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Loss of Cytosolic Phosphoglucose Isomerase Affects Carbohydrate Metabolism in Leaves and Is Essential for Fertility of Arabidopsis
Authors:Hans-Henning Kunz  Shirin Zamani-Nour  Rainer E. H?usler  Katja Ludewig  Julian I. Schroeder  Irina Malinova  Joerg Fettke  Ulf-Ingo Flügge  Markus Gierth
Affiliation:Department of Botany II, University of Cologne, 50674 Cologne, Germany (H.-H.K., S.Z.-N., R.E.H., K.L., U.-I.F., M.G.);;Division of Biological Sciences, Cell and Developmental Biology Section, University of California, San Diego, La Jolla, California 92093 (J.I.S.); and;Institute of Biochemistry and Biology, University of Potsdam, 14476 Golm, Germany (I.M., J.F.)
Abstract:Carbohydrate metabolism in plants is tightly linked to photosynthesis and is essential for energy and carbon skeleton supply of the entire organism. Thus, the hexose phosphate pools of the cytosol and the chloroplast represent important metabolic resources that are maintained through action of phosphoglucose isomerase (PGI) and phosphoglucose mutase interconverting glucose 6-phosphate, fructose 6-phosphate, and glucose 1-phosphate. Here, we investigated the impact of disrupted cytosolic PGI (cPGI) function on plant viability and metabolism. Overexpressing an artificial microRNA targeted against cPGI (amiR-cpgi) resulted in adult plants with vegetative tissue essentially free of cPGI activity. These plants displayed diminished growth compared with the wild type and accumulated excess starch in chloroplasts but maintained low sucrose content in leaves at the end of the night. Moreover, amiR-cpgi plants exhibited increased nonphotochemical chlorophyll a quenching during photosynthesis. In contrast to amiR-cpgi plants, viable transfer DNA insertion mutants disrupted in cPGI function could only be identified as heterozygous individuals. However, homozygous transfer DNA insertion mutants could be isolated among plants ectopically expressing cPGI. Intriguingly, these plants were only fertile when expression was driven by the ubiquitin10 promoter but sterile when the seed-specific unknown seed protein promoter or the Cauliflower mosaic virus 35S promoter were employed. These data show that metabolism is apparently able to compensate for missing cPGI activity in adult amiR-cpgi plants and indicate an essential function for cPGI in plant reproduction. Moreover, our data suggest a feedback regulation in amiR-cpgi plants that fine-tunes cytosolic sucrose metabolism with plastidic starch turnover.Starch and Suc turnover are major pathways of primary metabolism in all higher plants. As such, they are essential for carbohydrate storage and the energy supply of sink tissues and as building blocks for amino acid, fatty acid, or cell wall biosynthesis (Stitt and Zeeman, 2012).A core reaction in both starch and Suc biosynthesis is the reversible interconversion of the hexose phosphate pool metabolites Fru 6-phosphate (Fru6P) and Glc 6-phosphate (Glc6P), which is mediated by phosphoglucose isomerase (PGI). Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) contains two isoforms of PGI, one in the plastids and one in the cytosol (Caspar et al., 1985).During the light period, the plastid isoform of PGI (PGI1) is involved in starch biosynthesis by generating Glc6P from the primary photosynthetic product Fru6P. Glc6P is further converted to Glc 1-phosphate (Glc1P) and ADP-glucose via action of phosphoglucomutase (PGM) and ADP-glucose pyrophosphorylase (AGPase), respectively (Stitt and Zeeman, 2012). Finally, transfer of the glucosyl moiety of ADP-glucose to the growing carbohydrate chain of starch is mediated by starch synthases. Any of the enzymatic reactions of this linear pathway is essential for starch synthesis, as illustrated by the virtual absence of transitory starch in chloroplasts of mutant plant lines with impaired function of PGI1 (Yu et al., 2000; Kunz et al., 2010), PGM (Caspar et al., 1985; Kofler et al., 2000), or AGPase (Lin et al., 1988). Interestingly, in a few specific cell types, e.g. leaf guard cells and root columella cells, loss of PGI1 activity can be bypassed by the presence of the plastid Glc6P/phosphate translocator GPT1 (Niewiadomski et al., 2005; Kunz et al., 2010).The cytosolic isoform of PGI (cPGI) is involved in anabolism and catabolism of Suc, the major transport form of