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In plants, lysine catabolism is thought to be controlled by a bifunctional enzyme, lysine ketoglutarate reductase/saccharopine dehydrogenase (LKR/SDH). Lysine is converted to saccharopine, through condensation with alpha-ketoglutarate, by LKR, and subsequently to glutamate and alpha-aminoadipate-delta-semialdehyde by SDH. To investigate lysine catabolism in maize kernels, we generated transgenic plants with suppressed LKR/SDH activity in either endosperm or embryo. We found that the suppression of LKR/SDH in endosperm induced an increase in free lysine in developing endosperm, which peaked at 32 days after pollination. At later stages of kernel development, most of the free lysine was found in the embryo along with an elevated level of saccharopine. By combining endosperm LKR/SDH suppression with embryo LKR/SDH suppression through crosses, the saccharopine level in embryo was reduced and resulted in higher lysine accumulation in mature kernels. These results reveal new insights into how free lysine level is regulated and distributed in developing maize kernels and demonstrate the possibility of engineering high lysine corn via the suppression of lysine catabolism.  相似文献   

3.
Both in mammals and plants, excess lysine (Lys) is catabolized via saccharopine into alpha-amino adipic semialdehyde and glutamate by two consecutive enzymes, Lys-ketoglutarate reductase (LKR) and saccharopine dehydrogenase (SDH), which are linked on a single bifunctional polypeptide. To study the control of metabolite flux via this bifunctional enzyme, we have purified it from developing soybean (Glycine max) seeds. LKR activity of the bifunctional LKR/SDH possessed relatively high K(m) for its substrates, Lys and alpha-ketoglutarate, suggesting that this activity may serve as a rate-limiting step in Lys catabolism. Despite their linkage, the LKR and SDH enzymes possessed significantly different pH optima, suggesting that SDH activity of the bifunctional enzyme may also be rate-limiting in vivo. We have previously shown that Arabidopsis plants contain both a bifunctional LKR/SDH and a monofunctional SDH enzymes (G. Tang, D. Miron, J.X. Zhu-Shimoni, G. Galili [1997] Plant Cell 9: 1-13). In the present study, we found no evidence for the presence of such a monofunctional SDH enzyme in soybean seeds. These results may provide a plausible regulatory explanation as to why various plant species accumulate different catabolic products of Lys.  相似文献   

4.
In prokaryotes and plants the synthesis of the essential amino acids lysine and threonine is predominantly regulated by feed-back inhibition of aspartate kinase (AK) and dihydrodipicolinate synthase (DHPS). In order to modify the flux through the aspartate family pathway in barley and enhance the accumulation of the corresponding amino acids, we have generated transgenic barley plants that constitutively express mutant Escherichia coli genes encoding lysine feed-back insensitive forms of AK and DHPS. As a result, leaves of primary transformants (T0) exhibited a 14-fold increase of free lysine and an 8-fold increase in free methionine. In mature seeds of the DHPS transgenics, there was a 2-fold increase in free lysine, arginine and asparagine and a 50% reduction in free proline, while no changes were observed in the seeds of the two AK transgenic lines analysed. When compared to that of control seeds, no differences were observed in the composition of total amino acids. The introduced genes were inherited in the T1 generation where enzymic activities revealed a 2.3-fold increase of AK activity and a 4.0–9.5-fold increase for DHPS. T1 seeds of DHPS transformants showed the same changes in free amino acids as observed in T0 seeds. It is concluded that the aspartate family pathway may be genetically engineered by the introduction of genes coding for feed-back-insensitive enzymes, preferentially giving elevated levels of lysine and methionine.  相似文献   

