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1.
Mutations at the rug5 (rugosus5) locus have been used to elucidate the role of the major soluble isoform of starch synthase II (SSII) in amylopectin synthesis in the developing pea embryo. The SSII gene maps to the rug5 locus, and the gene in one of three rug5 mutant lines has been shown to carry a base pair substitution that introduces a stop codon into the open reading frame. All three mutant alleles cause a dramatic reduction or loss of the SSII protein. The mutations have pleiotropic effects on the activities of other isoforms of starch synthase but apparently not on those of other enzymes of starch synthesis. These mutations result in abnormal starch granule morphology and amylopectin structure. Amylopectin contains fewer chains of intermediate length (B2 and B3 chains) and more very short and very long chains than does amylopectin from wild-type embryos. The results suggest that SSII may play a specific role in the synthesis of B2 and B3 chains of amylopectin. The extent to which these findings can be extrapolated to other species is discussed.  相似文献   

2.
The branched pentasaccharide methyl 6'-alpha-maltosyl-alpha-maltotrioside was chemically synthesised and investigated as a primer for particulate starch synthase II (SSII) using starch granules prepared from the low-amylose pea mutant lam as the enzyme source. For chemical synthesis, the trichloroacetimidate activation method was used to synthesise methyl O-(2,3,4,6-tetra-O-benzyl-alpha-D-glucopyranosyl)-(1-->4)-O-(2,3,6-tri-O-benzyl-alpha-D-glucopyranosyl)-(1-->6)-O-[(2,3,4,6-tetra-O-benzyl-alpha-D-glucopyranosyl-(1-->4)]-O-(2,3-di-O-benzyl-alpha-D-glucopyranosyl)-(1-->4)-2,3,6-tri-O-benzyl-alpha-D-glucopyranoside, which was then debenzylated to provide the desired branched pentasaccharide methyl 6'-alpha-maltosyl-alpha-maltotrioside as documented by 1H and 13C NMR spectroscopy. Using a large excess of the maltoside, the pentasaccharide was tested as a substrate for starch synthase II (SSII). Both of the non-reducing ends of methyl 6'-alpha-maltosyl-alpha-maltotrioside were extended equally resulting in two hexasaccharide products in nearly equal amounts. Thus, SSII catalyses an equimolar and non-processive elongation reaction of this substrate. Accordingly, the presence of the alpha-1,6 linkages does not dictate a specific structure of the pentasaccharide in which only one of the two non-reducing ends are available for extension.  相似文献   

3.
In this paper we provide further evidence about the nature of a 77-kD starch synthase (SSII) that is both soluble and bound to the starch granules in developing pea (Pisum sativum L.) embryos. Mature SSII gives rise to starch synthase activity when expressed in a strain of Escherichia coli lacking glycogen synthase. In transgenic potatoes (Solanum tuberosum L.) expressing SSII, the protein is both soluble and bound to the starch granules. These results confirm that SSII is a starch synthase and indicate that partitioning between the soluble and granule-bound fraction of storage organs is an intrinsic property of the protein. A 60-kD isoform of starch synthase found both in the soluble and granule-bound fraction of the pea embryos is probably derived by the processing of SSII and is a different gene product from GBSSI, the exclusively granule-bound 59-kD isoform of starch synthase that is similar to starch synthases encoded by the waxy genes of cereals and the amf gene of potatoes. Consistent with this, expression in E. coli of an N-terminally truncated version of SSII gives rise to starch synthase activity.  相似文献   

4.
Several studies have suggested that debranching enzymes (DBEs) are involved in the biosynthesis of amylopectin, the major constituent of starch granules. Our systematic analysis of all DBE mutants of Arabidopsis thaliana demonstrates that when any DBE activity remains, starch granules are still synthesized, albeit with altered amylopectin structure. Quadruple mutants lacking all four DBE proteins (Isoamylase1 [ISA1], ISA2, and ISA3, and Limit-Dextrinase) are devoid of starch granules and instead accumulate highly branched glucans, distinct from amylopectin and from previously described phytoglycogen. A fraction of these glucans are present as discrete, insoluble, nanometer-scale particles, but the structure and properties of this material are radically altered compared with wild-type amylopectin. Superficially, these data support the hypothesis that debranching is required for amylopectin synthesis. However, our analyses show that soluble glucans in the quadruple DBE mutant are degraded by α- and β-amylases during periods of net accumulation, giving rise to maltose and branched malto-oligosaccharides. The additional loss of the chloroplastic α-amylase AMY3 partially reverts the phenotype of the quadruple DBE mutant, restoring starch granule biosynthesis. We propose that DBEs function in normal amylopectin synthesis by promoting amylopectin crystallization but conclude that they are not mandatory for starch granule synthesis.  相似文献   

