Galactoglycerolipids, in which galactose is bound at the glycerol sn-3 position in O-glycosidic linkage to diacylglycerol, are abundant in plants and photosynthetic bacteria, where they constitute the bulk of the polar lipids of the photosynthetic membranes. Galactoglycerolipid biosynthesis in plants is highly compartmentalized involving enzymes at the endoplasmic reticulum and the two chloroplast envelopes. This peculiar organization requires extensive trafficking of lipid precursors. It is now increasingly apparent that there are three different sets of lipid galactosyltransferases capable of galactoglycerolipid biosynthesis in the model plant Arabidopsis. Two enzymes, MGD1 and DGD1, provide the bulk of galactoglycerolipids in the chloroplast and in photosynthetic tissues in general. Under phosphate-limited growth conditions and in non-photosynthetic tissues MGD2/3 and DGD2 are highly active. Moreover, galactoglycerolipids produced by this second pathway are often found in extraplastidic membranes. Although these galactosyltransferases use UDP-Gal as the galactose donor, a third pathway involves a processive enzyme, which transfers galactose from one galactolipid to another.In thinking about membrane lipids, phosphoglycerolipids often come to mind first as these are the primary building blocks of many eukaryotic and prokaryotic cell membranes. However, in plant cells the fraction of phosphoglycerolipids is relatively small. Instead, non-phosphorous galactoglycerolipids are predominant, representing up to 50% of polar lipids in extracts of photosynthetic tissues (1). Of the different galactolipids reported for plants (2), most abundant are the monogalactosyldiacylglycerol (MGDG) 1 and digalactosyldiacylglycerol (DGDG) lipids (cf. Fig. 1 for structures). In addition, under certain circumstances, e.g. in the Arabidopsis tgd1 mutant (3), plants can synthesize higher galactosylated forms of galactoglycerolipids. Although most of these lipids are restricted to the chloroplast membranes in plants, it has become increasingly apparent that galactoglycerolipids are present in extraplastidic membranes in non-photosynthetic tissues or under phosphate-limited growth conditions (4). Current evidence suggests that galactoglycerolipids are exclusively synthesized by enzymes associated with the two chloroplast envelopes in plants, a fact that requires the transfer of lipid precursors to, between, and through the envelopes as well as that of galactoglycerolipids from the envelopes to the photosynthetic membranes inside the chloroplast (thylakoids) and to extraplastidic membranes (5). The three classes of glycosyltransferases ( Fig. 1) involved in galactoglycerolipid biosynthesis in plants and their respective functions and interactions in vivo will be discussed.
Monogalactosyldiacylglycerol SynthasesThe most abundant plant galactoglycerolipid, 1-MGDG, is synthesized in plants by the action of a galactosyltransferase (MGDG synthase, EC 2.4.1.46) catalyzing the transfer of a galactosyl residue from UDP-1␣-Gal to the sn-3-posit...