5.
Zhu X  Tang G  Granier F  Bouchez D  Galili G 《Plant physiology》2001,126(4):1539-1545
Plants possess both anabolic and catabolic pathways for the essential amino acid lysine (Lys). However, although the biosynthetic pathway was clearly shown to regulate Lys accumulation in plants, the functional significance of Lys catabolism has not been experimentally elucidated. To address this issue, we have isolated an Arabidopsis knockout mutant with a T-DNA inserted into exon 13 of the gene encoding Lys ketoglutarate reductase/saccharopine dehydrogenase. This bifunctional enzyme controls the first two steps of Lys catabolism. The phenotype of the LKR/SDH knockout was indistinguishable from wild-type plants under normal growth conditions, suggesting that Lys catabolism is not an essential pathway under standard growth conditions. However, mature seeds of the knockout mutant over-accumulated Lys compared with wild-type plants. This report provides the first direct evidence for the functional significance of Lys catabolism in regulating Lys accumulation in seeds. Such a knockout mutant may also provide new perspectives to improve the level of the essential amino acid Lys in plant seeds.  相似文献   

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The essential amino acid lysine is synthesized in higher plants by a complex pathway that is predominantly regulated by feedback inhibition of two enzymes, namely aspartate kinase (AK) and dihydrodipicolinate synthase (DHPS). Although DHPS is thought to play a major role in this regulation, the relative importance of AK is not known. In order to study this regulation, we have expressed in the chloroplasts of transgenic potato plants a DHPS derived from Escherichia coli at a level 50-fold above the endogenous DHPS. The bacterial enzyme is much less sensitive to lysine inhibition than its potato counterpart. DHPS activity in leaves, roots and tubers of the transgenic plants was considerably higher and more resistant to lysine inhibition than in control untransformed plants. Furthermore, this activity was accompanied by a significant increase in level of free lysine in all three tissues. Yet, the extent of lysine overproduction in potato leaves was significantly lower than that previously reported in leaves of transgenic plants expressing the same bacterial enzyme, suggesting that in potato, AK may also play a major regulatory role in lysine biosynthesis. Indeed, the elevated level of free lysine in the transgenic potato plants was shown to inhibit the lysine-sensitive AK activity in vivo. Our results support previous reports showing that DHPS is the major rate-limiting enzyme for lysine synthesis in higher plants, but they suggest that additional plant-specific regulatory factors are also involved.  相似文献   

9.
Lysine-ketoglutarate reductase/saccharopine dehydrogenase (LKR/SDH) is a bifunctional enzyme catalyzing the first two steps of lysine catabolism in animals and plants. To elucidate the biochemical signification of the linkage between the two enzymes of LKR/SDH, namely lysine ketoglutarate and saccharopine dehydrogenase, we employed various truncated and mutated Arabidopsis LKR/SDH polypeptides expressed in yeast. Activity analyses of the different recombinant polypeptides under conditions of varying NaCl levels implied that LKR, but not SDH activity, is regulated by functional interaction between the LKR and SDH domains, which is mediated by the structural conformation of the linker region connecting them. Because LKR activity of plant LKR/SDH enzymes is also regulated by casein kinase 2 phosphorylation, we searched for such potential regulatory phosphorylation sites using matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization time-of-flight mass spectrometry and site-directed mutagenesis. This analysis identified Ser-458 as a candidate for this function. We also tested a hypothesis suggesting that an EF-hand-like sequence at the C-terminal part of the LKR domain functions in a calcium-dependent assembly of LKR/SDH into a homodimer. We found that this region is essential for LKR activity but that it does not control a calcium-dependent assembly of LKR/SDH. The relevance of our results to the in vivo function of LKR/SDH in lysine catabolism in plants is discussed. In addition, because the linker region between LKR and SDH exists only in plants but not in animal LKR/SDH enzymes, our results suggest that the regulatory properties of LKR/SDH and, hence, the regulation of lysine catabolism are different between plants and animals.  相似文献   

