首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 15 毫秒
1.
A reconstituted system composed of purified phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase (PEP-Case) and a soluble protein kinase (PK) from green maize leaves was developed to critically assess the effects of in vitro protein phosphorylation on the catalytic and regulatory (malate sensitivity) properties of the target enzyme. The PK was partially purified from light-adapted leaf tissue by ammonium sulfate fractionation (0-60% saturation fraction) of a crude extract and blue dextran-agarose affinity chromatography. The resulting preparation was free of PEPCase. This partially purified protein kinase activated PEPCase from dark-adapted green maize leaves in an ATP-, Mg2+-, time-, and temperature-dependent fashion. Concomitant with these changes in PEPCase activity was a marked decrease in the target enzyme's sensitivity to feedback inhibition by L-malate. The PK-mediated incorporation of 32P from [gamma-32P]ATP into the protein substrate was directly correlated with these changes in PEPCase activity and malate sensitivity. The maximal molar 32P-incorporation value was about 0.25 per 100-kDa PEPCase subunit (i.e., 1 per holoenzyme). Phosphoamino acid analysis of the 32P-labeled target enzyme by two-dimensional thin-layer electrophoresis revealed the exclusive presence of phosphoserine. These in vitro results, together with our recent studies on the light-induced changes in phosphorylation status of green maize leaf PEPCase in vivo (J. A. Jiao and R. Chollet (1988) Arch. Biochem. Biophys. 261, 409-417), collectively provide the first unequivocal evidence that the seryl-phosphorylation of the dark-form enzyme by a soluble protein kinase is responsible for the changes in catalytic activity and malate sensitivity of C4 PEPCase observed in vivo during dark/light transitions of the parent leaf tissue.  相似文献   

2.
Phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase (PEPCase) from light- and dark-adapted maize leaves was rapidly purified in the presence of L-malate and glycerol to apparent electrophoretic homogeneity by ammonium sulfate fractionation, hydroxylapatite chromatography, and fast-protein liquid chromatography on Mono Q. The resulting preparations were totally devoid of pyruvate, orthophosphate dikinase protein based on immunoblot analysis. Throughout the purification, both forms of PEPCase retained their different enzymatic properties. The specific activity of the light enzyme was consistently about twice that of the dark form when assayed at suboptimal (but physiological) pH (pH 7.0-7.3), and the former was also less sensitive to feedback inhibition by L-malate than that from darkened leaves under various conditions. Covalently bound phosphate and high-performance liquid chromatography-based phosphoamino acid analyses showed that both forms of purified PEPCase were phosphorylated exclusively on serine residues, but the degree of phosphorylation was about 50% greater in the light enzyme. Notably, incubation of purified PEPCase in vitro with exogenous alkaline phosphatase led to an increase in malate sensitivity and a decrease in specific activity of the light form enzyme to levels observed with the dark form, which was essentially not affected by phosphatase treatment. These results with the purified enzyme from light- and dark-adapted maize leaves indicate that the light-induced changes in activity and malate sensitivity of C4 PEPCase are related, at least in part, to the degree of covalent seryl phosphorylation of the protein in vivo.  相似文献   

3.
In vitro phosphorylation of maize leaf phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase   总被引:3,自引:2,他引:1  
Budde RJ  Chollet R 《Plant physiology》1986,82(4):1107-1114
Autoradiography of total soluble maize (Zea mays) leaf proteins incubated with 32P-labeled adenylates and separated by denaturing electrophoresis revealed that many polypeptides were phosphorylated in vitro by endogenous protein kinase(s). The most intense band was at 94 to 100 kilodaltons and was observed when using either [γ-32P]ATP or [β-32P]ADP as the phosphate donor. This band was comprised of the subunits of both pyruvate, Pi dikinase (PPDK) and phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase (PEPCase). PPDK activity was previously shown to be dark/light-regulated via a novel ADP-dependent phosphorylation/Pi-dependent dephosphorylation of a threonyl residue. The identity of the acid-stable 94 to 100 kilodalton band phosphorylated by ATP was established unequivocally as PEPCase by two-dimensional gel electrophoresis and immunoblotting. The phosphorylated amino acid was a serine residue, as determined by two-dimensional thin-layer electrophoresis. While the in vitro phosphorylation of PEPCase from illuminated maize leaves by an endogenous protein kinase resulted in a partial inactivation (~25%) of the enzyme when assayed at pH 7 and subsaturating levels of PEP, effector modulation by l-malate and glucose-6-phosphate was relatively unaffected. Changes in the aggregation state of maize PEPCase (homotetrameric native structure) were studied by nondenaturing electrophoresis and immunoblotting. Enzyme from leaves of illuminated plants dissociated upon dilution, whereas the protein from darkened tissue did not dissociate, thus indicating a physical difference between the enzyme from light- versus dark-adapted maize plants.  相似文献   

