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1.
Pyruvate orthophosphate dikinase was detected from Kalanchoë daigremontiana Hamet. et. Perr., a succulent plant with crassulacean acid metabolism. Enzyme activity was similar to that of maize extracts. Two enzymes demonstrating pyruvate orthophosphate dikinase activity from K. daigremontiana and Zea mays were found to be partially identical from enzyme-inhibition and immunoprecipitin tests with maize enzyme antiserum. A time course study demonstrated that pyruvate orthophosphate dikinase activity in leaf extracts was dependent upon exposure of leaves to light.  相似文献   

2.
Polyadenylated RNA was isolated from maize leaves and translated in vitro. In agreement with a previous report by others, we found among the translation products a 110-kilodalton pyruvate orthophosphate dikinase (PPDK) precursor that is about 16 kilodaltons larger than the polypeptide isolated from cells. This maize PPDK precursor polypeptide was taken up from the translation product mixture by intact spinach chloroplasts and yielded a mature PPDK polypeptide (94 kilodaltons). The uptake and processing support the proposal that the extra 16-kilodalton size of the polypeptide from in vitro translation of maize leaf mRNA represents a transit sequence which is cleaved after its entry into chloroplasts. Moreover, these results provide additional evidence that in vivo in maize leaf cells PPDK polypeptide is synthesized in the cytoplasm and is transported into the chloroplasts.

Location of PPDK in C3 plant leaves was investigated by immunochemical analysis. Intact chloroplasts were isolated from leaves of spinach, wheat, and maize. A protein blot of stromal protein in each case gave rise to bands corresponding to authentic PPDK polypeptide. This result indicates that PPDK is present in chloroplasts of C3 plant leaves as it is in the case of C4 plants.

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3.
Specific activities of NADP-malic enzyme, NAD-malic enzyme, phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase and pyruvate, orthophosphate dikinase in various cells of Vicia faba L. leaflets were determined. Expressed on dry weight, chlorophyll or protein basis, the averages for NADP- and NAD-malic enzyme specific activities were higher in guard cells than in photosynthetic parenchyma cells. Malic enzyme-specific activities were also high in epidermal cells. Phosphoenolypyruvate carboxykinase activity was not detected in Vicia leaf extracts or guard cells; the assay techniques were validated by mixed Vicia-Brachiaria leaf extraction and assays on nanogram samples of Brachiaria bundlesheath cells. It was inferred from these data that guard cell malate depletion is by decarboxylation to pyruvate in the epidermal layer, but how the various epidermal cells interact remains obscure.  相似文献   

4.
Pyruvate orthophosphate dikinase in wheat leaves   总被引:9,自引:3,他引:6       下载免费PDF全文
Pyruvate orthophosphate dikinase (PPDK) was found in wheat (Triticum aestivum L. cv Cheyenne [CI 8885]) leaves both by activity assays and by the protein blot method. The specific activity of the wheat enzyme is comparable to that of PPDK from maize leaves. Of the total soluble protein in wheat leaves, about 0.05% was PPDK, comparable to the amount in the immature wheat seed and about 1/70th the amount found in mesophyll cells of maize. Immunoprecipitation of wheat PPDK with maize enzyme antiserum indicates partial identity, and the apparent subunit molecular weight is the same based on sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis.  相似文献   

5.
Polyadenylated RNA was isolated from leaves and seeds of a C3 plant (Triticum aestivum L. cv Cheyenne, CI 8885) and from a C4 plant (Zea mays L. cv Golden bantam). Each polyadenylated RNA preparation was translated in vitro with micrococcal nuclease-treated reticulocyte lysate. When the in vitro translation products were probed with antibodies to pyruvate orthophosphate dikinase (PPDK) (EC 2.7.9.1), two sizes of polypeptide were identified. A 110 kilodalton polypeptide was found in the in vitro translation products of mRNA isolated exclusively from leaves of both wheat and maize. A 94 kilodalton polypeptide, similar to the PPDK polypeptide which can be extracted after in vivo synthesis in maize and wheat leaves and seeds, was found in the in vitro translation products obtained from wheat seeds and maize kernels.

These results indicate that the mRNAs for PPDK polypeptides are organ-specific in both a C4 and a C3 plant. Hague et al. (1983 Nucleic Acids Res 11: 4853-4865) proposed that the larger size polypeptide of the in vitro translation polypeptide from maize leaf RNA contains a `transit sequence' which permits entry into the chloroplasts of a polypeptide synthesized in vivo in maize leaf cell cytoplasm. It appears that in wheat leaves also the transit of synthesized PPDK polypeptide through an intracellular membrane may be required, while such a transit sequence seems not to be required within cells of wheat and maize seeds.

