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First published online September 11, 2003; 10.1104/pp.103.024513 Plant Physiology 133:838-849 (2003) © 2003 American Society of Plant Biologists ADP-Glucose Pyrophosphorylase Is Activated by Posttranslational Redox-Modification in Response to Light and to Sugars in Leaves of Arabidopsis and Other Plant Species1,[w]Max Planck Institute of Molecular Plant Physiology, Am Mühlenberg 1, 14476 Golm, Germany
ADP-glucose pyrophosphorylase (AGPase) catalyzes the first committed reaction in the pathway of starch synthesis. It was recently shown that potato (Solanum tuberosum) tuber AGPase is subject to redox-dependent posttranslational regulation, involving formation of an intermolecular Cys bridge between the two catalytic subunits (AGPB) of the heterotetrameric holoenzyme (A. Tiessen, J.H.M. Hendriks, M. Stitt, A. Branscheid, Y. Gibon, E.M. Farré, P. Geigenberger [2002] Plant Cell 14: 21912213). We show here that AGPase is also subject to posttranslational regulation in leaves of pea (Pisum sativum), potato, and Arabidopsis. Conversion is accompanied by an increase in activity, which involves changes in the kinetic properties. Light and sugars act as inputs to trigger posttranslational regulation of AGPase in leaves. AGPB is rapidly converted from a dimer to a monomer when isolated chloroplasts are illuminated and from a monomer to a dimer when preilluminated leaves are darkened. AGPB is converted from a dimer to monomer when sucrose is supplied to leaves via the petiole in the dark. Conversion to monomeric form increases during the day as leaf sugars increase. This is enhanced in the starchless phosphoglucomutase mutant, which has higher sugar levels than wild-type Columbia-0. The extent of AGPB monomerization correlates with leaf sugar levels, and at a given sugar content, is higher in the light than the dark. This novel posttranslational regulation mechanism will allow starch synthesis to be regulated in response to light and sugar levels in the leaf. It complements the well-characterized regulation network that coordinates fluxes of metabolites with the recycling of phosphate during photosynthetic carbon fixation and sucrose synthesis.
During photosynthesis, triose-phosphates (triose-P) are exported to the cytosol where they are converted to end products, including Suc. This releases inorganic orthophosphate (Pi), which is recycled to the chloroplast in counterexchange with triose-P (Edwards and Walker, 1983
AGPase catalyzes the first committed step in the pathway of starch synthesis (Preiss, 1988
For more than a decade, this biochemical model has provided the framework to explain how the photosynthate allocation between Suc and starch is regulated. Support has been provided by biochemical analyses of changes of metabolites, enzyme activities, and fluxes during the diurnal cycle (Gerhardt et al., 1987
Curiously, the evidence is less convincing for treatments that modify partitioning by altering sugar levels in the leaf. Starch synthesis was stimulated in the absence of an increase of 3PGA when sugars were supplied to detached spinach leaves (Krapp et al., 1991
When potato AGPB and AGPS are heterologously overexpressed in E. coli, an intermolecular bridge forms between the cys82 residues of the two AGPB subunits. To obtain active enzyme, it was necessary to incubate the complex with dithiothreitol (DTT) or thioredoxin to break this link (Fu et al., 1998
AGPB Expressed in Leaves Contains a Conserved N-Terminal Cys
Almost all dicotyl plant AGPB sequences contain a conserved SQTCLDPDAS motif at the N terminus, which includes the Cys shown by Fu et al. (1998
The full genome sequence for Arabidopsis contains one reading frame (At5g48300) with a high homology to AGPB in other higher plants. A second open reading frame, which is annotated as a putative AGPB (At1g05610), shows considerable deviations from all other AGPB sequences (see Supplementary Material). Diversification occurs throughout the sequence and includes the loss of many highly conserved amino acids. At1g05610 is the only gene that falls outside of the group for plant AGPB sequences when a tree is calculated with ClustalX (Thompson et al., 1997
Pea, potato, and Arabidopsis leaves were harvested during the second half of the light period and toward the end of the dark period to investigate whether leaf AGPB undergoes reversible dimerization in vivo. Extracts were rapidly prepared in degassed SDS solutions and subjected to non-reducing SDS-PAGE, and AGPB protein was detected using a rabbit-antibody raised against AGPB from potato (see Tiessen et al., 2002
In potato tubers, dimerization increases the Km(ATP) and decreases sensitivity to activation by 3PGA (Tiessen et al., 2002
The appearance of AGPB monomer during the day in leaves could be due to illumination or it could be an indirect effect due, for example, to leaves containing more sugars in the light. To investigate whether there are rapid light-dependent changes in AGPB monomerization, we darkened pre-illuminated plants. This treatment was chosen because it leads to an abrupt change in photosynthesis, whereas illumination leads to only slow changes due to the need to induce photosynthesis and increase stomatal conductance. Arabidopsis plants were illuminated for 6.5 h, samples were taken in the light, the remaining plants were darkened, and samples taken 6, 15, and 60 min later. In the light, a small proportion of AGPB was present as a monomer (Fig. 3A; see also Fig. 1B). After darkening, the monomer decreased within 6 min and almost totally vanished within 15 min. Sugar levels were measured in the same leaf material (Fig. 3B). There were no significant changes of Suc, Glc, or Fru levels in the first 6 min and only small changes in the first 60 min after darkening. Similar results were obtained for pea plants (data not shown).