4.
The effect of Pi on the properties of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase (PEPC) from Amaranthus hypochondriacus, a NAD-ME type C4 plant, was studied in leaf extracts as well as with purified protein. Efforts were also made to modulate the Pi status of the leaf by feeding leaves with either Pi or mannose. Inclusion of 30 mM Pi during the assay enhanced the enzyme activity in leaf extracts or of purified protein by >2-fold. The effect of Pi on the enzyme purified from dark-adapted leaves was more pronounced than that from light-adapted ones. The Ki for malate increased >2.3-fold and >1.9-fold by Pi in the enzyme purified from dark-adapted leaves and light-adapted leaves, respectively. Pi also induced an almost 50-60% increase in Km for PEP or Ka for glucose-6-phosphate. Feeding the leaves with Pi also increased the activity of PEPC in leaf extracts, while decreasing the malate sensitivity of the enzyme. On the other hand, Pi sequestering by mannose marginally decreased the activity, while markedly suppressing the light activation, of PEPC. There was no change in phosphorylation of PEPC in leaves of A. hypochondriacus due to the feeding of 30 mM Pi. However, feeding with mannose decreased the light-enhanced phosphorylation of PEPC. The marked decrease in malate sensitivity of PEPC with no change in phosphorylation state indicates that the changes induced by Pi are independent of the phosphorylation of PEPC. It is suggested here that Pi is an important factor in regulating PEPC in vivo and could also be used as a tool to analyse the properties of PEPC.  相似文献   

5.
Sucrose phosphate synthase (SPS) activity was measured in extracts of maize (Zea mays L.) and soybean (Glycine max L. [Merr.]) leaves over a single day/night cycle. There was a 2- to 3-fold postillumination increase in extractable enzyme activity in maize leaves, whereas the activity of soybean SPS was only about 30% higher in extracts prepared from light- compared to dark-adapted leaves. Alterations in extractable maize leaf SPS activity correlated with light/dark transitions suggesting that the enzyme may be light modulated. Diurnal variations of extractable maize leaf SPS activity were also observed in a greenhouse experiment. A transition from high (light) to low (dark) extractable SPS activity occurred near the light compensation point for photosynthesis (about 20 micromole photons per square meter per second). Further increases in irradiance did not increase extractable SPS activity. Substrate affinities for uridine 5′-diphosphoglucose (Michaelis constant = 3.5 and 5.1 millimolar) and fructose-6 phosphate (half maximal concentration = 1.0 and 2.5 millimolar) were lower for partially purified SPS obtained from light compared to dark acclimated maize leaves. Light-induced changes in extractable SPS activity were stable for at least one column chromatography step. The above results indicate that light-induced changes in SPS activity may be important in controlling the photosynthetic production of sucrose.  相似文献   

6.
7.
Pyruvate,orthophosphate (Pi) dikinase (PPDK) is best recognized as a chloroplastic C(4) cycle enzyme. As one of the key regulatory foci for controlling flux through this photosynthetic pathway, it is strictly and reversibly regulated by light. This light/dark modulation is mediated by reversible phosphorylation of a conserved threonine residue in the active-site domain by the PPDK regulatory protein (RP), a bifunctional protein kinase/phosphatase. PPDK is also present in C(3) plants, although it has no known photosynthetic function. Nevertheless, in this report we show that C(3) PPDK in leaves of several angiosperms and in isolated intact spinach (Spinacia oleracea) chloroplasts undergoes light-/dark-induced changes in phosphorylation state in a manner similar to C(4) dikinase. In addition, the kinetics of this process closely resemble the reversible C(4) process, with light-induced dephosphorylation occurring rapidly (< or =15 min) and dark-induced phosphorylation occurring much more slowly (> or =30-60 min). In intact spinach chloroplasts, light-induced dephosphorylation of C(3) PPDK was shown to be dependent on exogenous Pi and photosystem II activity but independent of electron transfer from photosystem I. These in organello results implicate a role for stromal pools of Pi and adenylates in regulating the reversible phosphorylation of C(3)-PPDK. Last, we used an in vitro RP assay to directly demonstrate ADP-dependent PPDK phosphorylation in desalted leaf extracts of the C(3) plants Vicia faba and rice (Oryza sativa). We conclude that an RP-like activity mediates the light/dark modulation of PPDK phosphorylation state in C(3) leaves and chloroplasts and likely represents the ancestral isoform of this unusual and key C(4) pathway regulatory "converter" enzyme.  相似文献   

