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1.
J Biol Chem ; 288(40): 28581-98, 2013 Oct 04.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23950181

RESUMO

Controlled conversion of leaf starch to sucrose at night is essential for the normal growth of Arabidopsis. The conversion involves the cytosolic metabolism of maltose to hexose phosphates via an unusual, multidomain protein with 4-glucanotransferase activity, DPE2, believed to transfer glucosyl moieties to a complex heteroglycan prior to their conversion to hexose phosphate via a cytosolic phosphorylase. The significance of this complex pathway is unclear; conversion of maltose to hexose phosphate in bacteria proceeds via a more typical 4-glucanotransferase that does not require a heteroglycan acceptor. It has recently been suggested that DPE2 generates a heterogeneous series of terminal glucan chains on the heteroglycan that acts as a "glucosyl buffer" to ensure a constant rate of sucrose synthesis in the leaf at night. Alternatively, DPE2 and/or the heteroglycan may have specific properties important for their function in the plant. To distinguish between these ideas, we compared the properties of DPE2 with those of the Escherichia coli glucanotransferase MalQ. We found that MalQ cannot use the plant heteroglycan as an acceptor for glucosyl transfer. However, experimental and modeling approaches suggested that it can potentially generate a glucosyl buffer between maltose and hexose phosphate because, unlike DPE2, it can generate polydisperse malto-oligosaccharides from maltose. Consistent with this suggestion, MalQ is capable of restoring an essentially wild-type phenotype when expressed in mutant Arabidopsis plants lacking DPE2. In light of these findings, we discuss the possible evolutionary origins of the complex DPE2-heteroglycan pathway.


Assuntos
Escuridão , Escherichia coli/enzimologia , Glucosiltransferases/metabolismo , Maltose/metabolismo , Folhas de Planta/metabolismo , Amido/metabolismo , Sacarose/metabolismo , Arabidopsis/genética , Arabidopsis/crescimento & desenvolvimento , Soluções Tampão , Citosol/metabolismo , Proteínas de Escherichia coli/química , Proteínas de Escherichia coli/metabolismo , Evolução Molecular , Glucosiltransferases/química , Metabolômica , Mutação/genética , Oligossacarídeos/metabolismo , Fenótipo , Plantas Geneticamente Modificadas , Estrutura Terciária de Proteína , Proteínas Recombinantes/isolamento & purificação , Relação Estrutura-Atividade , Especificidade por Substrato
2.
J Biol Chem ; 287(47): 39429-38, 2012 Nov 16.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22988248

RESUMO

Microarrays are powerful tools for high throughput analysis, and hundreds or thousands of molecular interactions can be assessed simultaneously using very small amounts of analytes. Nucleotide microarrays are well established in plant research, but carbohydrate microarrays are much less established, and one reason for this is a lack of suitable glycans with which to populate arrays. Polysaccharide microarrays are relatively easy to produce because of the ease of immobilizing large polymers noncovalently onto a variety of microarray surfaces, but they lack analytical resolution because polysaccharides often contain multiple distinct carbohydrate substructures. Microarrays of defined oligosaccharides potentially overcome this problem but are harder to produce because oligosaccharides usually require coupling prior to immobilization. We have assembled a library of well characterized plant oligosaccharides produced either by partial hydrolysis from polysaccharides or by de novo chemical synthesis. Once coupled to protein, these neoglycoconjugates are versatile reagents that can be printed as microarrays onto a variety of slide types and membranes. We show that these microarrays are suitable for the high throughput characterization of the recognition capabilities of monoclonal antibodies, carbohydrate-binding modules, and other oligosaccharide-binding proteins of biological significance and also that they have potential for the characterization of carbohydrate-active enzymes.


Assuntos
Parede Celular , Análise em Microsséries , Plantas , Polissacarídeos , Parede Celular/química , Parede Celular/metabolismo , Análise em Microsséries/instrumentação , Análise em Microsséries/métodos , Plantas/química , Plantas/metabolismo , Polissacarídeos/química , Polissacarídeos/metabolismo
3.
Front Plant Sci ; 9: 1138, 2018.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30123236

RESUMO

Starch synthases (SSs) are responsible for depositing the majority of glucoses in starch. Structural knowledge on these enzymes that is available from the crystal structures of rice granule bound starch synthase (GBSS) and barley SSI provides incomplete information on substrate binding and active site architecture. Here we report the crystal structures of the catalytic domains of SSIV from Arabidopsis thaliana, of GBSS from the cyanobacterium CLg1 and GBSSI from the glaucophyte Cyanophora paradoxa, with all three bound to ADP and the inhibitor acarbose. The SSIV structure illustrates in detail the modes of binding for both donor and acceptor in a plant SS. CLg1GBSS contains, in the same crystal structure, examples of molecules with and without bound acceptor, which illustrates the conformational changes induced upon acceptor binding that presumably precede catalytic activity. With structures available from several isoforms of plant and non-plant SSs, as well as the closely related bacterial glycogen synthases, we analyze, at the structural level, the common elements that define a SS, the elements that are necessary for substrate binding and singularities of the GBSS family that could underlie its processivity. While the phylogeny of the SSIII/IV/V has been recently discussed, we now further report the detailed evolutionary history of the GBSS/SSI/SSII type of SSs enlightening the origin of the GBSS enzymes used in our structural analysis.

