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New insights into plant transaldolase
Author(s) -
Caillau Maxime,
Paul Quick W.
Publication year - 2005
Publication title -
the plant journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.058
H-Index - 269
eISSN - 1365-313X
pISSN - 0960-7412
DOI - 10.1111/j.1365-313x.2005.02427.x
Subject(s) - transaldolase , biology , biochemistry , glycolysis , pentose phosphate pathway , enzyme
Summary The oxidative pentose phosphate pathway (OPPP) provides plants with important substrates for both primary and secondary metabolism via the oxidation of glucose‐6‐phosphate. The OPPP is also thought to generate large amounts of reducing power to drive various anabolic processes. In animals this major pathway is located within the cytoplasm of cells, but in plants its subcellular compartmentation is far from clear. Although several enzymes of the OPPP were demonstrated to have both cytosolic and plastidic counterparts, there is yet no evidence for a full set of functional enzymes in each compartment. We report here the isolation of two coding sequences from tomato ( Lycopersicon esculentum L.) which encode phylogenetically distant sequences ( ToTal1 and ToTal2 ) that putatively encode distinct plastidic TA isoforms. The kinetic characterization of ToTal1 revealed that, unlike other enzymes of the non‐oxidative branch of the OPPP, ToTal1 does not follow a Michaelis–Menten mode of catalysis which has implications for its role in regulating carbon flux between primary and secondary metabolism. TA genes appear to be differentially regulated at the level of gene expression in plant tissues and in response to environmental factors which suggests that TA isoforms have a non‐overlapping role for plant metabolism.

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