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Convergent Evolution of Polysaccharide Debranching Defines a Common Mechanism for Starch Accumulation in Cyanobacteria and Plants
Author(s) -
Ugo Cenci,
Malika Chabi,
Mathieu Ducatez,
Catherine Tirtiaux,
Jennifer Nirmal-Raj,
Yoshinori Utsumi,
Daiki Kobayashi,
Satoshi Sasaki,
Eiji Suzuki,
Yasunori Nakamura,
JeanLuc Putaux,
Xavier Roussel,
Amandine Durand-Terrasson,
Debashish Bhattacharya,
AnneSophie VercoutterEdouart,
Emmanuel Maes,
Maria Cecilia Arias,
Monica M. Palcic,
Lyann Sim,
Steven Ball,
Christophe Colleoni
Publication year - 2013
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.113.118174
Subject(s) - glycogen debranching enzyme , starch , biology , polysaccharide , glycogen , biochemistry , plastid , endosymbiosis , cyanobacteria , enzyme , glycogen synthase , chloroplast , bacteria , genetics , gene
Starch, unlike hydrosoluble glycogen particles, aggregates into insoluble, semicrystalline granules. In photosynthetic eukaryotes, the transition to starch accumulation occurred after plastid endosymbiosis from a preexisting cytosolic host glycogen metabolism network. This involved the recruitment of a debranching enzyme of chlamydial pathogen origin. The latter is thought to be responsible for removing misplaced branches that would otherwise yield a water-soluble polysaccharide. We now report the implication of starch debranching enzyme in the aggregation of semicrystalline granules of single-cell cyanobacteria that accumulate both glycogen and starch-like polymers. We show that an enzyme of analogous nature to the plant debranching enzyme but of a different bacterial origin was recruited for the same purpose in these organisms. Remarkably, both the plant and cyanobacterial enzymes have evolved through convergent evolution, showing novel yet identical substrate specificities from a preexisting enzyme that originally displayed the much narrower substrate preferences required for glycogen catabolism.

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