and for glycine decarboxylase and serine hydroxymethyltransferase. Aminotransferase activities differ between the tissues in that, firstly, appreciable transamination of serine, hydroxypyruvate and asparagine occurs only in leaf extracts and, secondly, glyoxylate is transaminated more actively than pyruvate in leaf extracts, whereas the converse is true of extracts of cotyledons and root apices. Alanine is the most active amino-group donor to both glyoxylate and hydroxypyruvate. 3-Phosphoglycerate dehydrogenase and glutamate: O-phosphohydroxypyruvate aminotransferase have comparable activities in all three tissues, except germinated cotyledons, in which the aminotransferase appears to be undetectable. Glycollate oxidase is virtually undetectable in the non-photosynthetic tissues and in these tissues the activity of glycerate dehydrogenase is much lower than that of 3-phosphoglycerate dehydrogenase. Glycine decarboxylase activity in leaves, measured in the presence of oxaloacetate, is equal to about 30–40% of the measured rate of CO2 fixation and is therefore adequate to account for the expected rate of photorespiration. The activity of glycine decarboxylase in the non-photosynthetic tissues is calculated to be about 2–5% of the activity in leaves and has the characteristics of a pyridoxal-and tetrahydrofolate-dependent mitochondrial reaction; it is stimulated by oxaloacetate, although not by ADP. In leaves, the measured activity of serine hydroxymethyltransferase is somewhat lower than that of glycine decarboxylase, whereas in root apices it is substantially higher. Differential centrifugation of extracts of root apices suggests that an appreciable proportion of serine hydroxymethyltransferase activity is associated with the plastids.Abbreviation GOGAT l-Glutamine:2-oxoglutarate aminotransferase  相似文献   

15.
Manipulation of the CO2 concentration of the atmosphere allows the selection of photorespiratory mutants from populations of seeds treated with powerful mutagens such as sodium azide. So far, barley lines deficient in activity of phosphoglycolate phosphatase, catalase, the glycine to serine conversion, glutamine synthetase, glutamate synthase, 2-oxoglutarate uptake and serine: glyoxylate aminotransferase have been isolated. In addition one line of pea lacking glutamate synthase activity and one barley line containing reduced levels of Rubisco are available. The characteristics of these mutations are described and compared with similar mutants isolated from populations of Arabidopsis. As yet, no mutant lacking glutamine synthetase activity has been isolated from Arabidopsis and possible reasons for this difference between barley and Arabidopsis are discussed. The value of these mutant plants in the elucidation of the mechanism of photorespiration and its relationships with CO2 fixation and amino acid metabolism are highlighted.Abbreviations GS cytoplasmic glutamine synthetase - GS2 chloroplastic glutamine synthetase - PFR Photon fluence rate - Rubisco Ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase - RuBP Ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate - SGAT serine:glyoxylate aminotransferase  相似文献   

16.
Iodine is vital to human health, and iodine biofortification programs help improve human intake through plant consumption. There is no research on whether iodine biofortification influences basic plant physiological processes. Because nitrogen (N) uptake, utilization, and accumulation are determining factors in crop yield, the aim of this work was to establish the effect of the application of different doses (20, 40, and 80 μM) and forms of iodine (iodate [IO3 ] vs. Iodide [I]) on N metabolism and photorespiration. For this study we analyzed shoot biomass and the activities of nitrate reductase (NR), nitrite reductase (NiR), glutamine synthetase (GS), glutamate synthase (GOGAT), aspartate aminotransferase (AAT), glutamate dehydrogenase (GDH), glycolate oxidase (GO), glutamate:glyoxylate aminotransferase (GGAT), serine:glyoxylate aminotransferase (SGAT), hydroxypyruvate reductase (HR) and catalase (CAT), nitrate (NO3 ), ammonium (NH4 +), organic and total N, amino acids, proteins, serine (ser), malate, and α-ketoglutaric acid in edible lettuce leaves. Application of I at doses of at least 40 μM reduced the foliar concentration of NO3 with no decrease in biomass production, which may improve the nutritional quality of lettuce plants. In contrast, the application of 80 μM of I is phytotoxic for lettuce plants, reducing the biomass, foliar concentration of organic N and NO3 , and NR and GDH activities. HR activity is significantly inhibited with all doses of I; the least inhibition was at 80 μM. This may involve a decrease in the incorporation of carbonated skeletons from photorespiration into the Calvin cycle, which may be partially associated with the biomass decrease. Finally, the application of IO3 increases biomass production, stimulates NO3 reduction and NH4 + incorporation (GS/GOGAT), and optimizes the photorespiratory process. Hence, this appears to be the most appropriate form of iodine from an agronomic standpoint.  相似文献   

