A soybean plastidic ATP/ADP transporter gene, GmAATP, is involved in carbohydrate metabolism in transgenic Arabidopsis |
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Authors: | Feibing Wang Xinhong Chen Fan Zhang Yuan Niu Yuxiu Ye Sitong Qi Qing Zhou |
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Affiliation: | 1.School of Life Science and Food Engineering,Huaiyin Institute of Technology,Huai’an,People’s Republic of China;2.Institute of Botany, Jiangsu Province and Chinese Academy of Sciences,Nanjing,People’s Republic of China |
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Abstract: | The plastidic ATP/ADP transporter (AATP) imports adenosine triphosphate (ATP) from the cytosol into plastids, resulting in the increase of the ATP supply to facilitate anabolic synthesis in heterotrophic plastids of dicotyledonous plants. The regulatory role of GmAATP from soybean in increasing starch accumulation has not been investigated. In this study, a gene encoding the AATP protein, named GmAATP, was successfully isolated from soybean. Transient expression of GmAATP in Arabidopsis protoplasts and Nicotiana benthamiana leaf epidermal cells revealed the plastidic localization of GmAATP. Its expression was induced by exogenous sucrose treatment in soybean. The coding region of GmAATP was cloned into a binary vector under the control of 35S promoter and then transformed into Arabidopsis to obtain transgenic plants. Constitutive expression of GmAATP significantly increased the sucrose and starch accumulation in the transgenic plants. Real-time quantitative PCR (qRT-PCR) analysis showed that constitutive expression of GmAATP up-regulated the expression of phosphoglucomutase (AtPGM), ADP-glucose pyrophosphorylase (AGPase) small subunit (AtAGPase-S1 and AtAGPase-S2), AGPase large subunit (AtAGPase-L1 and AtAGPase-L2), granule-bound starch synthase (AtGBSS I and AtGBSS II), soluble starch synthases (AtSSS I, AtSSS II, AtSSS III, and AtSSS IV), and starch branching enzyme (AtSBE I and AtSBE II) genes involved in starch biosynthesis in the transgenic Arabidopsis plants. Meanwhile, enzymatic analyses indicated that the major enzymes (AGPase, GBSS, SSS, and SBE) involved in the starch biosynthesis exhibited higher activities in the transgenic plants compared to the wild type (WT). These findings suggest that GmAATP may improve starch content of Arabidopsis by up-regulating the expression of the related genes and increasing the activities of the major enzymes involved in starch biosynthesis. All these results suggest that GmAATP could be used as a candidate gene for developing high starch-accumulating plants as alternative energy crops. |
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