10.
Zhu X  Galili G 《The Plant cell》2003,15(4):845-853
To elucidate the relative significance of Lys synthesis and catabolism in determining Lys level in plant seeds, we expressed a bacterial feedback-insensitive dihydrodipicolinate synthase (DHPS) in a seed-specific manner in wild-type Arabidopsis as well as in an Arabidopsis knockout mutant in the Lys catabolism pathway. Transgenic plants expressing the bacterial DHPS, or the knockout mutant, contained approximately 12-fold or approximately 5-fold higher levels, respectively, of seed free Lys than wild-type plants. However, the combination of these two traits caused a synergistic approximately 80-fold increase in seed free Lys level. The dramatic increase in free Lys in the knockout mutant expressing the bacterial DHPS was associated with a significant reduction in the levels of Glu and Asp but also with an unexpected increase in the levels of Gln and Asn. This finding suggested a special regulatory interaction between Lys metabolism and amide amino acid metabolism in seeds. Notably, the level of free Met, which competes with Lys for Asp and Glu as precursors, was increased unexpectedly by up to approximately 38-fold in the various transgenic and knockout plants. Together, our results show that Lys catabolism plays a major regulatory role in Lys accumulation in Arabidopsis seeds and reveal novel regulatory networks of seed amino acid metabolism.  相似文献   

11.
Stepansky A  Galili G 《Plant physiology》2003,133(3):1407-1415
In plants, excess cellular lysine (Lys) is catabolized into glutamic acid and acetyl-coenzyme A; yet, it is still not clear whether this pathway has other functions in addition to balancing Lys levels. To address this issue, we examined the effects of stress-related hormones, abscisic acid (ABA), and jasmonate, as well as various metabolic signals on the production of the mRNA and polypeptide of the bifunctional Lys-ketoglutarate reductase (LKR)/saccharopine dehydrogenase (SDH) enzyme, which contains the first two linked enzymes of Lys catabolism. The level of LKR/SDH was strongly enhanced by ABA, jasmonate, and sugar starvation, whereas excess sugars and nitrogen starvation reduced its level; thus this pathway appears to fulfill multiple functions in stress-related and carbon/nitrogen metabolism. Treatments with combination of hormones and/or metabolites, as well as use of ABA mutants in conjunction with the tester sugars mannose and 3-O-methyl-glucose further supported the idea that the hormonal and metabolic signals apparently operate through different signal transduction cascades. The stimulation of LKR/SDH protein expression by ABA is regulated by a signal transduction cascade that contains the ABI1-1 and ABI2-1 protein phosphatases. By contrast, the stimulation of LKR/SDH protein expression by sugar starvation is regulated by the hexokinase-signaling cascade in a similar manner to the repression of many photosynthetic genes by sugars. These findings suggest a metabolic and mechanistic link between Lys catabolism and photosynthesis-related metabolism in the regulation of carbon/nitrogen partitioning.  相似文献   

12.
Lysine is a nutritionally important essential amino acid, whose synthesis in plants is strongly regulated by the rate of its synthesis. Yet, lysine level in plants is also finely controlled by a super-regulated catabolic pathway that catabolizes lysine into glutamate and acetyl Co-A. The first two enzymes of lysine catabolism are synthesized from a single LKR/SDH gene. Expression of this gene is subject to compound developmental, hormonal and stress-associated regulation. Moreover, the LKR/SDH gene of different plant species encodes up to three distinct polypeptides: (i) a bifunctional enzyme containing the linked lysine-ketoglutarate (LKR) and saccharopine dehydrogenase (SDH) whose LKR activity is regulated by its linked SDH enzyme; (ii) a monofunctional SDH encoded by an internal promoter, which is a part of the coding DNA region of the LKR/SDH gene; and (iii) a monofunctional, highly potent LKR that is formed by polyadenylation within an intron. LKR activity in the bifunctional LKR/SDH polypeptide is also post-translationally regulated by phosphorylation by casein kinase-2 (CK2), but the consequence of this regulation is still unknown. Why is lysine metabolism super-regulated by synthesis and catabolism? A hypothesis addressing this important question is presented, suggesting that lysine may serve as a regulator of plant growth and interaction with the environment.  相似文献   