17.
Two different aminotransferases, that have glyoxylate as the amino acceptor, have specific activities of 1 to 2 mumol . min-1 . mg of protein-1 in the isolated peroxisomal fraction from spinach leaves. Their properties were evaluated after separation on a hydroxylapatite column. Both enzymes had a Km for glyoxylate of 0.15 mM and an amino acid Km of 2 to 3 mM. Reactions proceeded by a Ping Pong Bi Bi mechanism. Serine:glyoxylate aminotransferase was relatively specific for both substrates and could only be slightly reversed with 100 mM glycine, although the Ki of glycine was 33 mM. The glutamate:glyoxylate amino-transferase protein was equally active in catalyzing an alanine:glyoxylate aminotransferase reaction, but the reverse reactions with 100 mM glycine were hardly measureable, although the Ki (glycine) was 8.7 mM. Protection against hydroxylamine inhibition from reaction with pyridoxal phosphate was used to investigate the specificity of amino acid binding. Substrate amino acids protected at about the same concentration as their Km, while glycine protected at its Ki concentration. Thus, the nearly irreversible catalysis with glycine is not due to a failure to bind glycine. The significance of a peroxisomal alanine:glyoxylate aminotransferase activity has not been incorporated into schemes for the oxidative photosynthetic carbon cycle.  相似文献   

18.
In greening leaf segments amino-oxyacetate inhibited both chlorophyll and carotenoid formation by ca 60 % at 0.5 mM inhibitor concentration. In greening tissue serine: glyoxylate aminotransferase was the only enzyme of the glycollate pathway whose activity was markedly decreased after inhibitor treatment. The inhibition of pigment formation in barley and maize could be alleviated by glyoxylate, pyruvate and acetaldehyde; in the latter case there is probably a preferential reaction with inhibitor which displaces it from combination with enzymic pyridoxal 5′-phosphate.  相似文献   

19.
Glutamate:glyoxylate aminotransferase had been reported to be present exclusively in the peroxisomes of plant leaves and to participate in the glycollate pathway in leaf photorespiration (Tolbert (1971) Annu. Rev. Plant Physiol. 22, 45-74]. Glutamate:glyoxylate aminotransferase activity was already present in the etiolated cotyledons of cucumber (Cucumis sativus) seedlings, and increased during greening. The enzyme was present only in the cytosol of the etiolated cotyledons and appeared in the peroxisomes during greening. The enzyme was purified to homogeneity from the cytosol of the etiolated cotyledons and from the peroxisomes of the green cotyledons of cucumber seedlings. The two enzyme preparations had nearly identical enzymic and physical properties. On the basis of these findings, roles of glutamate:glyoxylate aminotransferase in the glycollate pathway in photorespiration, and the mechanism of its appearance in the peroxisomes during greening, are discussed.  相似文献   

20.
Summary A photorespiration mutant of Nicotiana sylvestris lacking serine: glyoxylate aminotransferase activity was isolated in the M2 generation following EMS mutagenesis. Mutants showing chlorosis in air and normal growth in 1% CO2 were fed [14C]-2-glycolate to examine the distribution of 14C among photorespiratory intermediates. Mutant strain NS 349 displayed a 9-fold increase in serine accumulation relative to wild-type controls. Enzyme assays revealed an absence of serine: glyoxylate aminotransferase (SGAT) activity in NS 349, whereas other peroxisomal enzymes were recovered at normal levels. Heterozygous siblings of NS 349 segregating air-sensitive M3 progeny in a 31 ratio were shown to contain one half the normal level of SGAT activity, indicating that air sensitivity in NS 349 results from a single nuclear recessive mutation eliminating SGAT activity. Since toxicity of the mutation depends on photorespiratory activity, callus cultures of the mutant were initiated and maintained under conditions suppressing the formation of functional plastids. Plantlets regenerated from mutant callus were shown to retain the SGAT deficiency and conditional lethality in air. The utility of photorespiration mutants of tobacco as vehicles for genetic manipulation of ribulose bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase at the somatic cell level is discussed.  相似文献   

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