|
|
||||||||
|
First published online September 11, 2003; 10.1104/pp.103.027375 Plant Physiology 133:875-884 (2003) © 2003 American Society of Plant Biologists Fatty Acid Biosynthesis in Mitochondria of Grasses: Malonyl-Coenzyme A Is Generated by a MitochondrialLocalized Acetyl-Coenzyme A Carboxylase1Botanik II, Universität Karlsruhe, 76128 Karlsruhe, Germany (M.F., E.G., S.S., H.-P.B.); Gesellschaft für Biotechnologische Forschung, 38124 Braunschweig, Germany (L.J.); Institut für Angewandte Genetik, Universität Hannover, D30419 Hannover, Germany (H.-P.B.); and Molekulare Botanik, Universität Ulm, 89069 Ulm, Germany (S.B.)
We present biochemical evidence for the occurrence of a 250-kD multifunctional acetyl-coenzyme A carboxylase in barley (Hordeum vulgare) mitochondria. Organelles from 6-d-old barley seedlings were purified by differential centrifugation and Percoll density gradient centrifugation. Upon analysis by two-dimensional Blue-native (BN)/SDS-PAGE, an abundant 250-kD protein can be visualized, which runs at 500 kD on the native gel dimension. A similar 500-kD complex is present in etioplasts from barley. The mitochondrial 250-kD protein is biotinylated as indicated by specific reaction with an antibody directed against biotin. Peptide sequence analysis by electrospray ionization tandem mass spectrometry of the 250-kD proteins from both organellar fractions revealed amino acid sequences that are 100% identical to plastidic acetyl-coenzyme A carboxylase from wheat (Triticum aestivum). The 500-kD complex was also detected in wheat mitochondria, but is absent in mitochondrial fractions from Arabidopsis. Specific acetyl-coenzyme A carboxylation activity in barley mitochondria is higher than in etioplasts, suggesting an important role of mitochondria in fatty acid biosynthesis. Functional implications are discussed.
Malonylcoenzyme A (CoA) is the building block of fatty acid biosynthesis. It is formed by carboxylation of acetyl-CoA in an ATP-dependent reaction, which is catalyzed by acetyl-CoA carboxylase (ACC). Consequently, ACC can be considered as the starting enzyme of fatty acid biosynthesis. Because malonyl-CoA concentration is rate limiting in fatty acid biosynthesis (Post-Beitenmiller et al., 1992
Four different peptide domains were shown to be crucial for carboxylation of acetyl-CoA: the biotin carboxylase, which is responsible for the ATP-dependent carboxylation of biotin resulting in carboxybiotin, the biotin-carboxy carrier protein carrying the prosthetic group biotin linked via the
In heterotrophic eukaryotes, fatty acids are synthesized in the cytosol, whereas in plants, this pathway mainly occurs in plastids (Ohlrogge et al., 1979
Consequently, plant cells need two acetyl-CoA carboxylases in two different subcellular locations, the cytoplasm and the plastid. Interestingly, the cytoplasmic enzyme is a multifunctional ACC, whereas the plastid enzyme is of the multisubunit form (Kannangara and Stumpf, 1972
Only 15 years ago, fatty acid biosynthesis was also discovered in mitochondria. Initially, a mitochondrial acyl-carrier protein was identified in fungi, animals, and plants, which is a prerequisite for fatty acid biosynthesis (Brody and Mikolajczyk, 1988
Here, we report the identification of a 250-kD multifunctional ACC in mitochondria of etiolated barley (Hordeum vulgare) seedlings. Protein complexes from barley were systematically investigated by two-dimensional Blue-native (BN)/SDS-PAGE. In contrast to dicotyledonous plants, mitochondria from barley contain a homodimeric 500-kD complex of two 250-kD subunits, which were identified by mass spectrometry (MS) as multifunctional ACC. In parallel, a homodimeric 500-kD ACC complex was also identified in barley etioplasts. Because the ACC proteins from barley mitochondria and etioplasts have very similar or identical primary structures, they might have to be added to the growing list of socalled "dual-targeting" proteins in plant cells (Peeters and Small, 2001
