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1.
2.
N.K. Matheson 《Phytochemistry》1975,14(9):2017-2021
After removal of granular starch at low centrifugal force, the centrifugation, at increasing forces, of aqueous extracts of su1 corn gave a series of α-glucan precipitates that contained amylose. The amylose content decreased as the force increased. In contrast, in normal corn all the α-glucan precipitated as starch granules at low forces. In the sweet corn precipitates, apart from the granular starch, the branched α-glucan was phytoglycogen. The MW of this decreased as the proportion of amylose decreased. It appears that, as well as starch granules and soluble phytoglycogen, sweet corn contains granules, smaller than starch, of a range of sizes, and these are made up of phytoglycogen and amylose. As granule size decreases, so does the MW of the phytoglycogen and the content of amylose. A method of quantitative extraction of starch giving minimal depolymerization is described. The isopotential iodine absorption of a quantitative extract of sweet corn flour indicated that the total ratio of linear (amylose) fraction to branched (amylopectin + phytoglycogen) fraction was near the normal value of 1:4.  相似文献   

3.
It is a problem how to fit the molecules of amylose and amylopectin into the ultrastructural apposition layers of starch granules which have a width of only 0.1μ. Stretched amylose chains with a length up to 1 μ can be ruled out. In addition to the proposal of Miihlethaler, who visualizes folded amylopectin chains, a model with a helical amylose chain is discussed. A helix with six glucose residues per turn would be compatible with the crystal lattice found by Kreger; and the disorder caused by this helix in the hexagonal lattice of the parallel side chains of the amylopectin would account for the low optical anisotropy of the starch granules as compared to the parallel β-polyglucosan chains in cellulose. The proposed model, fitted into the 0.1 μ apposition ring of the starch granule, shows tangential strata with a layer repeat of about 80 A and a radial chain lattice with the fibre period 10.6 A; i.e., it shows a combination of a lamellar and a fibrous structure.  相似文献   

4.
Starch biosynthesis in cereal endosperm   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
Stored starch generally consists of two d-glucose homopolymers, the linear polymer amylose and a highly branched glucan amylopectin that connects linear chains. Amylopectin structurally contributes to the crystalline organization of the starch granule in cereals. In the endosperm, amylopectin biosynthesis requires the proper execution of a coordinated series of enzymatic reactions involving ADP glucose pyrophosphorylase (AGPase), soluble starch synthase (SS), starch branching enzyme (BE), and starch debranching enzyme (DBE), whereas amylose is synthesized by AGPase and granule-bound starch synthase (GBSS). It is highly possible that plastidial starch phosphorylase (Pho1) plays an important role in the formation of primers for starch biosynthesis in the endosperm. Recent advances in our understanding of the functions of individual enzyme isoforms have provided new insights into how linear polymer chains and branch linkages are synthesized in cereals. In particular, genetic analyses of a suite of mutants have formed the basis of a new model outlining the role of various enzyme isoforms in cereal starch production. In our current review, we summarize the recent research findings related to starch biosynthesis in cereal endosperm, with a particular focus on rice.  相似文献   

5.
The aim of this work was to characterize starch synthesis, composition, and granule structure in Arabidopsis leaves. First, the potential role of starch-degrading enzymes during starch accumulation was investigated. To discover whether simultaneous synthesis and degradation of starch occurred during net accumulation, starch was labeled by supplying (14)CO(2) to intact, photosynthesizing plants. Release of this label from starch was monitored during a chase period in air, using different light intensities to vary the net rate of starch synthesis. No release of label was detected unless there was net degradation of starch during the chase. Similar experiments were performed on a mutant line (dbe1) that accumulates the soluble polysaccharide, phytoglycogen. Label was not released from phytoglycogen during the chase indicating that, even when in a soluble form, glucan is not appreciably degraded during accumulation. Second, the effect on starch composition of growth conditions and mutations causing starch accumulation was studied. An increase in starch content correlated with an increased amylose content of the starch and with an increase in the ratio of granule-bound starch synthase to soluble starch synthase activity. Third, the structural organization and morphology of Arabidopsis starch granules was studied. The starch granules were birefringent, indicating a radial organization of the polymers, and x-ray scatter analyses revealed that granules contained alternating crystalline and amorphous lamellae with a periodicity of 9 nm. Granules from the wild type and the high-starch mutant sex1 were flattened and discoid, whereas those of the high-starch mutant sex4 were larger and more rounded. These larger granules contained "growth rings" with a periodicity of 200 to 300 nm. We conclude that leaf starch is synthesized without appreciable turnover and comprises similar polymers and contains similar levels of molecular organization to storage starches, making Arabidopsis an excellent model system for studying granule biosynthesis.  相似文献   

