|
|
||||||||
|
Plant Physiol. (1998) 116: 1451-1460
Polypeptides of the Maize Amyloplast Stroma1
| |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| |
ABSTRACT |
|---|
|
|
|---|
In the developing endosperm of monocotyledonous plants, starch granules are synthesized and deposited within the amyloplast. A soluble stromal fraction was isolated from amyloplasts of immature maize (Zea mays L.) endosperm and analyzed for enzyme activities and polypeptide content. Specific activities of starch synthase and starch-branching enzyme (SBE), but not the cytosolic marker alcohol dehydrogenase, were strongly enhanced in soluble amyloplast stromal fractions relative to soluble extracts obtained from homogenized kernels or endosperms. Immunoblot analysis demonstrated that starch synthase I, SBEIIb, and sugary1, the putative starch-debranching enzyme, were each highly enriched in the amyloplast stroma, providing direct evidence for the localization of starch-biosynthetic enzymes within this compartment. Analysis of maize mutants shows the deficiency of the 85-kD SBEIIb polypeptide in the stroma of amylose extender cultivars and that the dull mutant lacks a >220-kD stromal polypeptide. The stromal fraction is distinguished by differential enrichment of a characteristic group of previously undocumented polypeptides. N-terminal sequence analysis revealed that an abundant 81-kD stromal polypeptide is a member of the Hsp70 family of stress-related proteins. Moreover, the 81-kD stromal polypeptide is strongly recognized by antibodies specific for an Hsp70 of the chloroplast stroma. These findings are discussed in light of implications for the correct folding and assembly of soluble, partially soluble, and granule-bound starch-biosynthetic enzymes during import into the amyloplast.
Starch is the major storage carbohydrate of higher plants,
consisting of 25% amylose and 75% amylopectin in wild-type maize (Zea mays L.). The enzymes AGP, SS, SBE, and SU1 catalyze
substrate formation, chain elongation, and branch-point insertion and
trimming, respectively, as starch granules enlarge and develop. Various isoforms of these enzymes have been purified, cloned, and expressed in
bacterial systems (Preiss, 1991 In nonphotosynthetic sink tissue, starch granules are contained within
a specialized plastid known as the amyloplast (Lopes and Larkins, 1993 Morphologically, the amyloplast comprises three distinct components,
the starch granule, the envelope, and the soluble compartment or
stroma. Each of these components is characterized by a unique set of
activities and polypeptides. In starch granules from common wild-type
maize, the most abundant granule-associated polypeptide, the 60-kD
GBSSI (waxy protein), is exclusively insoluble. In contrast, SSI and
SBEIIb exist as both soluble and granule-associated forms (Mu-Forster
et al., 1996 The inability to analyze amyloplast stromal polypeptides was largely
due to fragility of the amyloplast envelope. However, amyloplast-isolation methods based on direct, gentle mechanical release
from isolated endosperms (Denyer et al., 1996 The objective of this study was to identify and characterize
polypeptides of the maize amyloplast stroma. Our working hypothesis is
based on the prediction that the stroma contains a unique set of
polypeptides, many of which are involved in starch granule formation.
To achieve this objective, our strategy was to examine the enrichment
of polypeptides specifically localized in the soluble stromal fraction.
This identification is based on differential enrichment of polypeptides
present in stromal fractions upon comparison with polypeptides of
soluble extracts obtained from whole endosperm. Upon normalization for
protein, polypeptides specifically localized in the amyloplast stroma
are predicted to appear as differentially prominent bands in the
soluble stromal fractions.
This approach yielded a well-defined group of polypeptides that are
prominently displayed in the amyloplast stromal fractions. Through the
combined use of highly specific antibodies and direct protein
sequencing, we demonstrate that SSI, SBEIIb, and SU1 are each localized
in the amyloplast stroma. Moreover, the stroma of maize contains a
novel 81-kD member of the Hsp70 family of stress-related proteins. This
81-kD Hsc70 is constitutively expressed and is therefore classified and
referred to as an Hsc. Hsp70s function as molecular chaperones in a
wide range of organisms (Hendrick and Hartl, 1993 Preparation of Amyloplast Stromal Fractions
![]()
INTRODUCTION
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Methods
Results
Discussion
References
; Martin and Smith, 1995
; Wasserman et
al., 1995
), but the continuing emergence of new activities and isoforms
in a range of species indicates that our understanding of the
starch-biosynthetic pathway is far from complete. In addition, the
relative contribution of specific enzyme isoforms to granule formation
is regulated by factors such as subcellular localization and enzyme
solubility within the starch matrix.