Multisubunit Complexes of Mitochondria and Etioplasts from Barley Seedlings
BN-PAGE is a powerful tool for the separation of membrane-bound and -soluble protein complexes. Combined with SDS-PAGE as a second gel dimension, the procedure allows the resolution of subunits of protein complexes. BN-PAGE originally was developed for the analysis of respiratory protein complexes in fungi and mammals (Schägger and von Jagow, 1991
To minimize contamination of mitochondrial preparations by chloroplast debris, mitochondria were isolated from 6-d-old etiolated barley seedlings. After isolation and purification of organelles by differential centrifugation and Percoll density gradient centrifugation, mitochondrial protein fractions were two-dimensionally separated by BN/SDS-PAGE (Fig. 1A). The multi-subunit complexes I (about 1,000 kD), the HSP60 14-mer (
For comparison, analogous investigations were also performed with barley etioplasts (Fig. 1B). Four protein complexes are visible on the gels that were identified by their subunit compositions (for comparison, see Kügler et al., 1997 750-kD Rubisco-binding protein complex formed by seven copies of the 60-kD subunit and seven copies of the 59-kD subunit, the 530-kD Rubisco complex formed by eight copies of the 53-kD large subunit and eight copies of the 14-kD small subunit, the 260-kD dimeric b6f complex consisting of cytochrome f (32 kD), cytochrome b6 (24 kD), the FeS protein (20 kD), and subunit IV (17 kD), and the plastidic F1-ATP synthase complex. The presence of these protein complexes in etioplasts has been previously reported (Boardmann, 1981
The BN gels also show that cross-contaminations of mitochondrial and etioplast fractions are not detectable in the limits of the staining procedure and can therefore be considered to be very low. Furthermore, mitochondria and etioplasts remain intact during preparation because membrane-bound (e.g. the respiratory chain complexes of mitochondria or the cytochrome b6f-complex of etioplasts) and -soluble protein complexes (e.g. the mitochondrial HSP60 complex or the Rubisco complex of etioplasts) are visible on the BN gels (Fig. 1, A and B).
Besides the above described mitochondrial protein complexes, a diffuse protein spot was detectable in the stacking gel of the second gel dimension (data not shown). This spot seemed to represent a very large protein not able to enter the separation gel under the conditions applied. Analysis of mitochondria of dicotyledonous plants by BN/SDS-PAGE did not reveal the presence of a protein of comparable size (Jänsch et al., 1996 Low-percentage polyacrylamide gels for the second dimension allowed the identification of an abundant protein of about 250 kD that forms part of a 500-kD complex on the BN gel dimension (the complex runs between the cytochrome c reductase complex [480 kD] and the ATP synthase complex [580 kD]; Fig. 2A). No other proteins are visible on the second gel dimension in the same vertical line, indicating that this 500-kD protein complex has a homodimeric structure. Because a diffuse protein spot was also visible upon analysis of etioplasts by two-dimensional BN/SDS-PAGE, low-percentage polyacrylamide gels were also repeated for these organelles. A protein of comparable migration behavior in both gel dimensions could be visualized (Fig. 2B). However, this protein is of rather low abundance if compared with the corresponding mitochondrial protein.
