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1.
We have achieved, to our knowledge, the first high-level heterologous expression of the gene encoding d-ribulose-5-phosphate 3-epimerase from any source, thereby permitting isolation and characterization of the epimerase as found in photosynthetic organisms. The extremely labile recombinant spinach (Spinacia oleracea L.) enzyme was stabilized by dl-α-glycerophosphate or ethanol and destabilized by d-ribulose-5-phosphate or 2-mercaptoethanol. Despite this lability, the unprecedentedly high specific activity of the purified material indicates that the structural integrity of the enzyme is maintained throughout isolation. Ethylenediaminetetraacetate and divalent metal cations did not affect epimerase activity, thereby excluding a requirement for the latter in catalysis. As deduced from the sequence of the cloned spinach gene and the electrophoretic mobility under denaturing conditions of the purified recombinant enzyme, its 25-kD subunit size was about the same as that of the corresponding epimerases of yeast and mammals. However, in contrast to these other species, the recombinant spinach enzyme was octameric rather than dimeric, as assessed by gel filtration and polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis under nondenaturing conditions. Western-blot analyses with antibodies to the purified recombinant enzyme confirmed that the epimerase extracted from spinach leaves is also octameric.As a participant in the oxidative pentose phosphate pathway, Ru5P epimerase (EC 5.1.3.1), which catalyzes the interconversion of Ru5P and Xu5P, is widely distributed throughout nature. Beyond its catabolic role, the epimerase is also vital anabolically to photosynthetic organisms in the regenerative phase of the reductive pentose phosphate pathway (the Calvin cycle). In this capacity, Ru5P epimerase directs Xu5P, formed in two distinct transketolase reactions of the cycle, to Ru5P. Phosphorylation of the latter regenerates d-ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate, the substrate for net CO2 fixation. Because both the oxidative and reductive pentose phosphate pathways coexist in chloroplasts (Schnarrenberger et al., 1995), Ru5P epimerase and R5P isomerase facilitate partitioning of pentose phosphates between the two pathways, as dictated by the metabolic needs and redox status of the cell.Scant structural and mechanistic information about Ru5P epimerase is available despite its inherent importance and dual metabolic roles. This neglect may in part reflect the low natural abundance of the enzyme. For example, achievement of electrophoretic homogeneity required a 2000-fold purification from yeast (Bär et al., 1996) and spinach (Spinacia oleracea L.) chloroplasts (Teige et al., 1998) and 9000-fold purification from beef liver (Terada et al., 1985). Although low overall recoveries (<10%) further limited the availability of pure material, molecular sieving and denaturing electrophoresis established that the epimerases from mammals (Wood, 1979; Karmali et al., 1983; Terada et al., 1985) and yeast (Bär et al., 1996) are homodimers of approximately 23-kD subunits, whereas the enzyme from spinach chloroplasts may be an octamer of 23-kD subunits (Teige et al., 1998). DNA-deduced amino acid sequences of Ru5P epimerases from both photosynthetic and nonphotosynthetic sources, which confirm this estimated subunit size, show greater than 50% similarities among the most evolutionarily distant species examined (Kusian et al., 1992; Blattner et al., 1993; Falcone and Tabita, 1993; Lyngstadaas et al., 1995; Nowitzki et al., 1995; Teige et al., 1995).Although Ru5P epimerase has very recently been purified from a photosynthetic organism (spinach) for the first time (Teige et al., 1998), the low recovery (100 μg from 3.8 g of soluble chloroplast protein, representing an overall yield of 5%) imposes severe constraints on the directions of future experiments. Furthermore, despite successful cloning of cDNA fragments encoding Ru5P epimerase of several photosynthetic organisms (Kusian et al., 1992; Nowitzki et al., 1995; Teige et al., 1995), to our knowledge high-level heterologous expression and purification of enzymically active recombinant enzyme have not been achieved. Because of our interest in the regulation of photosynthetic carbon assimilation and the requisite need for ample supplies of the participant enzymes for use in mechanistic studies, we have attempted to optimize the heterologous expression of the spinach gene for Ru5P epimerase. In this paper we report cDNA clones that encode the mature chloroplastic enzyme or its cytoplasmic precursor. We also describe an efficient isolation procedure for the mature spinach enzyme synthesized in Escherichia coli and some of the properties of the purified enzyme. Contrasting features of the plant Ru5P epimerase, relative to the animal and yeast counterparts, include an octameric rather than a dimeric structure (also see Teige et al., 1998) and striking instability under routine laboratory conditions.  相似文献   