;
Nelson and Pan, 1995
). Amyloplast-localized polypeptides are believed
to be synthesized in the cytosol and are targeted to the amyloplast
envelope by a transit peptide, which is proteolytically cleaved upon
translocation through the amyloplast envelope into the stroma (Gavel
and von Heijne, 1990
; Li et al., 1992
). For many years, it was believed
that AGP was localized in the amyloplast stroma (Echeverria et al.,
1985
; Miller and Chourey, 1995
). However, a recent study using maize
amyloplasts isolated by gentle mechanical release showed that AGP
activity is restricted largely to the cytosol (Denyer et al., 1996
). A more detailed understanding of the compartmentalization of enzymes among the cytosol, the amyloplast stroma, and the starch granule is
therefore vital for elucidating the mechanism of starch synthesis and
deposition in the developing endosperm.
). The amyloplast envelope from maize yields a complex set
of integral membrane proteins. Of these, polypeptides in the size range
of 39 to 44 kD have been implicated as isoforms of the putative
adenylate-translocator BT1 (Cao et al., 1995
; Sullivan and Kaneko,
1995
). In contrast to the starch granule and the amyloplast envelope,
the polypeptide composition of the amyloplast stroma has not been
reported. Moreover, the hypothesis that the soluble SSs, SBEs, and
ancillary polypeptides are localized within the stromal compartment of
the amyloplast has never been directly tested or proven by probing
stromal fractions with antibodies recognizing specific polypeptides.
) have now replaced
protoplast-based procedures (Echeverria et al., 1985
), thereby
eliminating artifacts introduced by repeated centrifugations and use of
cell wall-hydrolytic enzyme preparations of unknown purity. Although
envelope fragility remains a major impediment to the use of uptake or
metabolic studies requiring extensive handling or centrifugation steps
(Echeverria et al., 1985
, 1988
), when physical handling is held to an
absolute minimum, amyloplast preparations free of nonplastidial markers
are readily obtained from immature (12-15 DAP) tissue.
; Hartl and Martin,
1995
; Boston et al., 1996
; Miernyk, 1997
). The implications of
molecular chaperones of the Hsp70 class within the maize amyloplast
stroma are discussed in relation to protein import into the amyloplast
and the folding of starch-biosynthetic enzymes.
![]()
MATERIALS AND METHODS
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Methods
Results
Discussion
References
80°C.
), with BSA omitted from the isolation medium. Omission of BSA was
necessary to conduct protein assays required for calculation of
specific activities and for normalization of protein levels for
SDS-PAGE. Ten grams of endosperm was obtained by manual dissection and
placed in a tilted Petri dish containing amyloplast-isolation medium
consisting of buffer B (0.8 m sorbitol, 1 mm
EDTA, 1 mm KCl, 2 mm MgCl2, 2 mm DTT, and 50 mm Hepes, pH 7.5) and incubated on ice for 30 min. A wide-bore pipette was used to slowly aspirate the
cloudy liquid to a 30-mL round-bottom centrifuge tube. Endosperms were
re-immersed in buffer B and sliced in half with a razor blade. The
resultant extracts were transferred to centrifuge tubes using pipettes
with the tips covered with Miracloth to filter out large particles.
This procedure was repeated until the endosperms became soft. A yellow
amyloplast-enriched pellet was recovered by centrifugation at
36g for 10 min. Amyloplasts were then resuspended in 1 mL of buffer A and stored at
80°C. Immediately before use, amyloplasts were thawed in the presence of 0.3% Triton X-100. A clear, soluble stromal fraction was recovered by centrifugation at 15,000g
for 30 min.
Starch Granule Isolation
Starch granules were isolated by low-speed centrifugation as described previously (Mu et al., 1994
1 dry weight granule). Mixtures were then
boiled for 15 min and cooled to room temperature, and the annealed
starch was removed by centrifugation at 13,000g for 15 min.
Extracted proteins were analyzed by SDS-PAGE using 9 to 18% gradient
gels (Porzio and Pearson, 1976Enzyme Assays
SS activity was assayed as previously described (Pollock and Preiss, 1980
1 glycogen, 5 mm EDTA, 0.5 mg
mL
1 BSA, 0.5 m sodium citrate, and
0.7 mm ADP-[14C]Glc (0.16 µCi
mmol
1), 100 mm Bicine/NaOH, pH 8.0. Mixtures were incubated for 30 min at 30°C, and reactions were
terminated by spotting aliquots directly onto GF/A glass fiber filters
under a heat lamp. Filters were washed with 70% ethanol to remove
unincorporated material and counted. One unit of activity represents
the incorporation of 1 nmol Glc min
1 into
ethanol-insoluble product.
). Assay mixtures of 200 µL contained 50 mm [14C]Glc-1-P (1.3 µCi
mmol
1), 1 mm AMP, 1.2 units of
phosphorylase a (Sigma), 0.1 m sodium citrate,
pH 7.0, and enzyme. Mixtures were incubated at 30°C for 30 min and
reactions were terminated by heating at 100°C for 2 min. Radiolabeled
reaction products were recovered by alcohol precipitation (2 mL of 75%
[v/v] methanol and 1% [w/v] KCl), followed by centrifugation at
1600g for 3 min. Products were precipitated twice and
radioactivity was determined by liquid-scintillation counting. A unit
of activity is expressed as 1 µmol Glc incorporated into
-d-glucan min
1.