The size of the 250-kD protein as well as its presence in plastids raises the possibility that it represents a multifunctional 250-kD ACC, which is known to form a homodimeric 500-kD protein complex in eukaryotes. To test this hypothesis, mitochondrial fractions from barley were analyzed by immunoblotting using an antibody directed against biotin, the prosthetic group of ACC. This antibody specifically recognizes the 250-kD protein on two-dimensional BN/SDS gels, indicating that the protein seems to represents ACC (Fig. 3, A and B). A 75-kD subunit of methylcrotonyl-CoA carboxylase (MCC), which also carries a biotin group and which previously was shown to be localized within plant mitochondria (Alban et al., 1993
For definite identification, the mitochondrial 250-kD protein from barley was cut out of two-dimensional gels, digested with trypsin, and analyzed by ESI-MS/MS. The sequences of four peptides were determined (Table I), which exhibit significant sequence identity to internal stretches of the amino acid sequence of ACC from wheat (Triticum aestivum; Fig. 4). While 100% sequence identity is found between the barley mitochondrial peptides and the plastidic form of ACC from wheat, several discrepancies were observed in comparison with the cytosolic version of this protein. Particularly, peptide 1 identifies the here analyzed protein to be homologous to the plastidic version of wheat ACC.
To find out whether the 250-kD protein from barley etioplasts represents the same protein or an additional form of ACC, two peptides of this protein were sequenced. These also exhibit 100% sequence identity to the plastidic form of ACC from wheat (Fig. 4). In addition, one of the two peptide sequences (Fig. 4, peptide 6) is identical with a peptide of the mitochondrial ACC (Fig. 4, peptide 2), and the peptide mass spectra of the 250-kD proteins from the mitochondrial and etioplast fraction did not reveal the presence of differing peptides (data not shown). We conclude that the two proteins have a very similar or an identical primary sequence.
The occurrence of a very similar or even identical homodimeric 500-kD protein complex in mitochondria and etioplasts from barley cannot be explained by cross-contamination of the etioplast and mitochondrial fractions because both fractions are highly pure as documented by the two-dimensional gels (Fig. 2, A and B): The mitochondrial fraction only contains the protein complexes of the respiratory chain and the HSP60 complex, whereas the etioplast fraction contains the four plastidic protein complexes, which previously were shown on Figure 1B. A very faint contamination of the large subunit of Rubisco can be seen in the mitochondrial fraction (indicated by a star in Fig. 2A). However, this protein is the most abundant plastidic protein and its occurrence in the mitochondrial fraction is very low if compared with the etioplast fraction, whereas the occurrence ACC is much higher in the mitochondrial fraction than in etioplasts. Absolutely no mitochondrial protein complexes are visible in the etioplast fraction. To verify the purity of our organelle preparations by independent methods, marker enzyme measurements were carried out in mitochondrial fractions and in homogenates of 6-d-old etiolated barley seedlings for Rubisco (marker for plastids), fumarase (marker enzyme for mitochondria), and phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP) carboxylase (marker enzyme for cytosol). Specific Rubisco activity in the mitochondrial fractions proved to be reduced by more than 97% if compared with total homogenates (fixation of 0.75 vs. 24.2 nmol CO2 mg1 protein min1). At the same time, specific fumarase activity was enriched by factor 10 in mitochondrial fractions if compared with whole-seedling homogenates (85 vs. 8 units). PEP carboxylase activity was reduced by 87% in the mitochondrial fractions (fixation of 90.9 vs. 11.8 nmol CO2 mg1 protein min1). Thus, we conclude that plastidic contamination of our mitochondrial fraction is very low, while there is some contamination by cytoplasm, which might be due to the lose binding of cytoplasmic enzymes to the surface of mitochondria. To exclude that the 250-kD ACC of our mitochondrial fractions represents a cytoplasmic contamination, isolated organelles were incubated with thermolysin. As documented in Figure 5, the mitochondrial 250-kD protein is not degraded in the presence of the protease and therefore must be localized inside the organelles. Therefore, we conclude that in barley three subcellular compartments, the cytoplasm, etioplasts, and mitochondria independently contain a 250-kD multifunctional ACC.
