Potato Tuber UDP-Glucose:Protein Transglucosylase Catalyzes Its Own Glucosylation
Author(s) -
Fernando Ardila,
Juana S. Tandecarz
Publication year - 1992
Publication title -
plant physiology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.554
H-Index - 312
eISSN - 1532-2548
pISSN - 0032-0889
DOI - 10.1104/pp.99.4.1342
Subject(s) - biochemistry , glucan , enzyme , glycogen phosphorylase , glycosylation , chemistry , kilodalton , starch synthase , biogenesis , molecular mass , starch , amylose , amylopectin , gene
Potato (Solanum tuberosum L.) tuber UDP-glucose:protein transglucosylase (UPTG) (EC 2.4.1.112) is involved in the first of a two-step mechanism proposed for protein-bound alpha-glucan synthesis by catalyzing the covalent attachment of a single glucose residue to an acceptor protein. The resulting glucosylated 38-kilodalton polypeptide would then serve as a primer for enzymic glucan chain elongation during the second step. In the present report, we describe the fast protein liquid chromatography purification of UPTG from a membrane pellet of potato tuber. An apparently close association of UPTG, phosphorylase, and starch synthase was observed under native conditions during different purification steps. Enrichment of a 38-kilodalton polypeptide was found throughout enzyme purification. It is now shown that the purified UPTG, with an apparent molecular mass of 38 kilodaltons, undergoes self-glucosylation in a UDP-glucose- and Mn(2+)-dependent reaction. Therefore, it is concluded that UPTG is the enzyme and at the same time the priming protein required for the biogenesis of protein-bound alpha-glucan in potato tuber.
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