13.
Higher plant responses to abiotic stresses are associated with physiological and biochemical changes triggering a number of metabolic adjustments. We focused on L-lysine catabolism, and have previously demonstrated that degradation of this amino acid is osmo-regulated at the level of lysine-ketoglutarate reductase (LKR, EC 1.5.1.8) and saccharopine dehydrogenase (SDH, EC 1.5.1.9) in Brassica napus. LKR and SDH activities are enhanced by decreasing osmotic potential and decrease when the upshock osmotic treatment is followed by a downshock osmotic one. Moreover we have shown that the B. napus LKR/SDH gene is up-regulated in osmotically-stressed tissues. The LKR/SDH activity produces alpha-aminoadipate semialdehyde which could be further converted into alpha-aminoadipate and acetyl CoA. Alternatively alpha-aminoadipate could behave as a precursor for pipecolic acid. Pipecolic acid is described as an osmoprotectant in bacteria and is co-accumulated with proline in halophytic plants. We suggest that osmo-induction of the LKR/SDH activity could be partly responsible for pipecolic acid accumulation. This proposal has been assessed in this study through pipecolic acid amounts determination in rape leaf discs subjected to various upshift and downshift osmotic treatments. Changes in pipecolic acid level actually behave as those observed for LKR and SDH activities, since it increases or decreases in rape leaf discs treated under hyper- or hypo-osmotic conditions, respectively. In addition we show that pipecolic acid level is positively correlated with the external osmotic potential as well as with the duration of the applied treatment. On the other hand pipecolic acid level is related to the availability of L-lysine and not to that of D-lysine. Collectively the results obtained demonstrate that lysine catabolism through LKR/SDH activity is involved in osmo-induced synthesis of pipecolic acid.  相似文献   

14.
A major nutritional drawback of many crop plants is their low content of several essential amino acids, particularly lysine. The biosynthesis of lysine in plants is regulated by several feedback loops. Dihydrodipicolinate synthase (DHPS) from Escherichia coli, a key enzyme in lysine biosynthesis, which is considerably less sensitive to lysine accumulation than the endogenous plant enzyme has been expressed in chloroplasts of tobacco leaves. Expression of the bacterial enzyme was accompanied by a significant increase in the level of free lysine. No increase in protein-bound lysine was evident. Free lysine accumulation was positively correlated with the level of DHPS activity in various transgenic plants. Compartmentalization of DHPS in the chloroplast was essential for its participation in lysine biosynthesis as no lysine overproduction was obtained in transgenic plants that expressed the bacterial enzyme in the cytoplasm. The elevated level of free lysine in the transgenic plants was sufficient to inhibit, in vivo, a second key enzyme in lysine biosynthesis, namely, aspartate kinase, with no apparent influence on lysine accumulation. The present report not only provides a better understanding of the regulation of lysine biosynthesis in higher plants but also offers a new strategy to improve the production of this essential amino acid.  相似文献   

15.
Although it is one of the major crops in the world, corn has poor nutritional quality for human and animal consumption due to its low lysine content. Here, we report a method of simultaneous expression of a deregulated lysine biosynthetic enzyme, CordapA, and reduction of a bifunctional lysine degradation enzyme, lysine-ketoglutarate reductase/saccharophine dehydrogenase (LKR/SDH), in transgenic corn plants by a single transgene cassette. This is accomplished by inserting an inverted-repeat sequence targeting the maize LKR/SDH gene into an intron of a transgene cassette that expresses CordapA. This combination of LKR/SDH silencing and CordapA expression led to the accumulation of free lysine to over 4000 p.p.m. in transgenic corn grain, compared to less than 100 p.p.m. in wild-type controls. This intron-embedded silencing cassette design reduces the number of transgene cassettes needed in transgenic approaches for manipulating metabolic pathways that sometimes require expression of one gene and silencing of another.  相似文献   