5.
This study assessed the impact on starch metabolism in Arabidopsis leaves of simultaneously eliminating multiple soluble starch synthases (SS) from among SS1, SS2, and SS3. Double mutant ss1- ss2- or ss1- ss3- lines were generated using confirmed null mutations. These were compared to the wild type, each single mutant, and ss1- ss2- ss3- triple mutant lines grown in standardized environments. Double mutant plants developed similarly to the wild type, although they accumulated less leaf starch in both short-day and long-day diurnal cycles. Despite the reduced levels in the double mutants, lines containing only SS2 and SS4, or SS3 and SS4, are able to produce substantial amounts of starch granules. In both double mutants the residual starch was structurally modified including higher ratios of amylose:amylopectin, altered glucan chain length distribution within amylopectin, abnormal granule morphology, and altered placement of α(1→6) branch linkages relative to the reducing end of each linear chain. The data demonstrate that SS activity affects not only chain elongation but also the net result of branch placement accomplished by the balanced activities of starch branching enzymes and starch debranching enzymes. SS3 was shown partially to overlap in function with SS1 for the generation of short glucan chains within amylopectin. Compensatory functions that, in some instances, allow continued residual starch production in the absence of specific SS classes were identified, probaby accomplished by the granule bound starch synthase GBSS1.  相似文献   

6.
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   

7.
A series of synthesized small linear and branched alpha-glucans has been studied by dynamic light scattering and combined size exclusion chromatography, refractive index measurement and static light scattering. The alpha-glucan molecules studied were maltose, maltotriose, maltopentaose, maltohexaose, maltoheptaose, panose, 6'-alpha-maltosyl-maltotriose, methyl 6'-alpha-maltosyl-maltotrioside, 6' '-alpha-maltosyl-maltotetraose, 6' '-alpha-maltotriosyl-maltohexaose, and 6,6' ' '-bis(alpha-maltosyl)-maltohexaose. The alpha-glucan oligosaccharides appeared to be very flexible molecules having a variety of conformations and self-associating into noncovalent dimers and trimers (referring to the single molecule). The size distributions were narrow (compared to pullulan) indicating that the alpha-glucan oligosaccharides are relatively compact molecules. The branched oligomers that include one or more flexible alpha-(1 --> 6) linkages exhibit size distributions corresponding to more compact conformations than their linear counterparts. This observation may be explained by intermolecular interactions or water bridges facilitated by the additional flexibility of these molecules. For the branched maltohexaose, a significant noncovalent trimer formation was observed, whereas in all other cases, noncovalent dimers were formed. Model calculations suggest that both the linear and branched oligomers containing 5-10 alpha-glucose units exist predominantly in a partial or full single turn helix in agreement with the glycosidic linkage preferences derived for these molecules.  相似文献   

8.
The formation of intermediary glucans, mature starch, and phytoglycogen was studied using leaves of Arabidopsis thaliana wild type and dbe mutant, which lacks plastidic isoamylase (Zeeman, S. C., Umemoto, T., Lue, W. L., Au-Yeung, P., Martin, C., Smith, A. M., and Chen, J. (1998) Plant Cell 10, 1699-1711). A new approach to the study of starch biosynthesis was developed based on "very short pulse" labeling of leaf starch through photosynthetic fixation of (14)CO(2). This allowed selective analysis of the structure of starch formed within a 30-s period. This time frame is shorter than the period required for the formation of a single crystalline amylopectin lamella and consequently permits a direct analysis of intermediary structures during granule formation. Analysis of chain length distribution showed that the most recently formed outer layer of the granules has a structure different from the mature starch. The outer layer is enriched in short chains that are 6-11 glucose residues long. Side chains with 6 glucose residues are the shortest abundant chains formed, and they are formed exclusively by transfer from donor chains of 12 glucose residues or longer. The labeling pattern shows that chain transfer resulting in branching is a rapid and efficient process, and the preferential labeling of shorter chains in the intermediary granule bound glucan is suggested to be a direct consequence of efficient branching. Although similar, the short chain intermediary structure is not identical to phytoglycogen, which is an even more highly branched molecule with very few longer chains (more than 40 glucose residues). Pulse and chase labeling profiles for the dbe mutant showed that the final structure is more highly branched than the intermediary structures, which implies that branching of phytoglycogen occurs over a longer time period than branching of starch.  相似文献   

9.
A chimeric antisense construct has been used to generate transgenic potatoes ( Solanum tuberosum L.) in which activities of both of the main starch synthases responsible for amylopectin synthesis in the tuber (SSII and SSIII) are reduced. The properties of starch from tubers of these plants have been compared with those of starches from transgenic plants in which activity of either SSII or SSIII has been reduced. Starches from the three types of transgenic plant are qualitatively different from each other and from the starch of control plants with unaltered starch synthase activities, with respect to granule morphology, the branch lengths of amylopectin, and the gelatinisation behaviour analysed by viscometry. The effects of reducing SSII and SSIII together cannot be predicted from consideration of the effects of reducing these two isoforms individually. These results indicate that different isoforms of starch synthase make distinct contributions to the synthesis of amylopectin, and that they act in a synergistic manner, rather than independently, during amylopectin synthesis.  相似文献   

