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Interactions of C4 Subtype Metabolic Activities and Transport in Maize Are Revealed through the Characterization of DCT2 Mutants
Authors:Sarit Weissmann  Fangfang Ma  Koki Furuyama  James Gierse  Howard Berg  Ying Shao  Mitsutaka Taniguchi  Doug K Allen  Thomas P Brutnell
Institution:aDonald Danforth Plant Science Center, St. Louis, Missouri 63132;bGraduate School of Bioagricultural Sciences, Nagoya University, Nagoya, Aichi 464-8601, Japan;cU.S. Department of Agriculture, Agricultural Research Service, St. Louis, Missouri 63132
Abstract:C4 photosynthesis in grasses requires the coordinated movement of metabolites through two specialized leaf cell types, mesophyll (M) and bundle sheath (BS), to concentrate CO2 around Rubisco. Despite the importance of transporters in this process, few have been identified or rigorously characterized. In maize (Zea mays), DCT2 has been proposed to function as a plastid-localized malate transporter and is preferentially expressed in BS cells. Here, we characterized the role of DCT2 in maize leaves using Activator-tagged mutant alleles. Our results indicate that DCT2 enables the transport of malate into the BS chloroplast. Isotopic labeling experiments show that the loss of DCT2 results in markedly different metabolic network operation and dramatically reduced biomass production. In the absence of a functioning malate shuttle, dct2 lines survive through the enhanced use of the phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase carbon shuttle pathway that in wild-type maize accounts for ∼25% of the photosynthetic activity. The results emphasize the importance of malate transport during C4 photosynthesis, define the role of a primary malate transporter in BS cells, and support a model for carbon exchange between BS and M cells in maize.
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