). One unit of activity is defined as the amount of
enzyme required to produce 1 µmol Glc-1-P
min
1 at 37°C.
).
Analytical Procedures
Soluble protein was analyzed by dye binding with Coomassie blue (Bradford, 1976| |
RESULTS |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Detergent-Assisted Permeabilization of the Amyloplast Envelope
To ensure the isolation of amyloplasts substantially free of cytosolic contamination, it was important to utilize the gentle release method originally developed for wheat (Tetlow et al., 1993
|
Cytosolic and Stromal Enzyme Activities

View larger version (32K):
[in a new window]
Figure 2.
Enrichment of SS and SBE in amyloplast stromal
extracts. Specific activities of SS (A; nanomoles per minute per
milligram), SBE (B; micromoles per minute per milligram), ADH, the
cytosolic marker enzyme (C; micromoles per minute per milligram), and
AGP assayed with 10 mm 3-phosphoglyceric acid (D;
micromoles per minute per milligram). Solid and striped bars represent
tissue harvested at 13 and 15 DAP, respectively. Values are
representative of two independent isolations.
1 mg
1.
This exceeds the values of 200 nmol min
1
mg
1 typically attained after extracts from
homogenized kernels or endosperms are subjected to ammonium sulfate
precipitation and ion-exchange chromatography (Pollock and Preiss,
1980
; Mu et al., 1994
).
Immunoblot Analysis of Stromal Polypeptides
Differentially Enriched Stromal Polypeptides
). Furthermore, if cytosolic activities were suppressed because of
the presence of an inhibitor, the immunoblots showing dramatic
enrichments of the SS, SBE, and SU1 polypeptides in the stromal
fraction (Fig. 3) would not correlate
with the activity data.

View larger version (55K):
[in a new window]
Figure 3.
Immunoblots of endosperm and amyloplast stromal
extracts probed with ADH, SSI, SBEIIb, and SU1 antibodies. SDS gels
were run with amyloplast stromal fractions (Am), soluble extracts from whole endosperm (En), or SDS extracts corresponding to 2.5 mg of
isolated starch granules (Gr). Immunoblots were probed with antibodies
recognizing ADH (A), SSI (B), SBEIIb (C), and SU1 (D). The blots shown
in A and D were visualized by electrochemiluminescence. The blots shown
in B and C were visualized colorimetrically. Each lane contained 5 µg
of protein.
). Moreover, immunoblot analysis conducted
using ADH antibodies (Good and Crosby, 1989
) shows that the ADH
polypeptide was barely detected in the stromal fraction (Fig. 3A). The
partitioning of ADH toward the whole endosperm fraction supports the
activity data (Fig. 2) and provides direct evidence that we are
characterizing stroma and not a random set of endosperm polypeptides.
Previous amyloplast studies have not used ADH antibodies to demonstrate
the relative purity of stromal fractions.
). Total activity recoveries in the
stromal fraction relative to soluble endosperm extracts were 0.3% for
ADH and 4 to 5% for SS and SBE, which agrees with yields previously
reported (Denyer et al., 1996
). The low yields of SS and SBE are
attributed to the incomplete nature of amyloplast release from
endosperms during the isolation procedure.

View larger version (95K):
[in a new window]
Figure 4.
Immunoblots of endosperm and amyloplast stromal
extracts probed with SH2 and BT2 antibodies. SDS gels were run with
amyloplast stromal fractions (Am) or soluble extracts from whole
endosperm (En). Immunoblots were probed with antibodies recognizing
SH2, the AGP large subunit, or BT2, the AGP small subunit, as
indicated. Each lane contained 5 µg of protein.

View larger version (89K):
[in a new window]
Figure 5.
Protein composition of soluble extracts from whole
endosperm and isolated amyloplasts. A, Coomassie blue-stained gel with 15 µg of protein per lane. B, Silver-stained gel with 10 µg of protein per lane. Shown are the soluble extracts from whole ground endosperm (En) and the amyloplast stromal fraction (Am). Marks indicate
stromal proteins in descending order of apparent molecular mass: >220,
215, 180, 134, 112, 107, 85, 81, and 76 kD.
; Fig. 3D).
Similar to SSI and SBEIIb, SU1 is highly concentrated in the amyloplast
stroma. We also probed polypeptide extracts of starch granules isolated
directly from the amyloplasts. SSI and SBEIIb were both present in SDS
extracts of the granules; however, SU1 was detected in the soluble
fraction only (Fig. 3D). Therefore, although SSI and SBEIIb both
possess a propensity to associate with the starch granule (Mu-Forster
et al., 1996
), SU1 is soluble.
