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Preamylopectin Processing: A Mandatory Step for Starch Biosynthesis in Plants.
Author(s) -
Grégory Mouille,
MarieLise Maddelein,
Nathalie Libessart,
Philippe Talaga,
André Decq,
Brigitte Delrue,
Steven Ball
Publication year - 1996
Publication title -
the plant cell
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 5.324
H-Index - 341
eISSN - 1532-298X
pISSN - 1040-4651
DOI - 10.1105/tpc.8.8.1353
Subject(s) - amylopectin , starch , biochemistry , biology , starch synthase , chlamydomonas , glycogen debranching enzyme , glycogen branching enzyme , biosynthesis , enzyme , amylose , polysaccharide , glycogen phosphorylase , gene , mutant
It has been generally assumed that the [alpha]-(1->4)-linked and [alpha]-(1->6)-branched glucans of starch are generated by the coordinated action of elongation (starch synthases) and branching enzymes. We have identified a novel Chlamydomonas locus (STA7) that when defective leads to a wipeout of starch and its replacement by a small amount of glycogen-like material. Our efforts to understand the enzymological basis of this phenotype have led us to determine the selective disappearance of an 88-kD starch hydrolytic activity. We further demonstrate that this enzyme is a debranching enzyme. Cleavage of the [alpha]-(1->6) linkage in a branched precursor of amylopectin (preamylopectin) has provided us with the ground rules for understanding starch biosynthesis in plants. Therefore, we propose that amylopectin clusters are synthesized by a discontinuous mechanism involving a highly specific glucan trimming mechanism.

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