4.
PLoS One ; 12(4): e0175488, 2017.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28407006

RESUMO

The production of starch is essential for human nutrition and represents a major metabolic flux in the biosphere. The biosynthesis of starch in storage organs like barley endosperm operates via two main pathways using different substrates: starch synthases use ADP-glucose to produce amylose and amylopectin, the two major components of starch, whereas starch phosphorylase (Pho1) uses glucose-1-phosphate (G1P), a precursor for ADP-glucose production, to produce α-1,4 glucans. The significance of the Pho1 pathway in starch biosynthesis has remained unclear. To elucidate the importance of barley Pho1 (HvPho1) for starch biosynthesis in barley endosperm, we analyzed HvPho1 protein production and enzyme activity levels throughout barley endosperm development and characterized structure-function relationships of HvPho1. The molecular mechanisms underlying the initiation of starch granule biosynthesis, that is, the enzymes and substrates involved in the initial transition from simple sugars to polysaccharides, remain unclear. We found that HvPho1 is present as an active protein at the onset of barley endosperm development. Notably, purified recombinant protein can catalyze the de novo production of α-1,4-glucans using HvPho1 from G1P as the sole substrate. The structural properties of HvPho1 provide insights into the low affinity of HvPho1 for large polysaccharides like starch or amylopectin. Our results suggest that HvPho1 may play a role during the initiation of starch biosynthesis in barley.


Assuntos
Hordeum/crescimento & desenvolvimento , Amido Fosforilase/química , Amido Fosforilase/metabolismo , Amido/biossíntese , Domínio Catalítico , Proteínas de Cloroplastos/química , Proteínas de Cloroplastos/genética , Proteínas de Cloroplastos/metabolismo , Cristalografia por Raios X , Endosperma/química , Endosperma/enzimologia , Endosperma/genética , Endosperma/crescimento & desenvolvimento , Regulação Enzimológica da Expressão Gênica , Regulação da Expressão Gênica de Plantas , Glucofosfatos/metabolismo , Hordeum/química , Hordeum/enzimologia , Hordeum/genética , Modelos Moleculares , Estrutura Secundária de Proteína , Amido Fosforilase/genética
5.
Front Plant Sci ; 6: 1265, 2015.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26858729

RESUMO

Starch is the main storage polysaccharide in cereals and the major source of calories in the human diet. It is synthesized by a panel of enzymes including five classes of starch synthases (SSs). While the overall starch synthase (SS) reaction is known, the functional differences between the five SS classes are poorly understood. Much of our knowledge comes from analyzing mutant plants with altered SS activities, but the resulting data are often difficult to interpret as a result of pleitropic effects, competition between enzymes, overlaps in enzyme activity and disruption of multi-enzyme complexes. Here we provide a detailed biochemical study of the activity of all five classes of SSs in barley endosperm. Each enzyme was produced recombinantly in E. coli and the properties and modes of action in vitro were studied in isolation from other SSs and other substrate modifying activities. Our results define the mode of action of each SS class in unprecedented detail; we analyze their substrate selection, temperature dependence and stability, substrate affinity and temporal abundance during barley development. Our results are at variance with some generally accepted ideas about starch biosynthesis and might lead to the reinterpretation of results obtained in planta. In particular, they indicate that granule bound SS is capable of processive action even in the absence of a starch matrix, that SSI has no elongation limit, and that SSIV, believed to be critical for the initiation of starch granules, has maltoligosaccharides and not polysaccharides as its preferred substrates.

6.
Carbohydr Res ; 358: 12-8, 2012 Sep 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22795862

RESUMO

2-Deoxy-2-fluoro-d-glucose, 3-deoxy-3-fluoro-D-glucose and 6-deoxy-6-fluoro-D-glucose were converted into the corresponding maltose derivatives using Arabidopsis thaliana DPE2-mediated trans-glycosylation reaction with glycogen acting as a glucosyl donor. (19)F NMR spectroscopy proved to be a valuable tool for monitoring the progress of these reactions and to assess the nature of resulting oligomeric products.


Assuntos
Desoxiglucose/análogos & derivados , Fluordesoxiglucose F18/metabolismo , Maltose/química , Maltose/metabolismo , Arabidopsis/enzimologia , Proteínas de Arabidopsis/metabolismo , Desoxiglucose/química , Desoxiglucose/metabolismo , Fluordesoxiglucose F18/química , Glicogênio/química , Glicogênio/metabolismo , Glicosídeo Hidrolases/metabolismo , Glicosilação , Espectroscopia de Ressonância Magnética , Maltose/síntese química
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