SummaryThe aim of this work was to establish whether plastidial phosphoglucomutase is involved in the starch biosynthetic pathway of potato tubers and thereby to determine the form in which carbon is imported into the potato amyloplast. For this purpose, we cloned the plastidial isoform of potato PGM (StpPGM), and using an antisense approach generated transgenic potato plants that exhibited decreased expression of the StpPGM gene and contained signi®cantly reduced total phosphoglucomutase activity. We con®rmed that this loss in activity was due speci®cally to a reduction in plastidial PGM activity. Potato lines with decreased activities of plastidial PGM exhibited no major changes in either whole-plant or tuber morphology. However, tubers from these lines exhibited a dramatic (up to 40%) decrease in the accumulation of starch, and signi®cant increases in the levels of sucrose and hexose phosphates. As tubers from these lines exhibited no changes in the maximal catalytic activities of other key enzymes of carbohydrate metabolism, we conclude that plastidial PGM forms part of the starch biosynthetic pathway of the potato tuber, and that glucose-6-phosphate is the major precursor taken up by amyloplasts in order to support starch synthesis.
The major mitochondrial processing activity removing presequences from nuclear encoded precursor proteins is present in the soluble fraction of fungal and mammalian mitochondria. We found that in potato, this activity resides in the inner mitochondrial membrane. Surprisingly, the proteolytic activity co‐purifies with cytochrome c reductase, a protein complex of the respiratory chain. The purified complex is bifunctional, as it has the ability to transfer electrons from ubiquinol to cytochrome c and to cleave off the presequences of mitochondrial precursor proteins. In contrast to the nine subunit fungal complex, cytochrome c reductase from potato comprises 10 polypeptides. Protein sequencing of peptides from individual subunits and analysis of corresponding cDNA clones reveals that subunit III of cytochrome c reductase (51 kDa) represents the general mitochondrial processing peptidase.
A 68-kDa heat-stress protein (HSP68) has been purified from cell-suspension cultures of tomato (Lycopersicon peruvianum L.). Antibodies raised against HSP68 cross-react with the Escherichia coli heat-stress protein DnaK. HSP68 was found to be a hydrophilic, ATP-binding protein. Immunological analysis of subcellular fractions and immunogold-labelling of ultrathin sections showed consistently that HSP68 is localized in the mitochondrial matrix. In-vitro translation experiments indicated that HSP68 is synthesized as a precursor protein. Immunoscreening of cDNA libraries from tomato and potato (Solanum tuberosum L.) led to the isolation of corresponding cDNA clones. The deduced amino-acid sequences show strong relationships to the DnaK-like proteins from bacteria and organelles of eukaryotic cells. The protein HSP68 is constitutively expressed, but its synthesis is increased during heat stress in all cells of higher plants investigated so far.
The mitochondrial iron-sulfur protein (also termed Rieske iron-sulfur protein) of cytochrome c reductase was purified from potato tubers and identified with heterologous antibodies. The sequences of the N-terminus of this 25 kDa protein and of an internal peptide were determined to design oligonucleotide mixtures for screening a cDNA library. One class of cDNA clones containing an open reading frame of 265 amino acids was isolated. The encoded protein contains the peptide sequences of the 25 kDa protein and shares about 50% sequence identity with the Rieske iron-sulfur proteins from fungi and around 43% with those from mammals. In vitro transcription and translation of the cDNA reveals that the iron-sulfur protein is made as a larger precursor of 30 kDa which is processed by the cytochrome c reductase/processing peptidase complex from potato. The processing product obtained after in vitro processing has the same size as the mature protein imported into isolated mitochondria. The presequence, which targets the protein to the organelle, is 53 amino acids long and has molecular features different from those found in presequences of fungal iron-sulfur proteins, which are processed in two steps. Our results indicate that, unlike in yeast and Neurospora, the presequence of the iron-sulfur protein from potato is removed by a single processing enzyme in one step.
The bc1-complex (EC 1.10.2.2.) from Triticum aestivum L. was purified by cytochrome-c affinity chromatography and gel filtration using either etiolated seedlings or wheat-germ extract as starting material. Sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis of the isolated enzyme revealed ten bands, which were analysed by immunoblotting and direct amino-acid sequencing. The enzyme from wheat is the first bc1-complex that is reported to contain four core proteins (55.5, 55.0, 51.5 and 51.0 kDa). In addition, the wheat bc1-complex comprises cytochrome b (35 kDa), cytochrome c1 (33 kDa) the "Rieske" iron-sulphur protein (25 kDa) and three small subunits < 15 kDa. This composition differs from the one reported in fungi, mammals and potato. Partial sequence determination of the large subunits suggests that the 55.5- and 55.0-kDa-proteins represent the beta-subunit of the general mitochondrial processing peptidase, and the 51.5- and 51.0-kDa proteins the alpha-subunit of this enzyme. The bc1-complex from wheat efficiently processes mitochondrial precursor proteins as shown in an in-vitro processing assay. In control experiments the isolated bc1-complexes from potato, yeast, Neurospora and beef, all purified by the same isolation procedure, were also tested for processing activity. Only the protein complexes from plants contain the general mitochondrial processing peptidase. The composition of the wheat bc1-complex sheds new light on the co-evolution of the processing peptidase and the middle segment of the respiratory chain.
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