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Candida albicans LYS1-encoded saccharopine dehydrogenase (CaLys1p, SDH) catalyzes the final biosynthetic step (saccharopine to lysine + α-ketoglutarate) of the novel α-aminoadipate pathway for lysine synthesis in fungi. The reverse reaction catalyzed by lysine-α-ketoglutarate reductase (LKR) is used exclusively in animals and plants for the catabolism of excess lysine. The 1,146 bp C. albicans LYS1 ORF encodes a 382 amino acid SDH. In the present investigation, we have used E. coli-expressed recombinant C. albicans Lys1p for the determination of both forward and reverse SDH activities in vitro, compared the sequence identity of C. albicans Lys1p with other known SDHs and LKRs, performed extensive site-directed mutational analyses of conserved amino acid residues and analyzed the phylogenetic relationship of C. albicans Lys1p to other known SDHs and LKRs. We have identified 14 of the 68 amino acid substitutions as essential for C. albicans Lys1p SDH activity, including two highly conserved functional motifs, H93XXF96XH98 and G138XXXG142XXG145. These results provided new insight into the functional and phylogenetic characteristics of the distinct biosynthetic SDH in fungi and catabolic LKR in higher eukaryotes.  相似文献   

18.
Both plants and animals catabolize lysine via saccharopine by two consecutive enzymes, lysine-ketoglutarate reductase (LKR) and saccharopine dehydrogenase (SDH), which are linked on a single polypeptide. We recently demonstrated that Arabidopsis plants possess not only a bifunctional LKR/SDH but in addition a monofunctional SDH enzyme. We also speculated that these two enzymes may be controlled by a single gene (G. Tang et al. Plant Cell, 1997, 9, 1305-1316). By expressing several epitope-tagged and GUS reporter constructs, we demonstrate in the present study that the Arabidopsis monofunctional SDH is encoded by a distinct gene, which is, however, nested entirely within the coding and 3' non-coding regions of the larger bifunctional LKR/SDH gene. The entire open reading frame of the monofunctional SDH gene, as well as some components of its promoter, are also parts of the translated coding sequence of the bifunctional LKR/SDH gene. These special structural characteristics, combined with the fact that the two genes encode simultaneously two metabolically related but distinct enzymes, render the LKR/SDH locus a novel type of a composite locus. Not all plant species possess an active monofunctional SDH gene and the production of this enzyme is correlated with an increased flux of lysine catabolism. Taken together, our results suggest that the composite LKR/SDH locus serves to control an efficient, highly regulated flux of lysine catabolism  相似文献   

19.
Lysine is one of the nutritionally limiting amino acids in food and feed products made from maize (Zea mays L.). Two enzymes in the lysine biosynthesis pathway, aspartate kinase (AK) and dihydrodipicolinate synthase (DHPS), have primary roles in regulating the level of lysine accumulation in plant cells because both enzymes are feedback-inhibited by lysine. An isolated cDNA clone for maize DHPS was modified to encode a DHPS much less sensitive to lysine inhibition. The altered DHPS cDNA was transformed into maize cell suspension cultures to determine the effect on DHPS activity and lysine accumulation. Partially purified DHPS (wildtype plus mutant) from transformed cultures was less sensitive to lysine inhibition than wild-type DHPS from nontransformed cultures. Transformed cultures had cellular free lysine levels as much as four times higher than those of nontransformed controls. Thus, we have shown that reducing the feedback inhibition of DHPS by lysine can lead to increased lysine accumulation in maize cells. Increasing the capacity for lysine synthesis may be an important step in improving the nutritional quality of food and feed products made from maize.  相似文献   

20.
We have previously shown that a gene encoding for lysine-ketoglutarate reductase (LKR, EC 1.5.1.8) and saccharopine dehydrogenase (SDH, EC 1.5.1.9) is upregulated in osmotically stressed leaf discs from Brassica napus. In plants, excess lysine is catabolised by these enzymes which are linked on a single polypeptide. These findings suggested that LKR and SDH activities could be enhanced with decreasing osmotic potential. This proposal has been assessed in this study where LKR and SDH activities were determined in desalted crude extracts from rapeseed leaf discs subjected in vitro to upshock osmotic stress using polyethylene glycol (PEG) as a non-permeant osmoticum. Results reported here demonstrated that LKR and SDH activities increased in stressed material similarly to that observed for the related mRNA levels. In addition, it was shown that both activities depend on the intensity of the external osmotic stress and the duration of the applied treatment. On the other hand, during recovery of leaf discs upshocked and then downshocked, LKR and SDH activities decreased which clearly demonstrated that lysine catabolism is osmo-regulated through these activities.  相似文献   

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