To provide independent evidence that light promotes monomerization of AGPB protein, we investigated the responses in isolated chloroplasts. Chloroplasts do not contain or synthesize Suc or other sugars. These experiments were carried out with chloroplasts from young pea plants. Pea chloroplasts have the advantage that it is possible to manipulate the adenylate content. Addition of inorganic pyrophosphate (PPi) leads to the loss of adenylates from the chloroplast, which can be reversed by adding ATP or ADP (Lunn and Douce, 1993 AGPB occurred almost exclusively as a dimer when chloroplasts were incubated in the dark with PPi, ATP, and 3PGA (Fig. 4A). A large proportion was converted to monomer after 6 min of illumination. This paralleled the increase of plastid FBPase activity (Fig. 4B). Addition of 30 mM Suc to isolated chloroplasts did not lead to monomerization of AGPB in the dark over a 15-min period (data not shown).
In vitro experiments with heterologously expressed potato tuber AGPase have shown that monomerization can be mediated by thioredoxins (Ballicora et al., 2000
A second set of experiments was carried out to investigate whether sugars promote AGPB monomerization. Leaves were harvested from Arabidopsis plants at the end of the normal day and supplied via their petiole with zero, 50, 100, or 200 mM Suc for 13 h in the dark (Fig. 5). AGPB was present almost exclusively as a dimer in leaf material at the end of the night and in leaves incubated in the dark without sugars. Suc led to the appearance of monomer. The proportion converted by Suc in the dark was similar to that seen in the light under normal growth conditions (Fig. 5A).
Feeding sugars led to a progressive increase in the levels of sugar (Fig. 5B), but 3PGA remained unaltered (Fig. 5C). There was also an increase of starch (Fig. 5D). This might be due to a stimulation of starch synthesis or to slower breakdown of starch during the 13-h dark treatment. To measure the rate of starch synthesis, the unlabeled Suc was spiked with high specific activity [14C]Glc. The rate of starch synthesis was calculated by dividing the label incorporated into starch by the specific activity of the hexose phosphate pool (for a detailed discussion of this approach, see Geigenberger et al., 1997
To provide further evidence that sugars increase monomerization of AGPB, we carried out a set of experiments comparing diurnal changes in wild-type Columbia-0 (Col0) and the pgm mutant (Caspar et al., 1986
In the same samples, the proportion of AGPB present as monomer was determined on western blots and quantified after scanning the films (Fig. 6D). Typical examples of immunoblots are shown in Figure 6, E through G. In wild-type Col0, AGPB is present almost exclusively as dimer at the end of the night, did not show a marked shift after 15 min illumination, was gradually converted to a monomer as the day progressed, and rapidly reverted to dimer after darkening (see also Fig. 3). The response was markedly changed in pgm. AGPB became partly monomerized within 15 min after illumination. Monomerization increased further during the next 2 to 3 h and by the second part of the light period AGPB was almost totally converted to monomer. 3PGA levels were comparable with those in Col0 (data not shown). After darkening, a substantial proportion of AGPB remained as monomer for the first 2 h of the night. The data in Figure 6, A, B, and D, are replotted in Figure 7 to show the relation between monomerization of AGPB and total sugars. When extracts from darkened leaves are compared, there is a correlation between leaf sugar levels and the appearance of AGPB monomer. Illumination leads to increased monomerization at a given sugar content in the dark.
AGPase activity was measured with limiting ATP (0.2 mM) in the presence and absence of 1 mM 3PGA in extracts from wild-type Col0 harvested at the end of the night and pgm harvested at midday. These represent the most extreme changes obtained in our experiments. The shift from dimer to monomer was accompanied by a 7-fold stimulation of activity (from 25 to 176 nmol min1 g1 fresh weight) in the absence of 3PGA, whereas activity was not affected in the presence of 3PGA (583 and 559 nmol min1 g1 fresh weight, respectively).