6.
1. Branching enzymes from rat and rabbit liver, as well as from potato and maize were prepared. They were almost free from contaminating glucan-degrading enzymes. 2. In 'sweet corn' maize, two separate fractions with (alpha 1,4)glucan: (alpha 1,4)glucan alpha 6-glycosyltransferase activities were obtained. One of them synthesized amylopectin, the branched component of starch, in the presence of phosphorylase and Glc1P, while the other fraction synthesized phytoglycogen. Furthermore, in a maize variety which does not accumulate phytoglycogen, only one fraction of branching activity was found, that formed amylopectin under the above-mentioned conditions. 3. Comparative analyses performed with native (alpha 1,4)-(alpha 1,6)glucopolysaccharides, and those synthesized in vitro with the branching enzyme from the same tissue, demonstrated a close similarity between both glucans. 4. It may be concluded that the branching enzyme is responsible for the specific degree of (alpha 1,6) branch linkages found in the native polysaccharide.  相似文献   

7.
Neurospora crassa branching enzyme [EC 2.4.1.18] acted on potato amylopectin or amylose to convert them to highly branched glycogen-type molecules which consisted of unit chains of six glucose units. The enzyme also acted on the amylopectin beta-limit dextrin, indicating that the enzyme acted on internal glucose chains as well as outer chains. By the combined action of N. crassa glycogen synthase [EC 2.4.1.11] and the branching enzyme, a glycogen-type molecule was formed from UDP-glucose. In the presence of primer glycogen, the glucose transfer reaction was accelerated by the addition of branching enzyme. On the other hand, the glucose transfer reaction by glycogen synthase did not occur without primers. When the branching enzyme was added, the glucose transfer occurred after a short time lag. This recovery of the glucose transfer reaction did not occur upon addition of the inactivated branching enzyme. The structure of the product formed by the combined action of the two enzymes was different from that of the intact N. crassa glycogen with respect to the distribution patterns of the unit chains.  相似文献   

8.
9.
It is widely known that some of the starch synthases and starch-branching enzymes are trapped inside the starch granule matrix during the course of starch deposition in amyloplasts. The objective of this study was to use maize SSI to further our understanding of the protein domains involved in starch granule entrapment and identify the chain-length specificities of the enzyme. Using affinity gel electrophoresis, we measured the dissociation constants of maize SSI and its truncated forms using various glucans. The enzyme has a high degree of specificity in terms of its substrate-enzyme dissociation constant, but has a greatly elevated affinity for increasing chain lengths of alpha-1, 4 glucans. Deletion of the N-terminal arm of SSI did not affect the Kd value. Further small deletions of either N- or C-terminal domains resulted in a complete loss of any measurable affinity for its substrate, suggesting that the starch-affinity domain of SSI is not discrete from the catalytic domain. Greater affinity was displayed for the amylopectin fraction of starch as compared to amylose, whereas glycogen revealed the lowest affinity. However, when the outer chain lengths (OCL) of glycogen were extended using the phosphorylase enzyme, we found an increase in affinity for SSI between an average OCL of 7 and 14, and then an apparently exponential increase to an average OCL of 21. On the other hand, the catalytic ability of SSI was reduced several-fold using these glucans with extended chain lengths as substrates, and most of the label from [14C]ADPG was incorporated into shorter chains of dp < 10. We conclude that the rate of catalysis of SSI enzyme decreases with the OCL of its glucan substrate, and it has a very high affinity for the longer glucan chains of dp approximately 20, rendering the enzyme catalytically incapable at longer chain lengths. Based on the observations in this study, we propose that during amylopectin synthesis shorter A and B1 chains are extended by SSI up to a critical chain length that soon becomes unsuitable for catalysis by SSI and hence cannot be elongated further by this enzyme. Instead, SSI is likely to become entrapped as a relatively inactive protein within the starch granule. Further glucan extension for continuation of amylopectin synthesis must require a handover to other SS enzymes which can extend the glucan chains further or for branching by branching enzymes. If this is correct, this proposal provides a biochemical basis to explain how the specificities of various SS enzymes determine and set the limitations on the length of A, B, C chains in the starch granule.  相似文献   

