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Plant Physiology 88:1182-1185 (1988)
© 1988 American Society of Plant Biologists

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Metabolism and Enzymology

Subcellular Location of NADPH-Dependent Hydroxypyruvate Reductase Activity in Leaf Protoplasts of Pisum sativum L. and Its Role in Photorespiratory Metabolism 1

Leszek A. Kleczkowski2, Curtis V. Givan, Jacqueline M. Hodgson and Douglas D. Randall

Department of Biology, Ridley Building, University of Newcastle upon Tyne, England, U.K., Biochemistry Department, University of Missouri-Columbia, Schweitzer Hall, Columbia, Missouri 65211

Protoplasts purified from pea (Pisum sativum L.) leaves were lysed and fractionated to assess the subcellular distribution of NADPH-dependent hydroxypyruvate reductase (NADPH-HPR) activity. Rate-zonal centrifugation and sucrose-gradient experiments demonstrated that most (about 70%) of the NADPH-HPR activity was located in the supernatant or cytosol fraction. Detectable, but relatively minor activities were associated with the chloroplast fraction (up to 10% on a chlorophyll basis when compared to the lysate) and with peroxisomes. The minor NADPH-HPR activity in the peroxisomes could be fully accounted for by the secondary NADPH-dependent activity of NADH-dependent HPR. The subcellular distribution of NADPH-HPR followed closely that previously determined for NADPH-dependent glyoxylate reductase (NADPH-GR), an enzyme localized predominantly in the cytosol of pea leaf protoplasts (CV Givan et al. 1988 J Plant Physiol 132: 593-599). Low activities of both NADPH-HPR and NADPH-GR were also found in purified chloroplasts prepared by mechanical homogenization of Pisum and Spinacia leaves. In pea and spinach chloroplasts, rates of both NADPH-HPR and NADPH-GR were lower than the activity of the NADH-dependent GR. The results are discussed in relation to a possible role for NADPH-HPR in the oxidative carbon pathway of photorespiration. Both NADPH-HPR and the GRs could function as auxiliary reactions to photorespiration, utilizing hydroxypyruvate and/or glyoxylate `leaked' or otherwise exported from peroxisomes. NADPH-HPR function might be especially significant under conditions of limiting NADH supply to peroxisomes, with extraperoxisomal reduced pyridine nucleotide acting as the reductant.


2 Permanent address: Institute of Plant Biology, Warsaw Agricultural University, Rakowiecka 26/30, 02-528, Warsaw, Poland.

1 Supported by research grant No. GR/E 34995 from the Science and Engineering Research Council, U.K., and by grants from the British Council and the United States National Science Foundation (grant No. DMB 8506473). This is Journal Report No. 10477 from the Missouri Agricultural Experiment Station.




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S. Timm, A. Nunes-Nesi, T. Parnik, K. Morgenthal, S. Wienkoop, O. Keerberg, W. Weckwerth, L. A. Kleczkowski, A. R. Fernie, and H. Bauwe
A Cytosolic Pathway for the Conversion of Hydroxypyruvate to Glycerate during Photorespiration in Arabidopsis
PLANT CELL, October 1, 2008; 20(10): 2848 - 2859.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]




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