A consensus has developed that starch synthesis is regulated in response to changes of metabolism in the cytosol (see introduction). When the rate of triose-P use for the synthesis of Suc and other end products is lower than the rate of photosynthesis, falling Pi is proposed to lead to a restriction of ATP synthesis and 3PGA reduction. The resulting increase of the 3PGA to Pi ratio activates AGPase, leading to an increased rate of starch synthesis and increased recycling of Pi within the chloroplast.
Tiessen et al. (2002
The shift from a dimer to a monomer is accompanied by an increase in leaf AGPase activity. Preiss and coworkers have shown for heterogeneously overexpressed potato tuber AGPase that DTT or thioredoxin lead to monomerization of AGPB and a concomitant increase in AGPase activity (Fu et al., 1998
The increase of AGPase activity involved a change in the kinetic properties, including an increased affinity for ATP and altered sensitivity to regulation by 3PGA. The increase in activity is less marked than Tiessen et al. (2002
At least two inputs modulate the posttranslational redox-activation of AGPase in leaves. The first input is a light-dependent signal. This is analogous to the way that several Calvin cycle enzymes and other proteins involved in photosynthesis are regulated (Scheibe, 1991
The reductive activation of heterologously expressed AGPase can be mediated in vitro by thioredoxin (Fu et al., 1998
The light-dependent activation of photosynthetic enzymes by thioredoxin is modulated by metabolites, which modify the mid-redox potential of the Cys in the target protein (Scheibe, 1991
Posttranslational regulation of AGPase allows starch synthesis to be modulated in response to light or the accumulation of sugars, without any requirement for changes in the levels of phosphorylated intermediates or Pi. Maintenance of an appropriate balance between phosphorylated intermediates and Pi is of crucial importance during photosynthesis. Triose-P are exported from the chloroplast and converted into Suc in the cytosol, and the Pi that is released is recycled to the chloroplast to support further photosynthesis. Excessive triose-P export will inhibit photosynthesis because it depletes the levels of Calvin cycle intermediates and inhibits regeneration of the CO2 acceptor ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate, and inadequate triose-P export will inhibit photosynthesis because Pi is sequestered in phosphorylated intermediates leading to depletion of free Pi and an inhibition of ATP synthesis (Edwards and Walker, 1983
In conclusion, three mechanisms interact to regulate AGPase activity in leaves. (a) Allosteric regulation allows instantaneous changes of AGPase activity when the 3PGA to Pi ratio changes. Although it may in some conditions be part of a regulatory sequence that links sugar accumulation to an increase of starch synthesis, its main significance is more likely to be to rapidly increase the recycling of Pi in the stroma when there is a transient imbalance between photosynthesis and triose P export. (b) Posttranslational redox regulation provides a mechanism that allows direct light activation of starch synthesis in leaves and also allows starch synthesis to be increased when sugars accumulate in the leaf. Crucially, this mechanism allows starch synthesis to be increased without an increase of the 3PGA to Pi ratio as a necessary intervening step. This will increase the flexibility of the regulatory network, because it allows photosynthetic carbon allocation to be regulated independently of the poising of intermediary photosynthetic metabolism. (c) Expression of AGPB and AGPS is increased by sugars (Salanoubat and Belliard, 1989
All experiments were reproduced at least once with independent biological material. Data points are at least the average of duplicate measurements of the same biological sample. When error bars are shown, they represent the SD of the average of the measurements on at least two biological samples of the same experiment.
Pea (Pisum sativum cv Marcia) was grown either in a greenhouse with a 16-h day of 180 µE, 21°C/19°C (day/night), and 50% humidity or in a high-light phytotron with a 14-h day, 20°C/16°C, and 60%/75% humidity. The pea cv Kelvedon Wonder was grown in a short-day phytotron (8-h day of 180 µE, 20°C/16°C, and 60%/75% humidity day/night). Arabidopsis var Col0, wild type, and a plastidic pgm (Caspar et al., 1986
Leaves were harvested while leaving the plants in place. Only source leaves that were not shaded by other leaves were selected. The leaves were put directly into liquid nitrogen, and stored at 80°C until use.