10.
The STA8 locus of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii was identified in a genetic screen as a factor that controls starch biosynthesis. Mutations of STA8 cause a significant reduction in the amount of granular starch produced during nutrient limitation and accumulate phytoglycogen. The granules remaining in sta8 mutants are misshapen, and the abundance of amylose and long chains in amylopectin is altered. Mutations of the STA7 locus, which completely lack isoamylase activity, also cause accumulation of phytoglycogen, although sta8 and sta7 mutants differ in that there is a complete loss of granular starch in the latter. This is the first instance in which mutations of two different genetic elements in one plant species have been shown to cause phytoglycogen accumulation. An analytical procedure that allows assay of isoamylase in total extracts was developed and used to show that sta8 mutations cause a 65% reduction in the level of this activity. All other enzymes known to be involved in starch biosynthesis were shown to be unaffected in sta8 mutants. The same amount of total isoamylase activity (approximately) as that present in sta8 mutants was observed in heterozygous triploids containing two sta7 mutant alleles and one wild-type allele. This strain, however, accumulates normal levels of starch granules and lacks phytoglycogen. The total level of isoamylase activity, therefore, is not the major determinant of whether granule production is reduced and phytoglycogen accumulates. Instead, a qualitative property of the isoamylase that is affected by the sta8 mutation is likely to be the critical factor in phytoglycogen production.  相似文献   

11.
The fine structures of amylopectin and intermediate material characteristic of amylomaize starch were investigated by chemical and enzymatic means. In comparison with waxy-maize amylopectin, that of amylomaize starch was found to possess a img/ approximately 10 glucose units longer. Unit-chain profiles of waxy and amylomaize amylopectins revealed that the clear difference lay simply in the relative amounts of two unit-chain fractions. By fractionations of debranched β-limit dextrins, it was demonstrated that the img/ of the internal chains in amylomaize amylopectin was 9 glucose units longer than that in waxy-maize amylopectin. In addition, the proportion of maltose and maltotriose fractions in the debranched dextrin for amylomaize amylopectin was noticeably smaller than found for waxy-maize amylopectin. These data suggest a lesser branching frequency of outer branches in amylomaize amylopectin, confirming the previous proposal that this amylopectin has longer inner and outer branches than those of normal amylopectin.

As for amylomaize intermediate material, the average degree of polymerization was estimated to be 250 to 300 glucose units per molecule. It was also indicated that there were 5 or 6 glucose residues corresponding to the non-reducing end in the molecule. The unit-chain profile of the intermediate material implied that this molecule was mainly composed of branches with img/ around 50. Moreover, the presence of only small amounts of maltose and maltotriose fractions was demonstrated by the unit-chain distribution of this β-limit dextrin. These findings indicate that amylomaize intermediate material is totally consistent with a branched glucan having a low molecular weight, proposing that this anomalous glucan has such a fine structure that four or five branches with img/ around 50 are linked to a main linear chain of 100 to 150 glucose units.  相似文献   