10.
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   

11.
Wheat and barley contain at least four classes of starch synthases in the endosperm, granule bound starch synthase I (GBSSI) and starch synthases I, II and III (SSI, SSII, SSIII). In this work, SSII in barley is shown to be associated with the starch granule by using antibodies. A cDNA from barley encoding SSII and the genes for SSII from barley and Aegilops tauschii (A. tauschii, the D genome donor to wheat) are characterised. Fluorescent in situ hybridisation (FISH) and PCR were used to localise the wheat SSII gene to the short arm of chromosome 7, showing synteny with the location of the rice SSII gene to the short arm of chromosome 6. Comparison of the genes encoding SSII of A. tauschii, barley and Arabidopsis showed a conserved exon-intron structure although the size of the introns varied considerably. Extending such comparison between the genes encoding starch synthases (GBSSI, SSI, SSII and SSIII) from A. tauschii and Arabidopsis showed that the exon-intron structures are essentially conserved. Separate and distinct genes for the individual starch synthases therefore existed before the separation of monocotyledons and dicotyledons. Electronic Publication  相似文献   

12.
A minimum of four soluble starch synthase families have been documented in all starch-storing green plants. These activities are involved in amylopectin synthesis and are extremely well conserved throughout the plant kingdom. Mutants or transgenic plants defective for SSII and SSIII isoforms have been previously shown to have a large and specific impact on the synthesis of amylopectin while the function of the SSI type of enzymes has remained elusive. We report here that Arabidopsis mutants, lacking a plastidial starch synthase isoform belonging to the SSI family, display a major and novel type of structural alteration within their amylopectin. Comparative analysis of beta-limit dextrins for both wild type and mutant amylopectins suggests a specific and crucial function of SSI during the synthesis of transient starch in Arabidopsis leaves. Considering our own characterization of SSI activity and the previously described kinetic properties of maize SSI, our results suggest that the function of SSI is mainly involved in the synthesis of small outer chains during amylopectin cluster synthesis.  相似文献   

13.
A branched nonasaccharide 6"'-alpha-maltotriosyl-maltohexaose was synthesised in 40 steps from D-glucose and maltose. Phenyl O-(2,3,4,6-tetra-O-benzyl-alpha-D-glucopyranosyl)-(1-->4)-O- (2,3,6-tri-O-benzyl-alpha-D-glucopyranosyl)-(1-->4)-2,3-di-O-benzyl-1-th io- beta-D-glucopyranoside and O-(2,3,4,6-tetra-O-benzyl-alpha-D-glucopyranosyl)-(1-->4)-O-(2,3,6-tri- O-benzyl-alpha-D-glucopyranosyl)-(1-->4)-2,3,6-tri-O-benzyl-alpha, beta-D-glucopyranosyl trichloroacetimidate were coupled by a general condensation reaction to form the per-O-benzylated branched hexasaccharide phenyl thioglycoside. The phenylthio group of this compound was converted into a trichloroacetimidate, which was coupled with phenyl O-(2,3,6-tri-O-benzyl-alpha-D-glucopyranosyl)-(1-->4)-O-(2,3,6-tri-O- benzyl-alpha-D-glucopyranosyl)-(1-->4)-2,3,6-tri-O-benzyl-1-thio-beta-D- glucopyranoside to afford the per-O-benzylated branched nonasaccharide phenyl thioglycoside. Replacement of the phenylthio group with a free OH-group followed by hydrogenolysis gave the desired product. The synthons reported for this synthesis constitute a versatile tool for the chemical synthesis of other complex carbohydrates.  相似文献   

14.
This study identified and characterized the soluble starch synthase of maize endosperm that was initially revealed as the SSII activity peak in anion exchange chromatography (J. L. Ozbun et al. (1971) Plant Physiol. 48, 765-769). At least six different genes coding for starch synthases are expressed in maize, although previously it was not known which of these is responsible for the SSII activity peak. The enzyme activity in the SSII peak was neutralized to a large extent by antibodies raised against the product of the Du1 gene, but was not affected by antibodies specific for the other highly expressed soluble starch synthase, zSSI, or for the zSSIIa or zSSIIb isoforms. These data provide direct evidence that Du1 codes for the starch synthase responsible for the SSII activity peak. This starch synthase was purified approximately 350-fold from endosperm extracts. The following enzymatic properties of the SSII activity were determined: temperature optimum, thermostability, pH effects, K(m) for different glucan primers and the glucosyl unit donor ADPGlc, V(max) using various primers, and stimulation by citrate. These properties were compared to those of zSSI purified over 1600-fold from maize endosperm by a parallel procedure. The major differences between the two enzymes were that the SSII activity displayed higher K(m) values for ADPGlc, a distinct temperature range for maximal activity, and different relative activities toward specific exogenous substrates. The purified SSI and SSII activities both were shown to be capable of elongating maltooligosaccharide primers in vitro.  相似文献   