). These blots (Fig. 4) show that the large and
small AGP subunits are distributed between the cytosol and the
amyloplast stroma. However, in contrast to SSI, SBEIIb, and SU1, signal
intensities for both SH2 and BT2 were weighted toward the soluble whole
endosperm fraction. The faster-migrating BT2 signal at 50 kD in the
stromal fraction is consistent with a uniquely compartmentalized
stromal form (Denyer et al., 1996
). The SH2 antibody also recognized
multiple species. One immunoreactive species was detected in both
samples, and a second species of lower molecular mass was detected in
the soluble endosperm extract only. The occurrence of faster-migrating
species of BT2 in the amyloplast stroma and SH2 in the soluble
endosperm fraction can be interpreted as distinctly compartmentalized
isoforms or could represent products of endogenous proteolytic activity
(Plaxton and Preiss, 1987
; Hannah et al., 1995
).
), the 76-kD SSI was not readily
discernible in the soluble extracts obtained from whole endosperm.
A Maize Amyloplast Stromal Hsc70
). In W64A the N-terminal sequence of the mature protein
was reported to begin with five Ala residues
(Ala-Ala-Ala-Ala-Ala-Arg-Lys-Ala-Val-Met-Val-Pro) beginning at position
53 of the predicted sequence (Fisher et al., 1993
). This difference
between the two mature proteins may be varietal in nature.

View larger version (20K):
[in a new window]
Figure 6.
N-terminal sequences of SBEIIb (85 kD; A) and the
stromal Hsc70 (81 kD; B). Polypeptides were excised from SDS gels and
electropurified as previously described (Mu-Forster et al., 1996
). The
dash at position 16 indicates an uncertain residue tentatively
identified as an Arg residue. Published sequences were as follows:
SBEIIb beginning at residue 53 of the predicted sequence (Fisher et
al., 1993
); chloroplast Hsp70 from Pisum sativum
(Marshall and Keegstra, 1992
); chloroplast Hsp70 from
Curcurbita sp. (Tsugeki and Nishimura, 1993
);
chromoplast Hsp70 from Narcissus pseudonarcissus (Bonk et al., 1996
); mitochondrial SSC1, an Hsp70 analog from
Saccharomyces cerevisiae (Craig et al., 1989
); dnaK, an
Hsp70 analog from E. coli (Bardwell and Craig, 1984
);
and cytosolic Hsp70 from Z. mays endosperm (Rochester et
al., 1986
).
Analysis of Stroma from Mutant Cultivars
Granule-Associated Proteins Are Not Selectively Solubilized by
0.3% Triton X-100
The amyloplast is one of the most vital and yet least- understood
organelles in starch-bearing crops. Therefore, detailed knowledge of
the proteins that constitute the amyloplast envelope, the starch
granule, and the stroma is essential to gain a complete understanding
of starch deposition in developing grains. This study demonstrates that
the amyloplast stroma provides a concentrated source of
starch-biosynthetic enzymes and ancillary proteins, establishing a
means to investigate the structure and function of individual stromal
polypeptides. The utility of this approach was validated by positive
identification of an amyloplast-localized Hsc70 of 81 kD.
Received October 9, 1997;
accepted December 3, 1997.
Abbreviations:
ADH, alcohol dehydrogenase.
AGP, ADP-Glc
pyrophosphorylase.
BT, brittle mutant.
DAP, days after pollination.
GBSSI, granule-bound starch synthase I.
Hsc, heat-shock cognate.
Hsp, heat-shock protein.
SBE, starch-branching enzyme.
SH, shrunken mutant.
SS, starch synthase.
SU1, sugary1 mutant, the starch-debranching
enzyme.
Maize and initial amyloplast isolates were provided by Francie
Dunlap, Ed Wilhelm, and Peter Keeling (ExSeed Genetics). We thank
Rebecca S. Boston, Maureen Clancy, Alan Good, L. Curtis Hannah, Martha
James, Thomas Leustek, Jan S. Miernyk, and Afroza Rahman for generously
providing antibodies; Bing-Yuan Chen (Plant Science Department, Rutgers
University) for assistance with AGP assays; and George M. Carman for
helpful advice. Dave Lear and Joe Florentine assisted with greenhouse
work.
Amir-Shapira D,
Leustek T,
Dalie B,
Weissbach H,
Brot N
(1990)
Hsp70 proteins, similar to Escherichia coli Dnak, in chloroplasts and mitochondria of Euglena gracilis.
Proc Natl Acad Sci USA
87:
1749-1752
Bardwell JCA,
Craig EA
(1984)
Major heat shock gene of Drosophila and the Escherichia coli heat-inducible dnaK gene are homologous.