12.
Simulated enzymic debranching of a β-limit dextrin model, prepared from a computed construct made by random extension and branching, and given the CCL value of w-maize amylopectin (and equal amounts of external chains with ECL values of 2 and 3) has been related to experimental chromatograms of the debranched β-limit dextrin of the amylopectin. The profile was similar to those from gel chromatograms and IEC-PAD chromatography.The equivalent lengths in glucosyl units of grid-links (g-links) of internal and external chains in constructs were calculated from the ICL and ECL values of amylopectin and models produced from the constructs with the appropriate lengths for internal and external chains. These derived models were subjected to simulated hydrolysis by Pseudomonas stutzeri amylase and the products compared with those of the experimental distribution from w-maize amylopectin. With the model the amounts of maltotetraose and maltodextrins released were similar to the experimental values but the distribution of branched maltodextrins was quite different. Unlike w-maize amylopectin – a polymer with the cluster structure – which has given a profile of molecular sizes of maltodextrins with low amounts of single and small numbers of internal chains and with a peak at a MW of about 14,000 (13 chains), in the model the proportion of maltodextrin with one internal chain was high and as d.p. increased the amounts decreased exponentially. This would be expected if the distribution of internal chains in the core was random. It is suggested that in the core of a model prepared from a construct made with alternating probabilities of extension – one in which this probability is high relative to branching, and a second in which it is low – may give clusters of branched maltodextrins with short internal chains which are joined by longer chains; more closely approximating the distribution of internal chains of different lengths in amylopectin.An arrangement for amylopectin molecules in the starch granule has been proposed. In this, they have a wafer-like, discoidal shape, composed of the amorphous zone overlain with the double helical, crystalline region. The flat macromolecules are concentrically layered with the former on the inside and the latter oriented to the outside of the granule.  相似文献   

13.
Granular potato starch and amylopectin potato starch were methylated to molar substitutions (MS) up to 0.29. Extensive alpha-amylase digestion gave mixtures of partially methylated oligomers. Precipitation of larger fragments by methanol yielded mainly alpha-limit dextrins (84-99%). Methanol precipitates were extensively digested with beta-amylase yielding alpha,beta-limit dextrins. The average substitution level of branched glucose residues in the dextrins thus obtained was determined after per deuteriomethylation by using FAB mass spectrometry, and compared with that of the linearly linked glucose residues. The present work demonstrates that methylation does not show any preference for substitution at either branched or linearly linked glucose residues, taking into account the inherently lower amount of substitution sites at branched residues. The results corroborate earlier studies wherein it was found that substituents in branched regions are distributed almost randomly. In addition, the data enable the determination of the average degree of branching of partially methylated dextrins.  相似文献   

14.
The principle of using a chemically synthesized, well-defined branched oligosaccharide to provide a more detailed knowledge of the substrate specificity of starch synthase II (SSII) is demonstrated. The branched nonasaccharide, 6"'-alpha-maltotriosyl-maltohexaose, was investigated as a primer for particulate SSII using starch granules prepared from the low-amylose pea mutant lam as the enzyme source. The starch granule preparation from the lam pea mutant contains no starch synthases other than SSII and is devoid of alpha-amylase, beta-amylase and phosphorylase activity. SSII was demonstrated to catalyse a specific nonprocessive elongation of the nonreducing end of the shortest unit chain of 6"'-alpha-maltotriosyl-maltohexaose, i.e. the maltotriose chain. Maltotriose and maltohexaose, representing the two linear building units of the branched nonasaccharide, were also tested as primers for SSII. Maltotriose was elongated more efficiently than 6"'-alpha-maltotriosyl-maltohexaose and maltohexaose was used less efficiently. Compared to the surface exposed alpha-glucan chains of the granule bound amylopectin molecules, all three soluble oligosaccharides tested were poor primers for SSII. This indicates that in vivo, the soluble oligosaccharides supposedly released as result of amylopectin trimming reactions are not re-introduced into starch biosynthetic reactions via the action of the granule bound fraction of SSII.  相似文献   

