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Starch Granule Initiation inArabidopsisRequires the Presence of Either Class IV or Class III Starch Synthases
Author(s) -
Nicolas Szydlowski,
Paula Ragel,
Sandy Raynaud,
M. Mercedes Lucas,
Isaac Roldán,
Manuel Montero,
Francisco José Muñoz,
Miroslav Ovečka,
Abdellatif Bahaji,
Véronique Planchot,
Javier PozuetaRomero,
Christophe d’Hulst,
Ángel Mérida
Publication year - 2009
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.109.066522
Subject(s) - starch synthase , starch , arabidopsis , biology , granule (geology) , biochemistry , plastid , mutant , chloroplast , gene , paleontology , amylopectin , amylose
The mechanisms underlying starch granule initiation remain unknown. We have recently reported that mutation of soluble starch synthase IV (SSIV) in Arabidopsis thaliana results in restriction of the number of starch granules to a single, large, particle per plastid, thereby defining an important component of the starch priming machinery. In this work, we provide further evidence for the function of SSIV in the priming process of starch granule formation and show that SSIV is necessary and sufficient to establish the correct number of starch granules observed in wild-type chloroplasts. The role of SSIV in granule seeding can be replaced, in part, by the phylogenetically related SSIII. Indeed, the simultaneous elimination of both proteins prevents Arabidopsis from synthesizing starch, thus demonstrating that other starch synthases cannot support starch synthesis despite remaining enzymatically active. Herein, we describe the substrate specificity and kinetic properties of SSIV and its subchloroplastic localization in specific regions associated with the edges of starch granules. The data presented in this work point to a complex mechanism for starch granule formation and to the different abilities of SSIV and SSIII to support this process in Arabidopsis leaves.

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