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6.
The protein substrate specificity of the maize (Zea mays) leaf ADP: protein phosphotransferase (regulatory protein, RP) was studied in terms of its relative ability to inactivate/phosphorylate pyruvate, orthophosphate dikinase from Zea mays and the non-sulphur purple photosynthetic bacterium Rhodospirillum rubrum. The dimeric bacterial dikinase was inactivated by the maize leaf RP via phosphorylation, with a stoichiometry of approximately 1 mol of phosphate incorporated/mol of 92.7-kDa protomer. Inactivation required both ADP and ATP, with ADP being the specific donor for regulatory phosphorylation. The requirements for inactivation/phosphorylation in this heterologous system were identical with those previously established for the tetrameric maize leaf dikinase. The ADP-dependent maize leaf RP did not phosphorylate alternative protein substrates such as casein or phosvitin, and its activity was not affected by cyclic nucleotides, Ca2+ or calmodulin. The regulation of the maize leaf ADP: protein phosphotransferase was studied in terms of changes in adenylate energy charge and pyruvate concentration. The change in adenylate energy charge necessary to substantially inhibit phosphorylation of maize leaf dikinase was not suggestive of it being a physiological modulator of phosphotransferase activity. Pyruvate was a potent competitive inhibitor of regulatory phosphorylation (Ki = 80 microM), consistent with its interaction with the catalytic phosphorylated intermediate of dikinase, the true protein substrate for ADP-dependent phosphorylation/inactivation.  相似文献   

7.
We have utilized the cellular differentiation gradient of the developed, youngest leaf to examine the regulation by nitrogen of levels of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase (PEPCase), pyruvate orthophosphate dikinase (PPDK), and ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase in maize (Zea mays L.). The protein whose level regulated most preferentially by N availability was PEPCase, followed by PPDK, and the changes in level occurred most conspicuously at the photosynthetically maturing cells. Pulse and pulse-chase experiments to analyze photosynthetic fixation of [14C]CO2 indicate that maize leaf primarily exploited a C4-mode of photosynthetic fixation of carbon dioxide even under a selective reduction in levels of these proteins. The effects of N on the synthesis of these proteins and the accumulation of corresponding mRNAs during recovery from a deficiency were examined by pulse and pulse-chase labeling with [35S]Met and by hybridization, respectively. The rate of turnover of PPDK was substantially higher than that of the other proteins. Results also showed that the reduced accumulation of PEPCase, as well as PPDK, under N deficiency could largely be accounted for a reduced level of synthesis of protein with a concomitant reduction in level of their mRNAs. This indicates that the N-dependent selective accumulation of these enzymes is primarily a consequence of level of its mRNAs.  相似文献   

8.
In vitro activation of dark-inactivated pyruvate, orthophosphate dikinase extracted from maize (Zea mays L. cv. Golden Cross Bantam T51) leaves was examined. The inactive form of the enzyme and orthophosphate behaved kinetically as substrates for the reaction, which was catalyzed by an activating factor. This factor was bound by Blue Dextran Sepharose 4B and could be eluted by KCl at a concentration of 0.5m. The molecular weight of the maize leaf activating factor was about 88,000. Cibacron Blue 3G-A, a reactive moiety of Blue Dextran, inhibited the factor competitively with respect to the concentration of the inactive dikinase with a K(i) of 4.6 micromolar. Adenosine diphosphate and pyrophosphate were also found to be competitive inhibitors of activation, with respect to the inactive dikinase, giving K(i) values of 90 and 140 micromolar, respectively. Adenosine, other nucleotide diphosphates, and dinucleotides gave little or no inhibition of activation. These results suggest the association of a nucleotide, presumably nucleotide diphosphate, with the inactive form of pyruvate, orthophosphate dikinase.  相似文献   

