The evolutionary histories of the 12 enzymes that catalyze the reactions of the Calvin cycle in higher-plant chloroplasts are summarized. They are shown to be encoded by a mixture of nuclear genes of cyanobacterial and proteobacterial origin. Moreover, where cytosolic isoforms of these enzymes are found they are almost invariably encoded by genes of clearly endosymbiont origin. We infer that endosymbiosis resulted in functional redundancy that was eliminated through differential gene loss, with intruding eubacterial genes repeatedly replacing pre-existing nuclear counterparts to which they were either functionally or structurally homologous. Our findings fail to support the 'product-specificity corollary', which predicts re-targeting of nuclear-encoded gene products to the organelle from whose genome they originated. Rather it would appear that the enzymes of central carbohydrate metabolism have evolved novel targeting possibilities regardless of their origins. Our findings suggest a new hypothesis to explain organelle genome persistence, based on the testable idea that some organelle-encoded gene products might be toxic when present in the cytosol or other inappropriate cellular compartments.
The citric acid or tricarboxylic acid cycle is a central element of higher-plant carbon metabolism which provides, among other things, electrons for oxidative phosphorylation in the inner mitochondrial membrane, intermediates for aminoacid biosynthesis, and oxaloacetate for gluconeogenesis from succinate derived from fatty acids via the glyoxylate cycle in glyoxysomes. The tricarboxylic acid cycle is a typical mitochondrial pathway and is widespread among a-proteobacteria, the group of eubacteria as de®ned under rRNA systematics from which mitochondria arose. Most of the enzymes of the tricarboxylic acid cycle are encoded in the nucleus in higher eukaryotes, and several have been previously shown to branch with their homologues from a-proteobacteria, indicating that the eukaryotic nuclear genes were acquired from the mitochondrial genome during the course of evolution. Here, we investigate the individual evolutionary histories of all of the enzymes of the tricarboxylic acid cycle and the glyoxylate cycle using protein maximum likelihood phylogenies, focusing on the evolutionary origin of the nuclear-encoded proteins in higher plants. The results indicate that about half of the proteins involved in this eukaryotic pathway are most similar to their a-proteobacterial homologues, whereas the remainder are most similar to eubacterial, but not speci®cally a-proteobacterial, homologues. A consideration of (a) the process of lateral gene transfer among free-living prokaryotes and (b) the mechanistics of endosymbiotic (symbiont-to-host) gene transfer reveals that it is unrealistic to expect all nuclear genes that were acquired from the a-proteobacterial ancestor of mitochondria to branch speci®cally with their homologues encoded in the genomes of contemporary a-proteobacteria. Rather, even if molecular phylogenetics were to work perfectly (which it does not), then some nuclear-encoded proteins that were acquired from the a-proteobacterial ancestor of mitochondria should, in phylogenetic trees, branch with homologues that are no longer found in most a-proteobacterial genomes, and some should reside on long branches that reveal anity to eubacterial rather than archaebacterial homologues, but no particular anity for any speci®c eubacterial donor.
l h e intracellular localization of transaldolase, transketolase, ribose-5-phosphate isomerase, and ribulose-5-phosphate epimerase was reexamined in spinach (Spinacia oleracea 1,) leaves. We found a highly predominant if not exclusive localization of these enzyme activities in chloroplasts isolated by isopyknic centrifugation in sucrose gradients. Clucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase, 6-phosphogluconate dehydrogenase, glucose phosphate isomerase, and triose phosphate isomerase activity was present in the chloroplast fraction but showed additional activity in the cytosol (supernatant) fraction attributable to the cytosol-specific isoforms known to exist for these enzymes. Anion-exchange chromatography of proteins of crude extracts on diethylaminoethyl-Fractogel revealed only a single enzyme each for transaldolase, transketolase, ribose-5-phosphate isomerase, and ribulose-5-phosphate epimerase. The data indicate that chloroplasts of spinach leaf cells possess the complete complement of enzymes of the oxidative pentose phosphate pathway (OPPP), whereas the cytosol contains only the first two reactions, contrary to the widely held view that plants generally possess a cytosolic OPPP capable of cyclic function. l h e chloroplast enzymes transketolase, ribose-5-phosphate isomerase, and ribulose-5-phosphate epimerase appear to be amphibolic for the Calvin cycle and OPPP.
When green leaves of spinach (Spinacia oleracea L.) were surveyed for the presence of hexokinases which utilize glucose, fructose and-or mannose as a substrate, four kinases could be distinguished by their order of elution during chromatography on diethylaminoethyl (DEAE)-cellulose: (i) a hexokinase I with a specificity for fructose, glucose, and mannose, (ii) a fructokinase I with a specificity for fructose, (iii) a hexokinase II with a specificity for glucose, fructose and mannose, and (iv) a fructokinase II with a specificity for fructose. Hexokinases I and II had high apparent Km values for fructose (8 and 15 mM, respectively) and medium or low apparent Km values for glucose (150 and 18 μM, respectively) and mannose (18 and 15 μM, respectively). Maximal velocities were highest with fructose, medium with glucose and lowest with mannose. That hexokinases I and II used several sugars as substrate was concluded (i) from their identical elution profiles during enzyme separation and (ii) because their activities with two or three sugars at a time was always lower than the sum of activities with one substrate, indicating competition of the sugars for the reaction with the enzymes. Fructokinases I and II were very specific for fructose (85 and 140 μM, respectively) and had only little, if any, activity with glucose or mannose. All kinases showed varying degrees of activity with nucleoside triphosphates other than ATP. In the presence of all three sugars, hexokinases I and II were considerably more active with ATP than with uridine-, cytidine-, and guanosine 5'-triphosphate (UTP, CTP, GTP) except that, in the presence of glucose, hexokinase I was almost as active with UTP as with ATP. In the presence of fructose, fructokinase I exhibited highest activity with GTP and a gradually decreasing level of activity with CTP, UTP, and ATP. The activities in the presence of the other two sugars were highest with ATP. Fructokinase II was most active with ATP and fructose and progressively less active with GTP, UTP, and CTP. Cell fractionation by isopycnic density-gradient centrifugation or differential centrifugation indicated that fructokinase II was associated with chloroplasts, hexokinase II with mitochondria, and the other two kinases with the non-particulate cell fraction. In green leaves of pea (Pisum sativum L.), only a hexokinase (II) and fructokinase (II) were present. Corn (Zea mays L.) leaves exhibited only very low hexokinase activity.
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