15.
We investigated whether Cas9‐mediated mutagenesis of starch‐branching enzymes (SBEs) in tetraploid potatoes could generate tuber starches with a range of distinct properties. Constructs containing the Cas9 gene and sgRNAs targeting SBE1, SBE2 or both genes were introduced by Agrobacterium‐mediated transformation or by PEG‐mediated delivery into protoplasts. Outcomes included lines with mutations in all or only some of the homoeoalleles of SBE genes and lines in which homoeoalleles carried several different mutations. DNA delivery into protoplasts resulted in mutants with no detectable Cas9 gene, suggesting the absence of foreign DNA. Selected mutants with starch granule abnormalities had reductions in tuber SBE1 and/or SBE2 protein that were broadly in line with expectations from genotype analysis. Strong reduction in both SBE isoforms created an extreme starch phenotype, as reported previously for low‐SBE potato tubers. HPLC‐SEC and 1H NMR revealed a decrease in short amylopectin chains, an increase in long chains and a large reduction in branching frequency relative to wild‐type starch. Mutants with strong reductions in SBE2 protein alone had near‐normal amylopectin chain‐length distributions and only small reductions in branching frequency. However, starch granule initiation was enormously increased: cells contained many granules of <4 μm and granules with multiple hila. Thus, large reductions in both SBEs reduce amylopectin branching during granule growth, whereas reduction in SBE2 alone primarily affects numbers of starch granule initiations. Our results demonstrate that Cas9‐mediated mutagenesis of SBE genes has the potential to generate new, potentially valuable starch properties without integration of foreign DNA into the genome.  相似文献   

16.
Previous work has reported the production of an Escherichia coli branching enzyme with a 112-residue deletion at the amino terminal by limited proteolysis. Here, we study the chain transfer pattern of this enzyme. Gel-permeation chromatography of in vitro branched amylose shows that the truncated branching enzyme transfers fewer short chains (degree of polymerization [d.p.] <20) and a greater proportion of intermediate size chains (d.p. 30-90) than the native enzyme. High-performance anion-exchange chromatography (HPAEC) of the branching limited alpha-glucan product indicates that the truncated branching enzyme transfers a smaller proportion of chains with d.p. 4-11 and more chains longer than d.p. 12. Also, the genes encoding native or truncated branching enzyme were individually expressed in a branching enzyme-deficient mutant, AC71 (glgB(-)). By HPAEC analysis of the purified alpha-glucans we find that truncated branching enzyme transfers fewer chains of d.p. 5-11 and more chains longer than d.p. 12 relative to the full-length enzyme. These observations allow us to conclude that truncation of the amino-terminal domain has altered the branching pattern of the enzyme. Our results are consistent with the construction of hybrid branching enzymes from the maize isoforms.  相似文献   

17.
The biochemical lesion of the sugary-1 mutation was examined in five different mutants of rice with varying phenotypes but with mutations at the same locus. The cells in the inner part of the endosperm of all mutants tested contained phytoglycogen instead of starch, while the cells located in the outer part of the endosperm tissue from some mutants were filled with numerous starch granules. The molecular size of phytoglycogen was markedly smaller than that of amylopectin as measured by Sephacryl S-1000 chromatography. Analysis of the distribution of α-1,4 chain lengths revealed that in phytoglycogen the number of A-chains dramatically increased, while long B chains with DP ≥ 37 remarkably decreased or were almost absent, which resulted in the disappearance of the cluster structure. The results suggest that changes in the balance of enzymic activities induced by the mutations brought about a drastic alteration in polyglucan structure and the shape of the polyglucan granule. The greater the extent of phytoglycogen regions in su1 endosperm tissues became, the greater was the phytoglycogen content, and the greater the reduction in the activity of starch debranching enzyme, a type of enzyme referred to as R-enzyme (RE), limit dextrinase or pullulanase. Immunoblot analysis showed that the reduction in RE activity was due to a decrease in the amount of RE protein, and that the reduction in RE was specific since proteins of starch-branching enzymes I and IIa and ADP-glucose pyrophosphorylase were not markedly affected by su1 mutations. The proportion of starch region to the whole endosperm tissue of various su1 mutants was correlated with the RE activity in these endosperms. The results strongly suggest that the reduction in RE activity is involved in the su1 phenotype and that the enzyme plays an essential role in determining the fine structure of the amylopectin molecule  相似文献   