9.
Summary Previous results from this laboratory have demonstrated the presence of genes for phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase and pyruvate, orthophosphate dikinase in C3 plants. The structure and light-enhanced expression of these genes is very similar to that of the genes found in the C4 plant, maize. In order to investigate whether or not the regulation of these genes is similar in C3 and C4 plants, we have constructed chimeric genes using -glucuronidase as a reporter gene under the control of the maize promoters of the genes for phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase, pyruvate, orthophosphate dikinase, and the small subunit of ribulose bisphosphate carboxylase (RuBisCO). The chimeric genes were introduced into tobacco, a C3 plant. These genes were expressed primarily in leaf and stem tissue and the expression was enhanced by light. Thus, as in C4 plants, the genes are expressed in a tissue-specific and light-inducible manner in the C3 plant. Since the expression of these genes is restricted to specific cells in leaf tissue of C4 plants, we also investigated the spatial pattern of expression of the chimeric genes using histochemical analysis of -glucuronidase activity. High level expression of all of these genes was found in mesophyll cells. This included the small subunit of RuBisCO, which is not expressed in mesophyll cells but in bundle sheath cells in C4 plants. This report describes similarities between C3 and C4 plants in regulating the expression of these genes.  相似文献   

10.
11.
Mesophyll protoplasts and bundle sheath strands were isolated from maize leaves. Light microscopic observation showed the preparations were pure and without cross contamination. Protein blot analysis of mesophyll and bundle sheath cell soluble protein showed that the concentration of pyruvate orthophosphate dikinase (EC 2.7.9.1) is about one-tenth as much in the bundle sheath cells as in mesophyll cells, but about eight times greater than that found in wheat leaves, on the basis of soluble protein. Phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase (EC 4.1.1.31) was barely detectable in the bundle sheath cells, while ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase (EC 4.1.1.39) and NADP-dependent malic enzyme (EC 1.3.1.37) were exclusively present in the bundle sheath cells and were absent in the mesophyll cells. Whereas pyruvate, Pi dikinase was previously considered localized only in mesophyll cells of C4 plants, these results clearly demonstrate the presence of appreciable quantities of the enzyme in the bundle sheath cells of the C4 species maize.  相似文献   

12.
Glycerol stabilizes the activity of pyruvate, orthophosphate dikinase extracted from darkened or illuminated maize leaves. It serves as a better protectant of activity than dithiothreitol for the active day-form and the glycerol concentration needed for full protection is inversely related to the level of protein. The night-form of the enzyme is also protected by glycerol not only against inactivation, but also against partial reactivation in storage. Glycerol does not prevent the Pi-dependent activation nor the ADP-dependent inactivation of pyruvate, orthophosphate dikinase, but the rates of both processes are substantially decreased. The ability of the inactive night-form for Pi-dependent activation is also sustained by glycerol for at least 2 h at 20°C, apparently through stabilization of the labile regulatory protein.Abbreviations BSA bovine serum albumin - G-6-P glucose-6-phosphate - MDH malate dehydrogenase - PCMB p-chloromercuribenzoate - PEP phosphoenolpyruvate - PEPCase phosphoenol-pyruvate carboxylase - PPDK pyruvate, orthophosphate dikinase - PVP polyvinylpyrrolidone  相似文献   

13.
The gene for C4-pyruvate,orthophosphate dikinase (PPDK) from maize (Zea mays) was cloned into an Escherichia coli expression vector and recombinant PPDK produced in E. coli cells. Recombinant enzyme was found to be expressed in high amounts (5.3 U purified enzyme-activity liter-1 of induced cells) as a predominantly soluble and active protein. Biochemical analysis of partially purified recombinant PPDK showed this enzyme to be equivalent to enzyme extracted from illuminated maize leaves with respect to (i) molecular mass, (ii) specific activity, (iii) substrate requirements, and (iv) phosphorylation/inactivation by its bifunctional regulatory protein.Abbreviations DTT- dithiothreitol - FPLC- fast-protein liquid chromatography - HAP- hydroxyapatite - IPTG- isopropyl--thiogalactoside - MOPS- 3-(N-morpholino)propanesulfonic acid - PCR- polymerase chain reaction - PEP- phosphoenolpyruvate - PMSF- phenylmethylsufonyl fluoride - PPDK- pyruvate,orthophosphate dikinase - RP- regulatory protein  相似文献   