Proc Natl Acad Sci USA
1282:
848-852
Bonk M,
Tadros M,
Vandekerckhove J,
Al-Babili S,
Beyer P
(1996)
Purification and characterization of chaperonin 60 and heat-shock protein 70 from chromoplasts of Narcissus pseudonarcissus.
Plant Physiol
111:
931-939
[Abstract]
Boston RS,
Viitanen PV,
Vierling E
(1996)
Molecular chaperones and protein folding in plants.
Plant Mol Biol
32:
191-222
[CrossRef][ISI][Medline]
Boyer CD,
Preiss J
(1981)
Evidence for independent genetic control of the multiple forms of maize endosperm branching enzymes and starch synthases.
Plant Physiol
67:
1141-1145
Bradford MM
(1976)
A rapid and sensitive method for the quantitation of microgram quantities of protein using the principles of protein dye-binding.
Anal Biochem
72:
248-254
[CrossRef][ISI][Medline]
Cao H,
Sullivan TD,
Boyer CD,
Shannon JC
(1995)
Bt1, a structural gene for the major 39-44 kDa amyloplast membrane polypeptides.
Physiol Plant
95:
176-186
[CrossRef]
Cohen Y,
Yalovsky S,
Nechushtai R
(1995)
Integration and assembly of photosynthetic protein complexes in chloroplast thylakoid membranes.
Biochim Biophys Acta
1241:
1-30
[Medline]
Craig EA,
Kramer J,
Shilling J,
Werner-Washburne M,
Holmes S,
Kosic-Smithers J,
Nicolet CM
(1989)
SSC1, an essential member of the yeast HSP70 multigene family encodes a mitochondrial protein.
Mol Cell Biol
9:
3000-3008
Dang PL,
Boyer CD
(1988)
Maize leaf and kernel starch synthases and starch branching enzymes.
Phytochemistry
27:
1255-1259
[CrossRef]
Denyer K,
Dunlap F,
Thorbjornsen T,
Keeling P,
Smith AM
(1996)
The major form of ADP-glucose pyrophosphorylase in maize (Zea mays L.) endosperm is extra-plastidial.
Plant Physiol
112:
779-785
[Abstract]
Denyer K,
Sidebottom C,
Hylton CM,
Smith AM
(1993)
Soluble isoforms of starch synthase and starch-branching enzyme also occur within starch granules in developing pea embryos.
Plant J
4:
191-198
[CrossRef][Medline]
Echeverria E,
Boyer C,
Liu KC,
Shannon J
(1985)
Isolation of amyloplasts from developing maize endosperm.
Plant Physiol
77:
513-519
Echeverria E,
Boyer CD,
Thomas PA,
Liu KC,
Shannon JC
(1988)
Enzyme activities associated with maize kernel amyloplasts.
Plant Physiol
86:
786-792
Fisher DK,
Boyer CD,
Hannah LC
(1993)
Starch branching enzyme II from maize endosperm.
Plant Physiol
102:
1045-1046
[CrossRef][ISI][Medline]
Fontes EB,
Shank BB,
Wrobl RL,
Moose SP,
Obrian GR,
Wurtzel ET,
Boston RS
(1991)
Characterization of an immunoglobulin binding protein homolog in the maize floury-2 endosperm mutant.
Plant Cell
3:
483-496
Gavel Y,
von Heijne G
(1990)
A conserved cleavage-site motif in chloroplast transit peptides.
FEBS Lett
261:
455-458
[CrossRef][ISI][Medline]
Giroux MJ,
Hannah LC
(1994)
ADP-glucose pyrophosphorylase in shrunken-2 and brittle-2 mutants of maize.
Mol Gen Genet
243:
400-408
[ISI][Medline]
Glick BS
(1995)
Can Hsp70 proteins act as force-generating motors?
Cell
90:
11-14
Good AG,
Crosby WL
(1989)
Induction alcohol dehydrogenase and lactate dehydrogenase in hypoxically induced barley.
Plant Physiol
90:
860-866
Hannah LC, Baier J, Carren J, Giroux M (1995) 3-Phosphoglyceric
acid activation of maize endosperm ADP-Glc pyrophosphorylase following
proteolytic cleavage of the SH2 or BT2 subunits. In HG
Pontis, GL Salerno, EJ Echeverria, eds, Sucrose Metabolism,
Biochemistry, Physiology and Molecular Biology. American Society of
Plant Physiologists, Rockville, MD, pp 72-79
Hartl FU,
Martin J
(1995)
Molecular chaperones in cellular protein folding.
Curr Opin Struct Biol
5:
92-102
[CrossRef][ISI][Medline]
Hawker JS,
Ozbun JL,
Ozaki H,
Greenberg E,
Preiss J
(1974)
Interaction of spinach leaf adenosine diphosphate glucose
Hendrick JP,
Hartl FU
(1993)
Molecular chaperone functions of heat-shock proteins.
