The Rice Plastidial Phosphorylase Participates Directly in Both Sink and Source Processes
Author(s) -
Kaan Koper,
SeonKap Hwang,
Magnus Wood,
Salvinder Singh,
Asaph B. Cousins,
Helmut Kirchhoff,
Thomas W. Okita
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
plant and cell physiology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.975
H-Index - 152
eISSN - 1471-9053
pISSN - 0032-0781
DOI - 10.1093/pcp/pcaa146
Subject(s) - mutant , biochemistry , protein subunit , wild type , arabidopsis , chemistry , starch , glycogen phosphorylase , biology , gene , enzyme
The plastidial starch phosphorylase (Pho1) functions in starch metabolism. A distinctive structural feature of the higher Pho1 is a 50-82-amino-acid long peptide (L50-L82), which is absent in phosphorylases from non-plant organisms. To study the function of the rice Pho1 L80 peptide, we complemented a pho1- rice mutant (BMF136) with the wild-type Pho1 gene or with a Pho1 gene lacking the L80 region (Pho1ΔL80). While expression of Pho1 in BMF136 restored normal wild-type phenotype, the introduction of Pho1ΔL80 enhanced the growth rate and plant productivity above wild-type levels. Mass spectrometry analysis of proteins captured by anti-Pho1 showed the surprising presence of PsaC, the terminal electron acceptor/donor subunit of photosystem I (PSI). This unexpected interaction was substantiated by reciprocal immobilized protein pull-down assays of seedling extracts and supported by the presence of Pho1 on isolated PSI complexes resolved by blue-native gels. Spectrophotometric studies showed that Pho1ΔL80 plants exhibited modified PSI and enhanced CO2 assimilation properties. Collectively, these findings indicate that the higher plant Pho1 has dual roles as a potential modulator of source and sink processes.
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