14.
We have isolated two overlapping cDNA clones that encompass the entire structural gene for pyruvate, orthophosphate dikinase from maize. The analysis of the nucleotide sequence has revealed that the cDNA clones include an insert of a total of 3,171 nucleotides without a poly(A) tail and encode a polypeptide that contains 947 amino acid residues and has a molecular weight of 102,673. Comparison of the N-terminal amino acid sequence of purified pyruvate, orthophosphate dikinase protein with that deduced from the nucleotide sequence shows that the mature form of pyruvate, orthophosphate dikinase in the maize chloroplast consists of 876 amino acid residues and has a molecular weight of 95,353. The amino acid composition of the deduced sequence of pyruvate, orthophosphate dikinase is in good agreement with that of the purified enzyme. The region that contains the active and regulatory sites of pyruvate, orthophosphate dikinase can be found in the deduced sequence of amino acids. We have predicted the secondary structure and calculated the hydropathy pattern of this region. The extra 71 residues at the N terminus of the deduced sequence of amino acid residues corresponds to the transit peptide which is indispensable for the transport of the precursor protein into chloroplasts. We have compared the primary structure of the pyruvate, orthophosphate dikinase transit peptide to those of other proteins and found sequences similar to the consensus sequences found in other transit peptides.  相似文献   

15.
The effect of adenine nucleotides in pyruvate, orthophosphate dikinase (EC 2.7.9.1, ATP, pyruvate, orthophosphate phosphotransferase)_was studied with the enzyme furified from maize, and with the enzyme obtained from mesophyll chloroplast extracts during assay in the direction of pyruvate conversion to phosphoenolpyruvate. (1) In studies with the purified enzyme, the relationship of initial velocity to ATP concentrations follows Michaelis-Menten kinetics, and the Km value for ATP was 22.8 μM (± 5.1 μM, n = 5). (2) AMP was a competitive inhibitor with respect to ATP, and its Ki value was 35.8 μM (± μM, n = 4). There was no inhibition of catalysis by ADP up to a concentration of 460 μM. (3) The theoretical response of the enzyme to change in the adenylate energy charge was calculated from the kinetic constants for ATP and AMP. The experimentally obtained values were similar to the theoretical response when varying energy charge was generated by addition of appropriate amounts of ATP, ADP and AMP in assays with the purified enzyme. The response of the enzyme to energy charge at different pH values (pH 7.0, 7.5, and 8.0) was similar, although the activity of the enzyme at pH 7.0 was about 40% of that at pH 8.0. (4) When mesophyll chloroplast extracts of maize, which contain high levels of adenylate kinase, were used as the source of the enzyme and the adenylate energy charge was generated by addition of different concentrations of ATP and AMP, the influence on catalysis was similar to that with the purified enzyme. (5) The data show that the effect of varying energy chage on the activity of the dikinase is not typical of a U-type enzyme, in contrast to phosphoglycerate kinase (EC 2.7.2.3, ATP: 3-phospho-D-glycerate 1-phosphotransferase), which is more strongly regulated. (6) Evidence is presented for competition between the dikinase and phosphoglycerate kinase for ATP in mesophyll chloroplast extracts of maize. (7) When the effect of adenylate energy charge on the state of activation and the direct effect on catalysis of the dikanase are combined, the total capacity for catalysis is very dependent on the energy charge.  相似文献   

16.
Whole leaf and mesophyll cell concentrations of pyruvate, phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP), ATP, and ADP were determined in Zea mays during the reversible light activation of pyruvate, orthophosphate dikinase in vivo. Mesophyll cell levels of the four metabolites were estimated by extrapolation from values in freeze-quenched leaf samples that were fractionated by differential filtration through nylon mesh nets (adapted from M Stitt, HW Heldt [1985] Planta 164: 179-188). During the 3 minutes required for complete light activation of dikinase, pyruvate levels in the mesophyll cell decreased (from 166 ± 15 to 64 ± 10 nanomoles per milligram of chlorophyll [nmol/mg Chl]) while PEP levels increased (from 31 ± 4 to 68 ± 4 nmol/mg Chl, with a transient burst of 133 ± 16 nmol/mg Chl at 1 minute). Mesophyll cell levels of ATP increased (from 22 ± 4 to 48 ± 3 nmol/mg Chl) and ADP levels decreased (from 16 ± 4 to 7 ± 6 nmol/mg Chl) during the first minute of illumination. Upon darkening of the leaf and inactivation of dikinase, pyruvate levels initially increased in the mesophyll (from 160 ± 30 to a maximum of 625 ± 40 nmol/mg Chl), and then slowly decreased to about the initial value in the light over an hour. PEP levels dropped (from 176 ± 5 to 47 ± 3 nmol/mg Chl) in the first 3 minutes and remained low for the remainder of the dark period. Mesophyll levels of ATP and ADP rapidly decreased and increased, respectively, about twofold upon darkening. The trends observed for these metabolite levels in the mesophyll cell during the light/dark regulation of pyruvate, orthophosphate dikinase activity suggest that pyruvate and PEP do not play a major role in vivo in regulating the extent of light activation (dephosphorylation) or dark inactivation (ADP-dependent threonyl phosphorylation) of dikinase by its bifunctional regulatory protein. While the changes in ADP levels appear qualitatively consistent with a regulatory role for this metabolite in the light activation and dark inactivation of dikinase, they are not of a sufficient magnitude to account completely for the tenfold change in enzyme activity observed in vivo.  相似文献   