15.
16.
Isoforms of starch synthase (EC 2.4.1.21) in pea (Pisum sativum L.) leaves have been identified and compared with those in developing pea embryos. Purification and immunoprecipitation experiments show that most of the soluble starch synthase activity of the leaf is contributed by a novel isoform (SSIII) that is antigenically related to the major soluble isoform of the potato tuber. The major soluble isoform of the embryo (SSII) is also present in the leaf, but contributes only 15% of the soluble activity. Study of the leaf starch of lam mutant peas, which lack the abundant granule-bound isoform responsible for amylose synthesis in the embryo (GBSSI), indicates that GBSSI is not responsible for the synthesis of amylose-like material in the leaf. Leaves appear to contain a novel granule-bound isoform, antigenically related to GBSSI. The implications of the results for understanding of the role of isoforms of starch synthase are discussed. Received: 13 March 1997 / Accepted: 13 May 1997  相似文献   

17.
Conditions have been devised for the quantitative precipitation of the branched fraction in starches by concanavalin A and the enzymic estimation of the - -glucan in this and the soluble components. For some starches, such as those from cereal and high-amylose pea seeds, the percentage of branched fraction determined by this procedure was higher than that calculated by deducting from one hundred the apparent amylose content as measured by potentiometric iodine titration, suggesting a method for estimating the content of material having an atypical structure in the whole starch. The procedure has been adapted to provide a preparative method of separating amylose and amylopectin fractions. It efficiently separated these in starches that cannot be fully fractionated by complexing with 1-butanol, such as those from high-amylose pea seeds and tobacco leaves.  相似文献   

18.
The structural features required for xyloglucan oligosaccharides to inhibit 2,4-dichlorophenoxyacetic acid-stimulated elongation of pea stem segments have been investigated. A nonasaccharide (XG9) containing one fucosyl-galactosyl side chain and an undecasaccharide (XG11) containing two fucosyl-galactosyl side chains were purified from endo-β-1,4-glucanase-treated xyloglucan, which had been isolated from soluble extracellular polysaccharides of suspension-cultured sycamore (Acerpseudoplatanus) cells and tested in the pea stem bioassay. A novel octasaccharide (XG8′) was prepared by treatment of XG9 with a xyloglucan oligosaccharide-specific α-xylosidase from pea seedlings. XG8′ was characterized and tested for its ability to inhibit auxin-induced growth. All three oligosaccharides, at a concentration of 0.1 microgram per milliliter, inhibited 2,4-dichlorophenoxyacetic acid-stimulated growth of pea stem segments. XG11 inhibited the growth to a greater extent than did XG9. Chemically synthesized nona- and pentasaccharides (XG9, XG5) inhibited 2,4-dichlorophenoxyacetic acid-stimulated elongation of pea stems to the same extent as the same oligosaccharides isolated from xyloglucan. A chemically synthesized structurally related heptasaccharide that lacked a fucosyl-galactosyl side chain did not, unlike the identical heptasaccharide isolated from xyloglucan, significantly inhibit 2,4-dichlorophenoxyacetic acid-stimulated growth.  相似文献   

19.
20.
Starch re-structured directly in potato tubers by antisense suppression of starch branching enzyme (SBE), granule bound starch synthase (GBSS) or glucan water dikinase (GWD) genes was studied with the aim at disclosing the effects on resulting physico-chemical and enzyme degradative properties. The starches were selected to provide a combined system with specific and extensive alterations in amylose and covalently esterified glucose-6-phosphate (G6P) contents. As an effect of the altered chemical composition of the starches their hydrothermal characteristics varied significantly. Despite of the extreme alterations in phosphate content, the amylose content had a major affect on swelling power, enthalpy for starch gelatinization and pasting parameters as assessed by Rapid Visco Analysis (RVA). However, a combined influence of the starch phosphate and long glucan chains as represented by high amylose or long amylopectin chain length was indicated by their positive correlation to the final viscosity and set back (RVA) demonstrating the formation of a highly hydrated and gel-forming system during re-structuring of the starch pastes. Clear inverse correlations between glucoamylase-catalyzed digestibility and amylopectin chain length and starch phosphate and lack of such correlation with amylose content indicates a combined structuring role of the phosphate groups and amylopectin chains on the starch glucan matrix.  相似文献   

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