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Regulation and roles for alternative pathways of hexose metabolism in plants
Author(s) -
Black Clanton C.,
Mustardy Laszlo,
Sung S. S.,
Kormaník P. P.,
Xu D.P.,
Paz Nachman
Publication year - 1987
Publication title -
physiologia plantarum
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.351
H-Index - 146
eISSN - 1399-3054
pISSN - 0031-9317
DOI - 10.1111/j.1399-3054.1987.tb04305.x
Subject(s) - phosphofructokinase , glycolysis , biochemistry , pyrophosphate , metabolic pathway , allosteric regulation , fructose 2,6 bisphosphate , hexose , fructose 1,6 bisphosphatase , fructose , enzyme , biology , chemistry
Plant cells have two cytoplasmic pathways of glycolysis and gluconeogenesis for the reversible interconversion of fructose 6‐phosphate (F‐6‐P) and fructose 1,6‐bisphosphate (F‐1,6‐P 2 ). One pathway is described as a maintenance pathway that is catalyzed by a nucleotide triphosphate‐dependent phosphofructokinase (EC 2.7.1.11; ATP‐PFK) glycolytically and a F‐1,6 bisphosphatase (EC 3.1.3.11) gluconeogenically. These are non‐equilibrium reactions that are energy consuming. The second pathway, described as an adaptive pathway, is catalyzed by a readily reversible pyrophosphate‐dependent phosphofructokinase (EC 2.7.1.90; PP‐PFK) in an equilibrium reaction that conserves energy through the utilization and the synthesis of pyrophosphate. A constitutive regulator cycle is also present for the synthesis and hydrolysis of fructose 2,6‐bisphosphate (F‐2,6‐P 2 ) via a 2‐kinase and a 2‐phosphatase, respectively. The pathway catalyzed by the ATP‐PFK and F‐1,6‐bisphosphatase, the maintenance pathway, is fairly constant in maximum activity in various plant tissues and shows less regulation by F‐2,6‐P 2 . Plants use F‐2,6‐P 2 initially to regulate the adaptive pathway at the reversible PP i ‐PFK step. The adaptive pathway, catalyzed by PP i ‐PFK, varies in maximum activity with a variety of phenomena such as plant development or changing biological and physical environments. Plants can change F‐2,6‐P 2 levels rapidly, in less than 1 min when subjected to rapid environmental change, or change levels slowly over periods of hours and days as tissues develop. Both types of change enable plants to cope with the environmental and developmental changes that occur during their lifetimes. The two pathways of sugar metabolism can be efficiently linked by the cycling of uridylates and pyrophosphate required for sucrose breakdown via a proposed sucrose synthase pathway. The breakdown of sucrose via the sucrose synthase pathway requires half the net energy of breakdown via the invertase pathway. Pyrophosphate occurs in plant tissues as a substrate pool for biosynthetic reactions such as the PP i ‐PFK or uridine diphosphate glucose pyrophosphorylase (EC 2.7.7.9; UDPG pyrophosphorylase) that function in the breakdown of imported sucrose. Also, pyrophosphate links the two glycolytic/gluco‐neogenic pathways; and in a reciprocal manner pyrophosphate is produced as an energy source during gluconeogenic carbon flow from F‐1,6‐P 2 toward sucrose synthesis.

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