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A cDNA encoding the Arabidopsis thaliana uridine 5′-monophosphate (UMP)/cytidine 5′-monophosphate (CMP) kinase was isolated by complementation of a Saccharomyces cerevisiae ura6 mutant. The deduced amino acid sequence of the plant UMP/CMP kinase has 50% identity with other eukaryotic UMP/CMP kinase proteins. The cDNA was subcloned into pGEX-4T-3 and expressed as a glutathione S-transferase fusion protein in Escherichia coli. Following proteolytic digestion, the plant UMP/CMP kinase was purified and analyzed for its structural and kinetic properties. The mass, N-terminal sequence, and total amino acid composition agreed with the sequence and composition predicted from the cDNA sequence. Kinetic analysis revealed that the UMP/CMP kinase preferentially uses ATP (Michaelis constant [Km] = 29 μm when UMP is the other substrate and Km = 292 μm when CMP is the other substrate) as a phosphate donor. However, both UMP (Km = 153 μm) and CMP (Km = 266 μm) were equally acceptable as the phosphate acceptor. The optimal pH for the enzyme is 6.5. P1, P5-di(adenosine-5′) pentaphosphate was found to be a competitive inhibitor of both ATP and UMP.  相似文献   

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In this communication we document the reproducible protocols for the purification of milligram quantities of cytochrome b5 and NADH-cytochrome b5 reductase from the microsomal fraction of Pisum sativum. The cytochrome b5 component of this NADH linked electron transport chain was found to have a molecular mass of 16,400 daltons and the reductase a molecular mass of 34,500 daltons. These components could be reconstituted into a functional NADH oxidase activity active in the reduction of exogenous cytochrome c or ferricyanide. In the latter assay the purified reductase exhibited a turnover number of 22,000 per minute. The amino-terminal amino acid sequence of the cytochrome b5 component was determined by sequential Edmund degredation, thus providing crucial information for the efficient cloning of this central protein of plant microsomal electron transfer.  相似文献   

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Lipoic acid is a coenzyme that is essential for the activity of enzyme complexes such as those of pyruvate dehydrogenase and glycine decarboxylase. We report here the isolation and characterization of LIP1 cDNA for lipoic acid synthase of Arabidopsis. The Arabidopsis LIP1 cDNA was isolated using an expressed sequence tag homologous to the lipoic acid synthase of Escherichia coli. This cDNA was shown to code for Arabidopsis lipoic acid synthase by its ability to complement a lipA mutant of E. coli defective in lipoic acid synthase. DNA-sequence analysis of the LIP1 cDNA revealed an open reading frame predicting a protein of 374 amino acids. Comparisons of the deduced amino acid sequence with those of E. coli and yeast lipoic acid synthase homologs showed a high degree of sequence similarity and the presence of a leader sequence presumably required for import into the mitochondria. Southern-hybridization analysis suggested that LIP1 is a single-copy gene in Arabidopsis. Western analysis with an antibody against lipoic acid synthase demonstrated that this enzyme is located in the mitochondrial compartment in Arabidopsis cells as a 43-kD polypeptide.  相似文献   

9.
This paper contains taxonomic keys for the identification of species of the genera Steinernema and Heterorhabditis. Morphometrics of certain life stages are presented in data tables so that the morphometrics of species identified using the keys can be checked in the tables. Additionally, SEM photographs and diagnoses of the families and genera of Steinernematidae and Heterorhabditidae are presented.  相似文献   