18.
The aim of this work was to understand the initial steps of starch breakdown inside chloroplasts. In the non-living endosperm of germinating cereal grains, starch breakdown is initiated by alpha-amylase secreted from surrounding cells. However, loss of alpha-amylase from Arabidopsis does not prevent chloroplastic starch breakdown (Yu, T.-S., Zeeman, S. C., Thorneycroft, D., Fulton, D. C., Dunstan, H., Lue, W.-L., Hegemann, B., Tung, S.-Y., Umemoto, T., Chapple, A., Tsai, D.-L., Wang, S.-M, Smith, A. M., Chen, J., and Smith, S. M. (2005) J. Biol. Chem. 280, 9773-9779), implying that other enzymes must attack the starch granule. Here, we present evidence that the debranching enzyme isoamylase 3 (ISA3) acts at the surface of the starch granule. Atisa3 mutants have more leaf starch and a slower rate of starch breakdown than wild-type plants. The amylopectin of Atisa3 contains many very short branches and ISA3-GFP localizes to granule-like structures inside chloroplasts. We suggest that ISA3 removes short branches from the granule surface. To understand how some starch is still degraded in Atisa3 mutants we eliminated a second debranching enzyme, limit dextrinase (pullulanase-type). Atlda mutants are indistinguishable from the wild type. However, the Atisa3/Atlda double mutant has a more severe starch-excess phenotype and a slower rate of starch breakdown than Atisa3 single mutants. The double mutant accumulates soluble branched oligosaccharides (limit dextrins) that are undetectable in the wild-type and the single mutants. Together these results suggest that glucan debranching occurs primarily at the granule surface via ISA3, but in its absence soluble branched glucans are debranched in the stroma via limit dextrinase. Consistent with this model, chloroplastic alpha-amylase AtAMY3, which could release soluble branched glucans, is induced in Atisa3 and in the Atisa3/Atlda double mutant.  相似文献   

19.
A hemicellulosic polysaccharide, which was homogeneous on sedimentation analysis and also on electrophoresis, was isolated from the rice endosperm cell walls by the combination of alkaline extraction, ion exchange chromatography and iodine complex formation. It is composed of arabinose, xylose and glucose (molar ratio, 1.0: 2.0: 5.7) together with a small amount of galactose and rhamnose. Methylation analysis, Smith degradation and fragmentation with cellulase showed that this polysaccharide is composed of three distinct polysaccharide moieties i.e., xyloglucan, β-glucan and arabinoxylan. The xyloglucan consists of β-(1→4)-linked glucan back bone and short side chains of single xylose units or galactosylxylose both attached to C-6 of the glucose residues. The β-glucan contains both (1 →3)-and (1→4)-linkages similarly to the other cereal β-glucans, but differ from them in containing the blocks of (1→3)-linked glucose residues in the chain. The arabinoxylan has a highly branched structure, in which 78% of (1→4)-linked xylose residues have short side chains of arabinose at C-3 position.

On the basis of these findings, the interconnection of these polysaccharide moieties is discussed.  相似文献   

20.
The diurnal metabolism of leaf starch   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Starch is a primary product of photosynthesis in leaves. In most plants, a large fraction of the carbon assimilated during the day is stored transiently in the chloroplast as starch for use during the subsequent night. Photosynthetic partitioning into starch is finely regulated, and the amount of carbohydrate stored is dependent on the environmental conditions, particularly day length. This regulation is applied at several levels to control the flux of carbon from the Calvin cycle into starch biosynthesis. Starch is composed primarily of branched glucans with an architecture that allows the formation of a semi-crystalline insoluble granule. Biosynthesis has been most intensively studied in non-photosynthetic starch-storing organs, such as developing seeds and tubers. Biosynthesis in leaves has received less attention, but recent reverse-genetic studies of Arabidopsis (thale cress) have produced data generally consistent with what is known for storage tissues. The pathway involves starch synthases, which elongate the glucan chains, and branching enzymes. Remarkably, enzymes that partially debranch glucans are also required for normal amylopectin synthesis. In the last decade, our understanding of starch breakdown in leaves has advanced considerably. Starch is hydrolysed to maltose and glucose at night via a pathway that requires recently discovered proteins in addition to well-known enzymes. These sugars are exported from the plastid to support sucrose synthesis, respiration and growth. In the present review we provide an overview of starch biosynthesis, starch structure and starch degradation in the leaves of plants. We focus on recent advances in each area and highlight outstanding questions.  相似文献   

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