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Evolution of Chlorophyll Degradation: The Significance of RCC Reductase
Author(s) -
Hörtensteiner S.,
Rodoni S.,
Schellenberg M.,
Vicentini F.,
Nandi O. I.,
Qui YL.,
Matile Ph.
Publication year - 2000
Publication title -
plant biology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.871
H-Index - 87
eISSN - 1438-8677
pISSN - 1435-8603
DOI - 10.1055/s-2000-9149
Subject(s) - pheophorbide a , catabolite repression , biology , reductase , biochemistry , chlorophyll , vacuole , rubisco , botany , enzyme , gene , mutant , cytoplasm
In angiosperms the key process of chlorophyll breakdown in senescing leaves is catalyzed by pheophorbide a oxygenase and RCC reductase which, in a metabolically channeled reaction, cleave the porphyrin macrocycle and produce a colourless primary catabolite, pFCC. RCC reductase is responsible for the reduction of the C20/C1 double bond of the intermediary catabolite, RCC. Depending on plant species, RCC reductase produces one of the two C1 stereoisomers, pFCC‐1 or pFCC‐2. Screening of a large number of taxa for the type of RCCR revealed that the isomer produced is uniform within families. It also revealed that type RCCR‐2 is predominant; RCCR‐1 seems to represent a recent derivation which in unrelated lineages has evolved independently from RCCR‐2. A third type of pFCC was produced by RCCR from basal pteridophytes and some gymnosperms; its structure is unknown. Collectively, the data suggest that the pathway of chlorophyll breakdown is very conserved in vascular plants. RCCR appears to represent a decisive addition to the catabolic pathway: it allows terrestrial plants to metabolize the porphyrin part of the chlorophyll molecule to photodynamically inactive final products that are stored in the vacuoles of senescing mesophyll cells.