10.
A reversibly glycosylated polypeptide from pea (Pisum sativum) is thought to have a role in the biosynthesis of hemicellulosic polysaccharides. We have investigated this hypothesis by isolating a cDNA clone encoding a homolog of Arabidopsis thaliana, Reversibly Glycosylated Polypeptide-1 (AtRGP1), and preparing antibodies against the protein encoded by this gene. Polyclonal antibodies detect homologs in both dicot and monocot species. The patterns of expression and intracellular localization of the protein were examined. AtRGP1 protein and RNA concentration are highest in roots and suspension-cultured cells. Localization of the protein shows it to be mostly soluble but also peripherally associated with membranes. We confirmed that AtRGP1 produced in Escherichia coli could be reversibly glycosylated using UDP-glucose and UDP-galactose as substrates. Possible sites for UDP-sugar binding and glycosylation are discussed. Our results are consistent with a role for this reversibly glycosylated polypeptide in cell wall biosynthesis, although its precise role is still unknown.The primary cell wall of dicot plants is laid down by young cells prior to the cessation of elongation and secondary wall deposition. Making up to 90% of the cell''s dry weight, the extracellular matrix is important for many processes, including morphogenesis, growth, disease resistance, recognition, signaling, digestibility, nutrition, and decay. The composition of the cell wall has been extensively described (Bacic et al., 1988; Levy and Staehelin, 1992; Zablackis et al., 1995), and yet many questions remain unanswered regarding the synthesis and interaction of these components to provide cells with a functional wall (Carpita and Gibeaut, 1993; Carpita et al., 1996).Heteropolysaccharide biosynthesis can be divided into four steps: (a) chain or backbone initiation, (b) elongation, (c) side-chain addition, and (d) termination and extracellular deposition (Waldron and Brett, 1985). The similarity between various polysaccharide backbones leads to the prediction that the synthesizing machinery would be conserved between them. For example, the backbone of xyloglucan polymers, β-1,4 glucan, can be synthesized independently of or concurrently with side-chain addition (Campbell et al., 1988; White et al., 1993), and this polymer and the chains that make up cellulose are identical. The later addition of side chains to xyloglucan are catalyzed by specific transferases (Kleene and Berger, 1993) such as xylosyltransferase (Campbell et al., 1988), galactosyltransferase, and fucosyltransferase (Faïk et al., 1997), all of which are localized to the Golgi compartment (Brummell et al., 1990; Driouich et al., 1993; Staehelin and Moore, 1995).The enzymes involved in wall biosynthesis have been recalcitrant to isolation (Carpita et al., 1996; Albersheim et al., 1997). Only recently has the first gene encoding putative cellulose biosynthetic enzymes, celA, been isolated from cotton (Gossypium hirsutum) and rice (Oryza sativa; Pear et al., 1996).During studies of polysaccharide synthesis in pea (Pisum sativum) Golgi membranes, Dhugga et al. (1991) identified a 41-kD protein doublet that they suggested was involved in polysaccharide synthesis. The authors showed that this protein could be glycosylated by radiolabeled UDP-Glc but that this labeling could be reversibly competed with by unlabeled UDP-Glc, UDP-Xyl, and UDP-Gal, the sugars that make up xyloglucan (Hayashi, 1989). The 41-kD protein was named PsRGP1 (P. sativum Reversibly Glycosylated Polypeptide-1; Dhugga et al., 1997). Furthermore, the conditions that stimulate or inhibit Golgi-localized β-glucan synthase activity are the same conditions that stimulate or inhibit the glycosylation of PsRGP1 (Dhugga et al., 1991). To address the role of this protein in polysaccharide synthesis, the authors purified the polypeptides and obtained the sequences from tryptic peptides (Dhugga and Ray, 1994). Antibodies raised against PsRGP1 showed that it is soluble and localized to the plasma membrane (Dhugga et al., 1991) and Golgi compartment (Dhugga et al., 1997). In addition to its Golgi localization, the steady-state glycosylation of PsRGP1 is approximately 10:7:3 (UDP-Glc:-Xyl:-Gal), which is similar to the typical sugar composition of xyloglucan (1.0:0.75:0.25; Dhugga et al., 1997).We were interested in studying various aspects of cell wall metabolism, including the synthesis of polysaccharides and their delivery to the cell wall. Studies in pea have shown that a 41-kD protein may be involved in cell wall polysaccharide synthesis, possibly that of xyloglucan (Dhugga et al., 1997). Here we report the characterization of AtRGP1 (Arabidopsis thaliana Reversibly Glycosylated Polypeptide-1), a soluble protein that can also be found weakly associated with membrane fractions, most likely the Golgi fraction. The reversible nature of the glycosylation of this Arabidopsis homolog by the substrates used to make polysaccharides (nucleotide sugars) suggests a possible role for AtRGP1 in polysaccharide biosynthesis.  相似文献   