8.
9.
Pyruvate orthophosphate dikinase (PPDK) was found in various immature seeds of C3 plants (wheat, pea, green bean, plum, and castor bean), in some C3 leaves (tobacco, spinach, sunflower, and wheat), and in C4 (maize) kernels. The enzyme in the C3 plants cross-reacts with rabbit antiserum against maize PPDK. Based on protein blot analysis, the apparent subunit size of PPDK from wheat seeds and leaves and from sunflower leaves is about 94 kdaltons, the same as that of the enzyme from maize, but is slightly less (about 90 kdaltons) for the enzyme from spinach and tobacco leaves. The amount of this enzyme per mg of soluble protein in C3 seeds and leaves is much less than in C4 leaves. PPDK is present in kernels of the C4 plant, Zea mays in amounts comparable to those in C4 leaves.

Regulatory properties of the enzyme from C3 tissues (wheat) are similar to those of the enzyme from C4 leaves with respect to in vivo light activation and dark inactivation (in leaves) and in vivo cold lability (seeds and leaves).

Following incorporation of 14CO2 by illuminated wheat pericarp and adjoining tissue for a few seconds, the labeled metabolites were predominantly products resulting from carboxylation of phosphoenolpyruvate, with lesser labeling of compounds formed by carboxylation of ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate and operation of the reductive pentose phosphate cycle of photosynthesis. PPDK may be involved in mechanisms of amino acid interconversions during seed development.

  相似文献   

10.
The phosphoenolpyruvate (PPrv) carboxylase isozyme involved in C4 photosynthesis undergoes a day/night reversible phosphorylation process in leaves of the C4 plant, Sorghum. Ser8 of the target enzyme oscillates between a high (light) and a low (dark) phosphorylation status. Both in vivo and in vitro, phosphorylation of dark-form carboxylase was accompanied by an increase in the apparent Ki of the feedback inhibitor L-malate and an increase in Vmax. Feeding detached leaves various photosynthetic inhibitors, i.e. 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea, gramicidin and DL-glyceraldehyde, prevented PPrv carboxylase phosphorylation in the light, thus suggesting that the cascade involves the photosynthetic apparatus as the light signal receptor, and presumably has the electron transfer chain and the Calvin-Benson cycle as components in the signal-transduction chain. Two protein-serine kinases capable of phosphorylating PPrv carboxylase in vitro have been partially purified from light-adapted leaves. One was isolated on a calmodulin-Sepharose column; it was calcium-dependent but did not require calmodulin for activity. The other was purified on a blue-dextran-agarose column and the only Me2+ required for activity was Mg2+. In reconstituted phosphorylation assays, only the latter caused the expected decrease in malate sensitivity of PPrv carboxylase suggesting that this protein is the genuine PPrv-carboxylase-kinase. Desalted extracts from light-adapted leaves possessed a considerably greater phosphorylation capacity with immunopurified dephosphorylated PPrv carboxylase as substrate than did dark extracts. This light stimulation was insensitive to type 2A protein phosphatase inhibitors, okadaic acid and microcystin-LR, which suggests that the kinase is a controlled step in the cascade which leads to phosphorylation of PPrv carboxylase. The higher phosphorylation capacity of light-adapted leaf tissue was nullified by pretreatment with the cytosolic protein synthesis inhibitor, cycloheximide. Thus, protein turnover is involved as part of the mechanism controlling the activity of the kinase purified on blue-dextran-agarose. However, no information is available with respect to the specific nature of the link between the above-mentioned light transducing steps and the protein kinase that achieves the physiological response. Finally, the in vivo phosphorylation site (Ser8) in the N-terminal region of the C4 type Sorghum PPrv carboxylase is also present in a non-photosynthetic form of the Sorghum enzyme (Ser7), as deduced by cDNA sequence analysis.  相似文献   