At the end of the light period, plants were taken from the growth cabinet. Non-shaded source leaves were cut, and their petioles were recut under buffer solution. The recut petioles were inserted into the feeding solution, containing 2 mM MES, pH 6.5, and varying concentrations of Suc. The leaves were returned to the growth cabinet and incubated there during the night. At the end of the night, leaves were frozen immediately in liquid nitrogen, after excising that part of the petiole, which had been immersed in the feeding solution.
Ten- to 16-d-old pea seedling were subjected to an extended night by 5 h to deplete the internal starch pools and subsequently were transferred to light for about 30 min to induce photosynthesis. Chloroplasts were then prepared essentially as described by Lunn et al. (1990
Oxygen evolution was measured in an oxygen electrode at 25°C on a chloroplasts suspension of 50 µg chlorophyll mL1 in resuspension buffer containing 4 mM HCO3 and additives as indicated in the figure legends. The cuvette was darkened for 5 min before the dark sample was taken. After restabilization of the evolution trace, the sample was illuminated using the beam of a slide projector.
Frozen leaf material was homogenized using a liquid nitrogen cooled ball-mill, and 50 mg of leaf material was extracted in cold 16% (w/v) TCA in diethyl ether, mixed, and stored at 20°C for at least 2 h. The pellet was collected by centrifugation at 13,000 rpm for 5 min at 4°C. The pellet was washed three times with ice-cold acetone, dried briefly under vacuum, and resuspended in 1x Laemmli sample buffer containing no reductant (Laemmli, 1970
Activity measurements were performed essentially as described (Tiessen et al., 2002
FBPase and NADP-malate dehydrogenase activities in chloroplasts were measured by mixing 20 µL of the chloroplasts solution from the oxygen electrode with 180 µL of reaction mixture containing 50 mM K-Tricine, pH 8.0, 5 mM MgCl2, and 0.1% (v/v) Triton X-100. For FBPase, the mixture additionally contained 0.1 mM NADP+, 40 µM Fru-1,6-bisphosphate, and 1.75 mM EDTA. The reaction was stopped by the addition of 20 µL of 1 M NaOH either directly or after a 3- or 10-min incubation at room temperature. The reaction mix for NADP-malate dehydrogenase assays instead contained 0.1 mM NADPH, and 0 or 2 mM oxaloacetate additionally. It was stopped after 10 min by addition of 20 µL 1 M HCl/0.1 M Tricine, pH 9. In both cases, the difference in NADP(H) content of the two samples was taken as a measure for enzyme activity. The samples were stored at 4°C until further processing. Heating of the samples for 5 min at 95°C ensured the complete disrupture of all unused nucleotide-adenine substrate (NADP or NADPH). Five or 10 µL of the reaction was brought to pH 9 by the addition of 25 mM HCl/50 mM Tricine, pH 9, for FBPase or 0.1 M NaOH for MDH. The NADP(H) content was determined directly after the pH adjustment by an enzymatic cycling assay (Gibon et al., 2002
Suc, Glc, Fru, and starch were determined in ethanol extracts as described by Geigenberger et al. (1996
Labeling experiments were carried out with whole Arabidopsis leaves cut directly from the plant, with ends of petioles re-cut under water. Leaves were incubated in the dark for 13 h at 20°C (humidity of 60%) in medium containing 2 mM MES-KOH (pH 6.5) and 0.66 mM or 0.33 mM [U-14C]Glc (specific activity, 111 mBq mM1; Amersham-Buchler, Braunschweig, Germany) together with various concentrations of Suc (see legends to figures for details). Incubations were done in petri dishes (5-mL volume). Wet ends of petioles of incubated leaves were cut and discarded, and leaves were frozen immediately in liquid nitrogen. After ethanol extraction, the soluble fraction was further separated into neutral, anionic, and cationic components by ion-exchange chromatography as by Geigenberger et al. (1997
We are grateful to Axel Tiessen for doing preliminary experiments, for valuable discussions, and for preparation of the His-tagged AGPB protein used for the rabbit immunization; to John Lunn for his advice concerning the chloroplast work; to Christian Scherling for help with sample analysis; and to Sam Zeeman (Bern, Switzerland) for providing the pgm mutant. Received April 1, 2003; returned for revision May 9, 2003; accepted July 10, 2003.
Article, publication date, and citation information can be found at www.plantphysiol.org/cgi/doi/10.1104/pp.103.024513.
1 This work was supported by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (grant no. SFB 429 TPB7 to A.K. and P.G.) and by the Bundesministerium für Bildung und Forschung (GABI; grant to Y.G. and M.S.).
[w] The online version of this article contains Web-only data. * Corresponding author; e-mail geigenberger{at}mpimp-golm.mpg.de; fax 493315678408.
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