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WDR5 is a core component of the human mixed lineage leukemia-2 complex, which plays central roles in ER positive tumour cells and is a major driver of androgen-dependent prostate cancer cell proliferation. Given the similarities between breast and prostate cancers, we explore the potential prognostic value of WDR5 gene expression on breast cancer survival. Our findings reveal that WDR5 over-expression is associated with poor breast cancer clinical outcome in three gene expression data sets and BreastMark. The eQTL analysis reveals 130 trans-eQTL SNPs whose genes mapped with statistical significance are significantly associated with patient survival. These genes together with WDR5 are enriched with “cellular development, gene expression, cell cycle” signallings. Knocking down WDR5 in MCF7 dramatically decreases cell viability, but does not alter tumour cell response to doxorubicin. Our study reveals the prognostic value of WDR5 expression in breast cancer which is under long-range regulation of genes involved in cell cycle, and anthracycline could be coupled with treatments targeting WDR5 once such a regimen is available.  相似文献   

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Esterases have recurrently been implicated in insecticide resistance in Helicoverpa armigera but little is known about the underlying molecular mechanisms. We used a baculovirus system to express 14 of 30 full-length esterase genes so far identified from midgut cDNA libraries of this species. All 14 produced esterase isozymes after native PAGE and the isozymes for seven of them migrated to two regions of the gel previously associated with both organophosphate and pyrethroid resistance in various strains. Thirteen of the enzymes obtained in sufficient yield for further analysis all showed tight binding to organophosphates and low but measurable organophosphate hydrolase activity. However there was no clear difference in activity between the isozymes from regions associated with resistance and those from elsewhere in the zymogram, or between eight of the isozymes from a phylogenetic clade previously associated with resistance in proteomic and quantitative rtPCR experiments and five others not so associated. By contrast, the enzymes differed markedly in their activities against nine pyrethroid isomers and the enzymes with highest activity for the most insecticidal isomers were from regions of the gel and, in some cases, the phylogeny that had previously been associated with pyrethroid resistance. Phospholipase treatment confirmed predictions from sequence analysis that three of the isozymes were GPI anchored. This unusual feature among carboxylesterases has previously been suggested to underpin an association that some authors have noted between esterases and resistance to the Cry1Ac toxin from Bacillus thuringiensis. However these three isozymes did not migrate to the zymogram region previously associated with Cry1Ac resistance.  相似文献   

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It was previously shown that a number of sulfhydryl [SH] group reagents (N-ethylmaleimide [NEM], iodoacetate, Ag+, HgCl2, etc.) can induce a marked, transitory stimulation of O2 uptake (QO2) in Egeria densa leaves, insensitive to CN and salicylhydroxamic acid and inhibited by diphenylene iodonium and quinacrine. The phytotoxin fusicoccin (FC) also induces a marked increase in O2 consumption in E. densa leaves, apparently independent of the recognized stimulating action on the H+-ATPase. In this investigation we compared the FC-induced increase in O2 consumption with those induced by NEM and Ag+, and we tested for a possible interaction between FC and the two SH blockers in the activation of QO2. The results show (a) the different nature of the FC- and NEM- or Ag+-induced increases of QO2; (b) that FC counteracts the NEM- (and Ag+)-induced respiratory burst; and (c) that FC strongly reduces the damaging effects on plasma membrane permeability observed in E. densa leaves treated with the two SH reagents. Two alternative models of interpretation of the action of FC, in activating a CN-sensitive respiratory pathway and in suppressing the SH blocker-induced respiratory burst, are proposed.  相似文献   

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The kinetics of phototransduction of phytochrome A (phyA) and phytochrome B (phyB) were compared in etiolated Arabidopsis thaliana seedlings. The responses of hypocotyl growth, cotyledon unfolding, and expression of a light-harvesting chlorophyll a/b-binding protein of the photosystem II gene promoter fused to the coding region of β-glucuronidase (used as a reporter enzyme) were mediated by phyA under continuous far-red light (FR) and by phyB under continuous red light (R). The seedlings were exposed hourly either to n min of FR followed by 60 minus n min in darkness or to n min of R, 3 min of FR (to back-convert phyB to its inactive form), and 57 minus n min of darkness. For the three processes investigated here, the kinetics of phototransduction of phyB were faster than that of phyA. For instance, 15 min R h−1 (terminated with a FR pulse) were almost as effective as continuous R, whereas 15 min of FR h−1 caused less than 30% of the effect of continuous FR. This difference is interpreted in terms of divergence of signal transduction pathways downstream from phyA and phyB.  相似文献   