To physiologically characterize the mitochondrial ACC from barley, CO2 uptake of mitochondrial lysates in the presence and absence of known inhibitors for ACC was determined (Fig. 6). Analogous experiments were carried out with etioplast lysates. The specific activity of the ACC was higher in the mitochondrial fraction than in the etioplast lysates (450 nmol CO2 fixation h1 and mg1 protein vs. 150 nmol in etioplasts). Slightly lower activities were found for propionyl-CoA carboxylation in both extracts. Diclofop inhibited ACC activities of both organelle fractions by about 80%, whereas cycloxydim reduced activity by 50%. These results confirm the presence of ACC in both organelles. The generally higher specific activity in mitochondrial fraction is consistent with the higher abundance of this protein in the respective fraction analyzed on the two-dimensional gels (Fig. 2).
To determine whether a mitochondrial ACC is an unique feature of barley mitochondria or a more general feature of grasses, mitochondria were prepared from 7-d-old wheat seedlings and mitochondrial proteins were analyzed by two-dimensional BN/SDS-PAGE (Fig. 7). As in barley, a homodimeric 500-kD complex is present in wheat mitochondria. In contrast, no such complex is detectable in mitochondrial fractions from Arabidopsis (Fig. 7). This suggests that the presence of ACC in mitochondria is probably a general feature of Poaceae and possibly monocotyledonous plants.
Evidence for a Mitochondrially Localized ACC in Grasses In contrast to dicotyledonous plants investigated, mitochondria from barley and wheat contain an ACC. The enzyme was discovered in the course of a systematic investigation of protein complexes from barley on two-dimensional BN/SDS-polyacrylamide gels. This experimental approach not only allows us to investigate the subunit composition of protein complexes, but also is a very reliable tool for monitoring the purity of organelle fractions because different organelles contain very different protein complexes with typical subunit patterns (e.g. respiratory chain protein complexes only occur in mitochondria and photosystems or Rubisco only occur in chloroplasts). Thus, this procedure easily allows us to detect plastidic contaminations in mitochondrial fractions and vice versa. Furthermore, BN/SDS-PAGE simultaneously monitors soluble and membrane-bound protein complexes, which documents the intactness of organelles after isolation. As demonstrated in Figures 1 and 2, only minor plastidic impurities were observed in mitochondrial fractions, whereas no mitochondrial subunits of protein complex are detectable in etioplast fractions. Considering these minimal cross-contaminations, the presence of ACC in the mitochondrial fraction of barley certainly cannot be explained as a contamination of the fraction by plastids. In addition, ACC abundance in 6-d-old seedlings was found to be much higher in mitochondria than in etioplasts, which is consistent with higher ACC activities measured in mitochondria. Also, cytoplasmic contaminations of mitochondrial fractions cannot explain the identification of ACC in these organelles because the protein was shown to be resistant to protease treatment of isolated mitochondria.
Further evidence for the localization of a multifunctional ACC in mitochondria comes from an analysis of the rice (Oryza sativa) mitochondrial proteome (Heazlewood et al., 2003
Based on partial amino acid sequence determination, plastidic and mitochondrial ACC from barley have to be considered to be structurally very similar and possibly even identical proteins. Huang et al. (2002
Mitochondria from dicotyledonous plants can synthesize fatty acids starting from malonyl-CoA, which can be generated from malonate (Gueguen et al., 2000
The fact that graminicides of the cyclohexan-1,3-dione-type (e.g. cycloxydim) and the aryloxyphenoxypropionic acid type (e.g. diclofop) do not only inhibit plastidic fatty acid biosynthesis in barley, but also the mitochondrial fatty acid biosynthesis (by blocking ACC as shown in this study) opens the question of whether the mode of action of these graminicides is fully understood. In the past, it was assumed that mode of action can be explained by a shortage of fatty acids for general membrane biosynthesis. However, due to an inhibition of more specific products of fatty acid biosynthesis in mitochondria such as lipoic acid, it is possible that special metabolic pathways in mitochondria like acetyl-CoA formation (pyruvate dehydrogenase complex) photorespiration (H-Protein of the Gly decarboxylase complex) or amino acid metabolism (branched-chain-
To our knowledge, grasses are the first eukaryotic organisms shown to possess a mitochondrial ACC. In mammals, an multifunctional ACC was shown to be associated with mitochondria (Abu-Elheiga et al., 1995 The presence of an internal ACC in mitochondria from grasses raises several questions. How abundant and active is ACC in plastids and mitochondria in different tissues and developmental stages of grasses? How active and abundant are other enzymes of mitochondrial fatty acid biosynthesis in grasses? Can fatty acids be exported from mitochondria in grasses?