Annu Rev Biochem
62:
349-384
[CrossRef][ISI][Medline]
James MG,
Robertson DS,
Myers AM
(1995)
Characterization of the maize gene sugary1, a determinant of starch composition in kernels.
Plant Cell
7:
417-429
[Abstract]
Laemmli UK
(1970)
Cleavage of structural proteins during the assembly of the head of bacteriophage T4.
Nature
227:
680-685
[CrossRef][Medline]
Li HM,
Sullivan TD,
Keegstra K
(1992)
Information for targeting to the chloroplastic inner envelope membrane is contained in the mature region of the maize Bt1-encoded protein.
J Biol Chem
267:
18999-19004
Lopes MA,
Larkins BA
(1993)
Endosperm origin, development, and function.
Plant Cell
5:
1383-1389
Macdonald FD,
Preiss J
(1985)
Partial purification and characterization of granule-bound starch synthases from normal and waxy maize.
Plant Physiol
78:
849-852
Marshall J,
Keegstra K
(1992)
Isolation and characterization of a cDNA clone encoding the major Hsp70 of the pea chloroplastic stroma.
Plant Physiol
100:
1048-1054
Martin C,
Smith AM
(1995)
Starch biosynthesis.
Plant Cell
7:
971-985
[CrossRef][ISI][Medline]
Miernyk JA
(1997)
The 70 kDa stress-related proteins as molecular chaperones.
Trends Plant Sci
2:
180-187
[CrossRef]
Miller ME,
Chourey PS
(1995)
Intracellular immunolocalization of ADPglucose pyrophosphorylase in developing endosperm cells of maize (Zea mays L.).
Planta
197:
522-527
Mu C,
Harn C,
Ko YT,
Singletary GW,
Keeling PL,
Wasserman BP
(1994)
Association of a 76 kDa polypeptide with soluble starch synthase I activity in maize (cv73) endosperm.
Plant J
6:
151-159
[CrossRef]
Mu-Forster C,
Huang R,
Powers JR,
Harriman RW,
Knight M,
Singletary GW,
Keeling PL,
Wasserman BP
(1996)
Physical association of starch biosynthetic enzymes with starch granules of maize endosperm. Granule-associated forms of starch synthase I and starch branching enzyme II.
Plant Physiol
111:
821-829
[Abstract]
Nelson O,
Pan D
(1995)
Starch synthesis in maize endosperms.
Annu Rev Plant Physiol Mol Biol
46:
475-496
[CrossRef][ISI]
Plaxton WC,
Preiss J
(1987)
Purification and properties of nonproteolytic degraded ADPglucose pyrophosphorylase from maize endosperm.
Plant Physiol
83:
105-112
Pollock C,
Preiss J
(1980)
The citrate-stimulated starch synthase of starchy maize kernels: purification and properties.
Arch Biochem Biophys
204:
578-588
[CrossRef][Medline]
Porzio MA,
Pearson AM
(1976)
Improved resolution of myofibrillar proteins with sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis.
Biochim Biophys Acta
490:
27-34
Preiss J
(1991)
Biology and molecular biology of starch synthesis and its regulation.
Oxf Surv Plant Mol Cell Biol
7:
59-114
Rahman S,
Kosar Hashemi B,
Samuel MS,
Hill A,
Abbott DC,
Skeritt JH,
Preiss J,
Appels R,
Morell MK
(1995)
The major proteins of wheat endosperm starch granules.
Aust J Plant Physiol
22:
793-803
Rochester DE,
Winer JA,
Shah DM
(1986)
The structure and expression of maize genes encoding the major heat shock protein, hsp70.
EMBO J
5:
451-458
[ISI][Medline]
Schiefer S,
Lee EYC,
Whelan WJ
(1973)
Multiple forms of starch synthetase in maize varieties as revealed by disc-gel electrophoresis and activity staining.
FEBS Lett
30:
129-132
[Medline]
Sullivan TD,
Kaneko Y
(1995)
The maize brittle1 gene encodes amyloplast membrane polypeptides.
Planta
196:
477-484
[ISI][Medline]
Tetlow IJ,
Blessett KJ,
Emes MJ
(1993)
A rapid method for the isolation of purified amyloplasts from wheat endosperm.
Planta
189:
597-600
[ISI]
Tsugeki R,
Nishimura M
(1993)
Interaction of homologues of Hsp70 and Cpn60 with ferredoxin-NADP+ reductase upon import into chloroplasts.
FEBS Lett
320:
198-202
[CrossRef][ISI][Medline]
Vallee BL,
Hoch FL
(1955)
Zinc, a component of yeast alcohol dehydrogenase.