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Porphyromonas gingivalis, a Gram-negative asaccharolytic anaerobe, is a major causative organism of chronic periodontitis. Because the bacterium utilizes amino acids as energy and carbon sources and incorporates them mainly as dipeptides, a wide variety of dipeptide production processes mediated by dipeptidyl-peptidases (DPPs) should be beneficial for the organism. In the present study, we identified the fourth P. gingivalis enzyme, DPP5. In a dpp4-7-11-disrupted P. gingivalis ATCC 33277, a DPP7-like activity still remained. PGN_0756 possessed an activity indistinguishable from that of the mutant, and was identified as a bacterial orthologue of fungal DPP5, because of its substrate specificity and 28.5% amino acid sequence identity with an Aspergillus fumigatus entity. P. gingivalis DPP5 was composed of 684 amino acids with a molecular mass of 77,453, and existed as a dimer while migrating at 66 kDa on SDS-PAGE. It preferred Ala and hydrophobic residues, had no activity toward Pro at the P1 position, and no preference for hydrophobic P2 residues, showed an optimal pH of 6.7 in the presence of NaCl, demonstrated Km and kcat/Km values for Lys-Ala-MCA of 688 μm and 11.02 μm−1 s−1, respectively, and was localized in the periplasm. DPP5 elaborately complemented DPP7 in liberation of dipeptides with hydrophobic P1 residues. Examinations of DPP- and gingipain gene-disrupted mutants indicated that DPP4, DPP5, DPP7, and DPP11 together with Arg- and Lys-gingipains cooperatively liberate most dipeptides from nutrient oligopeptides. This is the first study to report that DPP5 is expressed not only in eukaryotes, but also widely distributed in bacteria and archaea.  相似文献   

16.
Oxopantoyl lactone reductase has been purified to homogeneity from a crude extract of spinach leaves (Spinacia oleracea L.) using affinity chromatography on Red-Agarose and several subsequent ion exchange steps. The enzyme is monomeric with a relative molecular mass between 33,000 to 36,000. Affinity-purified antibodies directed against the homogenous enzyme have been used to determine the amount of oxopantoyl lactone reductase in the crude leaf extract as well as the chloroplast stroma. The overall purification factor has been determined to be 22,000. The subcellular location of the enzyme is chloroplastic. The final specific activity (strictly NADPH-dependent) is 4.5 μmole . min?1 . mg?1. The enzyme is also able to reduce isatin, bornanedione and acenaphthenequinone. The enzyme activity is strongly and uncompetitively inhibited by 2-keto-4-hydroxybutyrolactone and substituted 4,5-dioxopyrrolidines. An oxopantoate reductase associated with acetohydroxy acid isomeroreductase could be detected in the plant extract. Using a specific inhibitor of this latter enzyme or oxopyrrolidines, complementation studies with branched chain amino-acids and pantothenate have shown that oxopantoyl lactone reductase is likely to be involved in pantothenate biosynthesis. Furthermore, pantoyl lactone, the putative product of the reaction, together with β-alanine and ATP, has been shown to be the substrate of pantothenate synthase using a novel assay for pantothenate.  相似文献   

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The phenotypic consequences of targeted expression of mammalian biliverdin IXalpha reductase (BVR), an enzyme that metabolically inactivates the linear tetrapyrrole precursors of the phytochrome chromophore, are addressed in this investigation. Through comparative phenotypic analyses of multiple plastid-targeted and cytosolic BVR transgenic Arabidopsis plant lines, we show that the subcellular localization of BVR affects distinct subsets of light-mediated and light-independent processes in plant growth and development. Regardless of its cellular localization, BVR suppresses the phytochrome-modulated responses of hypocotyl growth inhibition, sucrose-stimulated anthocyanin accumulation, and inhibition of floral initiation. By contrast, reduced protochlorophyll levels in dark-grown seedlings and fluence-rate-dependent reduction of chlorophyll occur only in transgenic plants in which BVR is targeted to plastids. Together with companion analyses of the phytochrome chromophore-deficient hy1 mutant, our results suggest a regulatory role for linear tetrapyrroles within the plastid compartment distinct from their assembly with apophytochromes in the cytosol.  相似文献   

