Plant Physiology 94:1316-1322 (1990)
© 1990 American Society of Plant Biologists
Metabolism and Enzymology
Photorespiratory Mutants of the Mitochondrial Conversion of Glycine to Serine 1
Ray D. Blackwell,
Alan J. S. Murray2 and
Peter J. Lea
Division of Biological Sciences, Institute of Environmental and Biological Sciences, Lancaster University, Lancaster, LA1 4YQ, United Kingdom
Two mutants of barley (Hordeum vulgare L.), LaPr 85/55 and LaPr 87/30, have been isolated that accumulate glycine, with a concomitant reduction in the aminodonors glutamate and alanine, when transferred to air. Studies have shown that these plants have wild-type levels of serine transhydroxymethylase (EC 2.1.2.1) activity. When supplied 14CO2, 48 and 66% of the supplied carbon was retained as glycine in LaPr 85/55 and LaPr 87/30, respectively, compared with a value of 11% for the wild type. In the short-term, both mutant plants are unable to metabolize [14C] glycine, but when fed the isotope for 2 hours, LaPr 85/55 was able to metabolize most (70%) of the supplied carbon into sugars with only 15% remaining in glycine. LaPr 87/30, however, was unable to metabolize more than 4% of the supplied carbon into sugars even after 2 hours. Measurement of glycine decarboxylase (EC 2.1.2.10) activity via the glycine-bicarbonate exchange reaction showed LaPr 85/55 to have approximately 70% wild-type activity with LaPr 87/30 having only 14% wild-type activity. The approximation of LaPr 85/55 to wild-type activities was maintained for 14CO2 release from [14C]glycine feeding and ammonia accumulation in the presence of methionine sulphoximine with the equivalent rates for LaPr 87/30 being less than 40% and 10%, respectively. CO2 fixation rates for the mutants fell to between 35 and 40% of wild-type rates within 10 min of transfer to air. This was shown to be partly due to a run down of aminodonors, because when 40 millimolar serine was supplied through the xylem stream these rates recovered for both mutants to 70% of the wild-type rate. These data suggested a mutation in a glycine transport system for LaPr 85/55 and in the proteins of glycine decarboxylase for LaPr 87/30. Western blotting with antisera to the P, H, T, and L proteins of glycine decarboxylase showed cross-reaction against all four proteins for LaPr 85/55 but little cross-reaction against P or H protein for LaPr 87/30, reaffirming the possibility of a transport mutation in LaPr 85/55. We also suggest that genes for P and H proteins could be either coordinately regulated or that one protein is undetectable or unstable in the absence of the other.
2 Current address: William Grant and Sons Ltd., The Distillery, Girvan, Ayrshire, KA26 9PT, U.K.
1 Supported by grants from the Agricultural and Food Research Council (grant No. AG 89/33 and PG 89/502).
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