Proc Natl Acad Sci USA
41:
327-338
Wang H,
Goffreda M,
Leustek T
(1993)
Characteristics of an Hsp70 homolog localized in higher plant chloroplasts that is similar to DnaK, the Hsp70 of prokaryotes.
Plant Physiol
102:
843-850
[Abstract]
Wasserman BP,
Harn C,
Mu-Forster C,
Huang R
(1995)
Progress toward genetically modified starches.
Cereal Foods World
40:
810-817
; Fig. 7). As
with the previous experiments, normalized soluble extracts from whole
endosperm and amyloplasts were compared. Controls consisted of an Hsp70 preparation from E. gracilis (Amir-Shapira et
al., 1990
) and the purified stromal 81-kD polypeptide. The blot shows
that the antibodies strongly recognized the 81-kD stromal polypeptide
(Fig. 7). Consistent with SSI and SBEIIb, this polypeptide is enriched
within the stromal fraction. The antibodies also detected an
immunoreactive species at 70 kD, which migrates at the expected mass of
a known endosperm cytosolic form of Hsp70 from maize endosperm
(Rochester et al., 1986
). Antibodies to BiP, the Hsp localized in the
lumen of the ER (Fontes et al., 1991
), did not recognize the stromal
81-kD Hsc70 polypeptide (not shown).

View larger version (36K):
[in a new window]
Figure 7.
Immunoblots of endosperm and amyloplast stromal
extracts probed with chloroplast Hsp70 antibody. Lane 1, Hsp70
preparation containing two closely migrating Hsp70 proteins purified
from E. gracilis (Amir-Shapira et al., 1990
; 0.1 µg);
lane 2, soluble extract from whole endosperm (En; 30 µg); lane 3, amyloplast stromal fraction (Am; 30 µg); and lane 4, purified maize
stromal 81-kD polypeptide (0.1 µg).
; Wang
et al., 1993
) and chromoplast (Bonk et al., 1996
). This work shows that
maize endosperm contains at least two distinct members of the Hsp70
family of stress-related proteins.
). Stroma from an amylose
extender mutant are clearly deficient in the 85-kD SBEIIb relative
to the isogenic parental line. Analysis of a dull mutant,
which contains reduced levels of SSII activity (Boyer and Preiss,
1981
), shows that a stromal protein of >220 kD is absent. This value
falls within the size range of SSII estimated from gel-filtration
profiles of partially purified enzyme (Mu et al., 1994
).

View larger version (68K):
[in a new window]
Figure 8.
Polypeptide profiles of amyloplast stroma of
amylose extender (ae) and
dull (du) mutants. Stroma are from an
Exs86 parental line (lane 1), an isogenic dull mutant
(lane 2), and an amylose extender mutant (lane 3). Each
lane contained 30 µg of protein.

View larger version (50K):
[in a new window]
Figure 9.
Effect of Triton X-100 on the extraction of
soluble polypeptides from suspensions of whole endosperms and isolated
amyloplasts. Lanes 1 and 2, Soluble fraction from whole endosperm;
lanes 3 and 4, soluble fraction from isolated amyloplasts. Soluble
extracts were prepared in buffer A in the presence (+) or absence (
)
of 0.3% Triton X-100. Each lane contained 25 µg of protein.
![]()
DISCUSSION
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Methods
Results
Discussion
References
) is compartmentalized within
the stroma. To further examine stromal fractions, two starch mutants
were compared with wild-type cultivars. Stromal fractions from the
amylose extender mutant were deficient in SBEIIb, whereas
the dull mutant was lacking in a polypeptide of >220 kD.
This size range is generally consistent with the estimated mass of
SSII, which was estimated at 180 kD by gel-filtration chromatography
(Mu et al., 1994
).
). In
addition, the banding intensity of stromal Hsc70 paralleled that of SSI
and SBEIIb (Fig. 7), as would be expected for a protein localized in
the stroma. The antibodies also recognized the maize cytosolic Hsp70,
which migrates at 70 kD, albeit with lesser intensity. Consistent with
its localization within the cytosol, the 70-kD cytosolic Hsp70 was not
differentially elevated in soluble stromal fractions.
; Bonk et al., 1996
); however, to our knowledge, until
now amyloplastic Hsps had not been identified. The N-terminal sequence
of the maize stromal 81-kD Hsc70 bears more similarity to the
plastidial and prokaryotic Hsp70s than to the N terminus of the 70-kD
maize cytosolic Hsp70 (Fig. 6). The 81-kD maize stromal Hsc70 appears
to be constitutively expressed, which would classify this protein as an
Hsc (Miernyk, 1997
). The finding of stromal Hsp70s would help to
explain the process of polypeptide translocation across the amyloplast
envelope and protein folding within the stroma, as illustrated in the
working model (Fig. 10).

View larger version (37K):
[in a new window]
Figure 10.