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Volemitol (d-glycero-d-manno-heptitol, α-sedoheptitol) is an unusual seven-carbon sugar alcohol that fulfills several important physiological functions in certain species of the genus Primula. Using the horticultural hybrid polyanthus (Primula × polyantha) as our model plant, we found that volemitol is the major nonstructural carbohydrate in leaves of all stages of development, with concentrations of up to 50 mg/g fresh weight in source leaves (about 25% of the dry weight), followed by sedoheptulose (d-altro-2-heptulose, 36 mg/g fresh weight), and sucrose (4 mg/g fresh weight). Volemitol was shown by the ethylenediaminetetraacetate-exudation technique to be a prominent phloem-mobile carbohydrate. It accounted for about 24% (mol/mol) of the phloem sap carbohydrates, surpassed only by sucrose (63%). Preliminary 14CO2 pulse-chase radiolabeling experiments showed that volemitol was a major photosynthetic product, preceded by the structurally related ketose sedoheptulose. Finally, we present evidence for a novel NADPH-dependent ketose reductase, tentatively called sedoheptulose reductase, in volemitol-containing Primula species, and propose it as responsible for the biosynthesis of volemitol in planta. Using enzyme extracts from polyanthus leaves, we determined that sedoheptulose reductase has a pH optimum between 7.0 and 8.0, a very high substrate specificity, and displays saturable concentration dependence for both sedoheptulose (apparent Km = 21 mm) and NADPH (apparent Km = 0.4 mm). Our results suggest that volemitol is important in certain Primula species as a photosynthetic product, phloem translocate, and storage carbohydrate.Alditols (sugar alcohols or acyclic polyols) may be chemically described as reduction products of aldose or ketose sugars. The most prevalent plant alditols are the hexitols sorbitol, mannitol, and galactitol. However, as many as 17 different alditols occur naturally in higher plants (for review, see Bieleski, 1982; Lewis, 1984; Loescher and Everard, 1996). The lesser-known alditols are often restricted in their occurrence but still fulfill important functions in those plants where they do occur. Volemitol (Fig. (Fig.1) 1) is a good example of a less common but important alditol. This seven-carbon sugar alcohol seems to be confined to certain sections of the genus Primula, so much so that it has been suggested as a useful chemotaxonomical marker (Kremer, 1978). Very little is known about the physiology and metabolism of volemitol in primulas, except that it was an early photosynthetic product in cowslip (Primula veris) and oxslip (Primula elatior) (Kremer, 1978). Figure 1Fischer projections of volemitol and its four structurally related seven-carbon sugars. Nomenclature follows that of Collins (1987); trivial names are underlined.The physiological roles of alditols are manifold and largely resemble those of disaccharides and oligosaccharides. They include photosynthetic assimilation, translocation and storage of carbon, and reducing power, as well as protection against different types of stresses (for review, see Bieleski, 1982; Lewis, 1984; Loescher and Everard, 1996; Stoop et al., 1996). The biosynthetic pathways of the hexitols sorbitol (glucitol), mannitol, galactitol (dulcitol), and the pentitol ribitol have been established in higher plants. They generally use NADPH as a hydrogen donor and aldose phosphate as a hydrogen acceptor, in concert with the corresponding phosphatases. One exception might be galactitol, which was suggested to be formed directly from unphosphorylated Gal (and NADPH) (Negm, 1986). Although all foliar alditols are thought to be phloem-mobile (Lewis, 1984), this has only been demonstrated for sorbitol, mannitol, and galactitol (Zimmermann and Ziegler, 1975; Davis and Loescher, 1990; Moing et al., 1992; Flora and Madore, 1993).To expand our knowledge of alditol metabolism in higher plants beyond that of hexitols, we studied the carbohydrate metabolism of polyanthus (Primula × polyantha). This popular horticultural hybrid of primrose (Primula vulgaris), oxlip, and cowslip (Mabberley, 1997) was chosen because preliminary experiments showed that its volemitol content is very high, similar to that of the wild-type species, and because it may be easily grown both outdoors and indoors.We give a general overview on volemitol metabolism in polyanthus with special emphasis on the role of volemitol in plant development and phloem transport. We also report on a novel enzyme, a NADPH-dependent ketose reductase, which forms volemitol by the reduction of sedoheptulose.  相似文献   

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