carbohydrates in plants. Glc6P and Fru6P interconversion is necessary for both Suc synthesis during the day and during the night. During the day, Suc synthesis in source leaves is fueled mainly by triose phosphates exported from chloroplasts that are eventually converted to Fru6P in the cytosol. However, Fru6P is only one substrate for the Suc-generating enzyme Suc phosphate synthase. The second substrate, UDP-glucose, is synthesized from Fru6P via Glc6P and Glc1P by the cytosolic isoenzymes of PGI1 and PGM as well as UDP-glucose pyrophosphorylase.Because Suc is the major long-distance carbon transport form, its synthesis has to continue throughout the night to supply energy and carbohydrates to all tissues. The nocturnal synthesis of Suc is dependent on breakdown and mobilization of transitory starch from chloroplasts (Zeeman et al., 2007) via export of maltose and Glc (Weber et al., 2000; Niittylä et al., 2004; Weise et al., 2004; Cho et al., 2011). Exported maltose is temporarily integrated into cytosolic heteroglycans (Fettke et al., 2005) mediated by disproportionating enzyme2 (DPE2; Chia et al., 2004; Lu and Sharkey, 2004) yielding Glc and a heteroglycan molecule elongated by an α1-4-bound glucosyl residue. Cytosolic Glc can directly be phosphorylated to Glc6P by the action of hexokinase, while temporarily stored Glc in heteroglycans is released as Glc1P mediated by cytosolic glucan phosphorylase2 (PHS2; Fettke et al., 2004; Lu et al., 2006). Both Glc6P and Glc1P can then be converted to UDP-glucose as during the day.Generation of Fru6P, the second substrate for Suc synthesis, can proceed only to a limited extent from triose phosphates during the night. This limitation is caused mainly by the nocturnal inactivation of Fru 1,6-bisphosphatase (Cséke et al., 1982; Stitt, 1990), a key enzyme in Suc biosynthesis during the day. Hence, in contrast to the situation in the light, cPGI activity is now crucial for providing Fru6P from Glc6P.On the catabolic side, degradation of Suc into its monosaccharides in sink tissues yields both Glc6P and Fru6P, of which only Fru6P can be utilized in glycolytic degradation. Therefore, cPGI is also required for Glc6P conversion to Fru6P in glycolysis, which, in combination with respiration, is the major path of energy production in heterotrophic tissues.Impairment or loss of function of enzymes contributing to the cytosolic hexose phosphate pool has recently been investigated for the Glc1P-forming enzyme PGM (Egli et al., 2010). The Arabidopsis genome encodes three PGM isoforms, with PGM1 localized to plastids and PGM2 and PGM3 localized to the cytosol (Caspar et al., 1985; Egli et al., 2010). Analyses of transfer DNA (T-DNA) mutants showed that homozygous pgm2/pgm3 double mutants were nonviable because of impaired gametophyte development. However, pgm2 and pgm3 single mutants grew like ecotype Columbia (Col-0) wild-type plants, indicating overlapping functions of PGM2 and PGM3 (Egli et al., 2010).By contrast, cPGI is encoded only by a single locus in Arabidopsis (Kawabe et al., 2000). Higher plant mutants reduced in cPGI activity have so far been characterized only in ethyl methanesulfonate-mutagenized Clarkia xantiana (Jones et al., 1986a; Kruckeberg et al., 1989; Neuhaus et al., 1989). The C. xantiana genome encodes for two isoenzymes of cPGI, and homozygous point mutations in each individual cPGI led to significant decrease in cPGI enzyme activity, which was further reduced to a residual activity of 18% in cpgi2/cpgi3 double mutants, where the cPGI3 locus was heterozygous for the mutation (Jones et al., 1986a; Kruckeberg et al., 1989). Detailed physiological analyses of these mutants indicated a negative impact on Suc biosynthesis and elevated starch levels when cPGI activity was decreased at least 3- to 5-fold (Kruckeberg et al., 1989).The physiological impact of decreased or even absent cPGI activity has not been characterized in the genetic model organism Arabidopsis. Here, we show that homozygous T-DNA insertion mutants in the cPGI locus are nonviable and present data from analyses of mature Arabidopsis plants constitutively expressing artificial microRNAs (amiRNAs) targeted against cPGI. These mutants reveal altered photosynthesis, a strong impact on nocturnal leaf starch degradation, and impaired Suc metabolism.
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