Working model. A proposed mechanism for the
import and translocation of polypeptides into the amyloplast stromal
compartment illustrating a possible mode of action of the
81-kD Hsc70. This model proposes that chaperones
of the Hsp70 class facilitate the import and folding of enzymes that
are fully (I) or partially (II) soluble within the stroma. A proposed
function of the chaperones is to stabilize the partially soluble mature
proteins, delaying their insolubilization within the starch matrix. A
separate route for the import and deposition of fully insoluble (e.g.
GBSSI) amyloplast proteins (III) is shown.
; Hartl and Martin, 1995
; Boston et al., 1996
;
Miernyk, 1997
). Various mechanisms describing possible physical
associations between molecular chaperones and translocated polypeptides
have been proposed (Cohen et al., 1995
; Glick, 1995
; Boston et al.,
1996
).
; Rahman et al., 1995
; Mu-Forster et
al., 1996
). In maize endosperm, only 10 to 20% of SSI is soluble, the
remainder is intrinsically bound to the granule (Mu-Forster et al.,
1996
). In addition, activity gels of endosperm extracts reveal numerous
species of SS (Schiefer et al., 1973
). The existence of molecular
chaperones within the stroma could help to explain these observations.
We propose that stromal Hsc70 forms transient complexes with SSI and
other stromal enzymes. A complex would serve dual purposes. One would
be to provide correct folding. A second and equally important function would be to delay the entrapment of starch-synthetic enzymes within the
starch matrix, extending the functional lifetime of the soluble enzymes.
; Miller and Chourey, 1995
), but the fact that the in
vitro-translated SH2 and BT2 subunits were the same size as the
authentic endosperm subunits (Giroux and Hannah, 1994
) has raised
uncertainties concerning the true localization of AGP in maize
endosperm tissue. Accordingly, one study demonstrated that up to 95%
of AGP activity in maize cv UE95 was cytosolic (Denyer et al., 1996
).
Consistent with this notion, our results show no appreciable
enhancement of AGP-specific activity in the stroma (Fig. 2). However,
immunoblotting revealed significant levels of stromal SH2 and BT2
subunits at both 13 and 15 DAP (Fig. 4). Of the starch-synthetic
enzymes located in the amyloplast stroma, AGP is the only known
multimeric complex. The low stromal activity of AGP, therefore, may
reflect an inability of the individual subunits to properly fold and
assemble into a functionally active tetrameric complex following their
import into the stroma. In contrast to SSI and SBEIIb, AGP is
completely soluble and does not become embedded within the starch
granule (Mu-Forster et al., 1996
).
) that the
amyloplast contains the entire complement of proteins required for
chain elongation, branching, and processing of starch polymers.
Moreover, this organelle contains an abundant member of the Hsp70
family and additional polypeptides of unknown function (e.g. >220,
215, 180, 134, 112, and 107 kD) that may influence granule composition
and morphology (Lopes and Larkins, 1993
; Nelson and Pan, 1995
).
Knowledge of stromal polypeptide composition provides a potential basis
for establishing the identity of multiple SS isoforms (Pollock and
Preiss, 1980
; Macdonald and Preiss, 1985
; Mu et al., 1994
) and for
investigating the process by which starch-biosynthetic enzymes and
ancillary proteins assume their active conformations following import
across the amyloplast envelope.
1
Funding for this research was provided by the
U.S. Department of Agriculture National Research Initiative (no.
95-02531). Support from the Center for Advanced Food Technology, ExSeed
Genetics, and the New Jersey Agricultural Experiment Station is also
acknowledged.
![]()
FOOTNOTES
2
Present address: Monsanto Co., 800 North
Lindbergh Boulevard, St. Louis, MO 63198.
*
Corresponding author; e-mail wasserman{at}aesop.rutgers.edu; fax
1-732-932-6776.
![]()
ABBREVIATIONS
![]()
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
![]()
LITERATURE CITED
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Methods
Results
Discussion
References
-1,4-glucan,
-1,4-glucosyl transferase and
-1,4-glucan,
-1-4-glucan-6-glucosyl transferase in synthesis of branched
-glucan.
Arch Biochem Biophys
160:
530-551
[CrossRef][ISI][Medline]
Copyright Clearance Center: 0032-0889/98/116/1451/10
© 1998 American Society of Plant Physiologists
This article has been cited by other articles:
![]() |
H. Hussain, A. Mant, R. Seale, S. Zeeman, E. Hinchliffe, A. Edwards, C. Hylton, S. Bornemann, A. M. Smith, C. Martin, et al. Three Isoforms of Isoamylase Contribute Different Catalytic Properties for the Debranching of Potato Glucans PLANT CELL, January 1, 2003; 15(1): 133 - 149. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
Y. Yu, H. H. Mu, B. P. Wasserman, and G. M |