17.
18.
The regulatory site peptide sequence of phosphorylated inactive pyruvate, orthophosphate dikinase from maize leaf tissue was determined by automated Edman degradation analysis of 32P-labeled peptides purified by reversed-phase high performance liquid chromatography. The overlapping phosphopeptides were products of a digestion of the [beta-32P]ADP-inactivated dikinase with either trypsin or Pronase E. The sequence is Thr-Glu-Arg-Gly-Gly-Met-Thr(P)-Ser-His-Ala-Ala-Val-Val-Ala-Arg. The phosphothreonine residue, which appeared as either an anomalous proline or an unidentifiable phenylthiohydantoin derivative during sequencing, was verified by two-dimensional phosphoamino acid analysis of the phosphopeptides and by resequencing the tryptic peptide after dephosphorylation with exogenous alkaline phosphatase. This sequence, starting at position 4, is completely homologous to the previously published sequence of the tryptic dodecapeptide harboring the catalytically essential (phospho)histidyl residue in the active-site domain of the dikinase from the nonphotosynthetic bacterium, Bacteroides symbiosus (Goss, N.H., Evans, C.T., and Wood, H.G. (1980) Biochemistry 19, 5805-5809). These comparative results indicate that the regulatory phosphothreonine causing complete inactivation of maize leaf dikinase is separated from the critical active-site (phospho)histidine by just one intervening residue in the primary sequence.  相似文献   

19.
First leaves and flag leaves of the wheat species Triticum aestivum cv Anza (6×), T. boeoticum Boiss (2×) L. were examined for content of pyruvate, orthophosphate dikinase (PPDK), phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase (PEPC), and ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase (RuBPC) by protein blot analyses using antibodies to maize leaf enzymes and by activity assays. In agreement with previous reports, the amount of RuBPC per mesophyll cell was about 3 times more in the hexaploid species, T. aestivum, than in the diploid species, T. boeoticum, both in first leaves and in flag leaves. In contrast, the level of PPDK polypeptide was nearly 3-fold higher per unit leaf area in the first leaf and 63% higher in the flag leaf of this diploid species compared to this hexaploid species. There was no significant difference in the levels of polypeptide and enzyme activity of PEPC between diploid and hexaploid wheat. Despite this significantly greater level of PPDK in the diploid species, the actual amount of PPDK could still supply only a limited amount of the enzyme activity necessary to provide phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP) for any putative intracellular C4 carbon shuttle providing carbon to RuBPC. Thus, this difference in enzyme amount could not by itself account for the reported high rates of net photosynthesis at high light intensity in T. boeoticum. Together with reported anatomical differences between the diploid and hexaploid species, however, this biochemical difference may be of physiological importance.  相似文献   

20.
There are relatively few reports on the leaf structure and in situ immunolocalization of carbon metabolism enzymes in crassulacean acid metabolism (CAM) plants, compared with reports on C4 plants. The leaf inner structure and the subcellular location of some key CAM enzymes for a phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase (PCK) CAM species, Ananas comosus, and three malic enzyme (ME) CAM species, Mesembryanthemum crystallinum, Kalanchoe daigremontiana, and K. pinnata, was investigated by immunogold labelling and electron microscopy in this study. The leaves of these species had few intercellular air spaces in the mesophyll. A large vacuole occupied the mesophyll cells, and many vesicles of various sizes occurred in the cytosol. Immunocytochemical study revealed that labelling was present for phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase in the cytosol and for ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase in the chloroplasts of the mesophyll cells in all species. No specific labelling for pyruvate orthophosphate dikinase (PPDK) was observed in the PCK-CAM species. In the ME-CAM species, the patterns of labelling for PPDK differed. In M. crystallinum labelling for PPDK was present only in the chloroplasts, whereas in the two Kalanchoe species it occurred in the cytosol as well as in the chloroplasts. These results suggest that the subcellular localization of PPDK varies with ME-CAM species, in contrast to the conventional belief that it is localized in the chloroplasts.Key words: Crassulacean acid metabolism, immunolocalization, leaf inner structure, phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase, pyruvate orthophosphate dikinase.   相似文献   

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