11.
Phosphorylation of rhodopsin by G protein-coupled receptor kinase 1 (GRK1, or rhodopsin kinase) is critical for the deactivation of the phototransduction cascade in vertebrate photoreceptors. Based on our previous studies in vitro, we predicted that Ser(21) in GRK1 would be phosphorylated by cAMP-dependent protein kinase (PKA) in vivo. Here, we report that dark-adapted, wild-type mice demonstrate significantly elevated levels of phosphorylated GRK1 compared with light-adapted animals. Based on comparatively slow half-times for phosphorylation and dephosphorylation, phosphorylation of GRK1 by PKA is likely to be involved in light and dark adaptation. In mice missing the gene for adenylyl cyclase type 1, levels of phosphorylated GRK1 were low in retinas from both dark- and light-adapted animals. These data are consistent with reports that cAMP levels are high in the dark and low in the light and also indicate that cAMP generated by adenylyl cyclase type 1 is required for phosphorylation of GRK1 on Ser(21). Surprisingly, dephosphorylation was induced by light in mice missing the rod transducin α-subunit. This result indicates that phototransduction does not play a direct role in the light-dependent dephosphorylation of GRK1.  相似文献   

12.
Pyruvate, orthophosphate dikinase (PPDK) is a key enzyme in the C4 photosynthetic pathway of maize. To improve the cold tolerance of the enzyme in maize, we designed two genomic sequence-based constructs in which the carboxy-terminal region of the enzyme was modified to mimic the amino acid sequence of the cold-tolerant PPDK of Flaveria brownii (Asteraceae). A large amount of PPDK was found to have accumulated in the leaves of many of the maize plants transformed with one of these constructs – that which introduced 17 amino acid substitutions without any alteration of the exon-intron structure – although there was a wide range of variation in the amount of PPDK among the separate plants. In contrast, the production was much less in maize transformed with the second construct in which a cDNA fragment for the same carboxy-terminal region was inserted. The specific activity of PPDK in the plants transformed with the gene with the amino acid substitutions was inversely correlated with the amount of enzyme in the leaves. In addition, the activity of the cold-tolerant recombinant enzyme was judged to be regulated by the PPDK regulatory protein, similar to that of the native PPDK. The cold tolerance of PPDK in crude leaf extracts was greatly improved in plants that produced a large amount of the engineered PPDK. The photosynthetic rate at 8°C increased significantly (by 23%, p<0.05), but there was no obvious effect at higher temperatures. These results support the hypothesis that PPDK is one of the limiting factors in the C4 photosynthesis of maize under cold conditions.  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.
15.
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   

16.
Maize is a typical C4 plant of the NADP-malic enzyme type, and its high productivity is supported by the C4 photosynthetic cycle, which concentrates atmospheric CO2 in the leaves. The plant exhibits superior photosynthetic ability under high light and high temperature, but under cold conditions the photosynthetic rate is significantly reduced. Pyruvate orthophosphate dikinase (PPDK), a key enzyme of the C4 pathway in maize, loses its activity below about 12 °C by dissociation of the tetramer and it is considered as one possible cause of the reduction in the photosynthetic rate of maize at low temperatures. To improve the cold stability of the enzyme, we introduced a cold-tolerant PPDK cDNA isolated from Flaveria brownii into maize by Agrobacterium-mediated transformation. We obtained higher levels of expression by using a double intron cassette and a chimeric cDNA made from F. bidentis and F. brownii with a maximum content of 1mg/g fresh weight. In leaves of transgenic maize, PPDK molecules produced from the transgene were detected in cold-tolerant homotetramers or in heterotetramers of intermediate cold susceptibility formed with the internal PPDK. Simultaneous introduction of an antisense gene for maize PPDK generated plants in which the ratio of heterolologous and endogenous PPDK was greatly improved. Arrhenius plot analysis of the enzyme extracted from one such plant revealed that the break point was shifted about 3 °C lower than that of the wild type.  相似文献   

17.
In C(4) plants such as maize, pyruvate,orthophosphate dikinase (PPDK) catalyzes the regeneration of the initial carboxylation substrate during C(4) photosynthesis. The primary catalytic residue, His-458 (maize C(4) PPDK), is involved in the ultimate transfer of the beta-phosphate from ATP to pyruvate. C(4) PPDK activity undergoes light-dark regulation in vivo by reversible phosphorylation of a nearby active-site residue (Thr-456) by a single bifunctional regulatory protein (RP). Using site-directed mutagenesis of maize recombinant C(4) dikinase, we made substitutions at the catalytic His residue (H458N) and at this regulatory target Thr (T456E, T456Y, T456F). Each of these affinity-purified mutant enzymes was assayed for changes in dikinase activity. As expected, substituting His-458 with Asn results in a catalytically incompetent enzyme. Substitutions of the Thr-456 residue with Tyr and Phe reduced activity by about 94 and 99%, respectively. Insertion of Glu at this position completely abolished activity, presumably by the introduction of negative charge proximal to the catalytic His. Furthermore, neither the T456Y nor inactive H458N mutant enzyme was phosphorylated in vitro by RP. The inability of the former to serve as a phosphorylation substrate indicates that RP is functionally a member of the Ser/Thr family of protein kinases rather than a "dual-specificity" Ser-Thr/Tyr kinase, since our previous work showed that RP effectively phosphorylated Ser inserted at position 456. The inability of RP to phosphorylate its native target Thr residue when Asn is substituted for His-458 documents that RP requires the His-P catalytic intermediate form of PPDK as its protein substrate. For these latter studies, synthetic phosphopeptide-directed antibodies specific for the Thr(456)-P form of maize C(4) PPDK were developed and characterized.  相似文献   

18.
Site-directed mutagenesis of spinach sucrose-phosphate synthase (SPS) was performed to investigate the role of Ser158 in the modulation of spinach leaf SPS. Tobacco plants expressing the spinach wild-type (WT), S158A, S158T and S157F/S158E SPS transgenes were produced. Expression of transgenes appeared not to reduce expression of the tobacco host SPS. SPS activity in the WT and the S158T SPS transgenics showed light/dark modulation, whereas the S158A and S157F/S158E mutants were not similarly light/dark modulated: the S158A mutant enzyme was not inactivated in the dark, and the S157F/S158E was not activated in the light. The inability to modulate the activity of the S158A mutant enzyme by protein phosphorylation was demonstrated in vitro. The WT spinach enzyme immunopurified from dark transgenic tobacco leaves had a low initial activation state, and could be activated by PP2A and subsequently inactivated by SPS-kinase plus ATP. Rapid purification of the S158A mutant enzyme from dark leaves of transgenic plants using spinach-specific monoclonal antibodies yielded enzyme that had a high initial activation state, and pre-incubation with leaf PP2A or ATP plus SPS-kinase (the PKIII enzyme) caused little modulation of activity. The results demonstrate the regulatory significance of Ser158 as the major site responsible for dark inactivation of spinach SPS in vivo, and indicate that the significance of phosphorylation is the introduction of a negative charge at the Ser158 position.  相似文献   

19.
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   

20.
Reversible seryl-phosphorylation contributes to the light/dark regulation of C4-leaf phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase (PEPC) activity in vivo. The specific regulatory residue that, upon in vitro phosphorylation by a maize-leaf protein-serine kinase(s), leads to an increase in catalytic activity and a decrease in malate-sensitivity of the target enzyme has been recently identified as Ser-15 in 32P-phosphorylated/activated dark-form maize PEPC (J-A Jiao, R Chollet [1990] Arch Biochem Biophys 283: 300-305). In order to ascertain whether this N-terminal seryl residue is, indeed, the in vivo regulatory phosphorylation site, [32P]phosphopeptides were isolated and purified from in vivo 32P-labeled maize and sorghum leaf PEPC and subjected to automated Edman degradation analysis. The results show that purified light-form maize PEPC contains 14-fold more 32P-radioactivity than the corresponding dark-form enzyme on an equal protein basis and, more notably, only a single N-terminal serine residue (Ser-15 in maize PEPC and its structural homolog, Ser-8, in the sorghum enzyme) was found to be 32P-phosphorylated in the light or dark. These in vivo observations, combined with the results from our previous in vitro phosphorylation studies (J-A Jiao, R Chollet [1989] Arch Biochem Biophys 269: 526-535; [1990] Arch Biochem Biophys 283: 300-305), demonstrate that an N-terminal seryl residue in C4 PEPC is, indeed, the regulatory site that undergoes light/dark changes in phosphorylation-status and, thus, plays a major, if not cardinal role in the light-induced changes in catalytic and regulatory properties of this cytoplasmic C4-photosynthesis enzyme in vivo.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号