Cultivation of Plants
Barley (Hordeum vulgare cv Alexis) and wheat (Triticum aestivum) were grown on peat (TKS 2) covered with a wet tissue at 24°C for 6 (barley) or 7 (wheat) d in the dark. Arabidopsis cell suspensions were cultivated as described by Werhahn et al. (2001
Starting material for mitochondrial preparations from barley and wheat involved about 200 g of etiolated seedlings. The seedlings were suspended in 1,000 mL of ice-cold "grinding buffer" (0.4 M mannitol, 1 mM EGTA, 25 mM MOPS, 5 mM dithiothreitol [DTT], and 1% [w/v] bovine serum albumin, pH 7.8) and cells were disrupted in a Waring Blender by three periods of 3 s each. All subsequent steps were carried out at 4°C. After filtration through four layers of gaze, mitochondria were enriched by two-step centrifugation: large cell debris were removed by centrifugation at 3,500g for 5 min and afterward, a mitochondrial fraction was sedimented by centrifugation at 18,000g for 30 min. The pellet was resuspended in "resuspension buffer" (0.4 M mannitol, 1 mM EGTA, and 10 mM KH2PO4, pH 7.2) and was layered on top of three-step Percoll gradients (six gradients of 30 mL each containing 10 mL of 14%, 10 mL of 23%, and 6 mL of 45% [all w/v] Percoll in resuspension buffer). After centrifugation for 45 min at 70,000g, mitochondria were collected from the 23%/45% interphase. To remove the Percoll, purified mitochondria were diluted in resuspension buffer and were resedimented three times by centrifugation for 10 min at 18,000g. A typical mitochondrial preparation yields about 100 mg of mitochondria (about 10 mg of mitochondrial protein). Purification of mitochondria from Arabidopsis cell suspension cultures was carried out as described previously (Werhahn et al., 2001
Etioplasts were isolated from barley seedlings according to a protocol as detailed in Roughan (1987
Two-dimensional BN/SDS-PAGE was carried out as outlined by Schägger and von Jagow (1991
One-dimensional SDS-PAGE was carried out as described in Schägger and von Jagow (1987
Transfer of proteins onto nitrocellulose membranes was carried out in a semidry blotting apparatus with a discontinuous transfer buffer system (Kyhse-Andersen, 1984
About 20 mg of isolated barley mitochondria (2 mg of mitochondrial protein) was resuspended in 200 µL of "termolysin-resuspension buffer" (0.4 M mannitol, 10 mM Tricine, 1 mM ZnCl2, and 10 mM CaCl2, pH 7.2) and incubated with 10 µg of thermolysin (Sigma) for 30 min at 10°C. Protease activity was monitored by incubation of control proteins with thermolysin. All protease reactions were stopped by adding EDTA (a final concentration of 25 mM) and mitochondria were reisolated by centrifugation through Suc cushions (0.75 mL of a 25% [w/v] Suc solution) at 18,000g for 5 min. Pellets were directly resolved in sample buffer for SDS-PAGE. One-dimensional SDS-PAGE was carried out according to Schägger and von Jagow (1987
Homogenates of 6-d-old etiolated barley seedlings and isolated barley mitochondria were lysed by treatment with Tween 20 (final concentration of 1%, v/v). The lysates were passed through a PD-10 column (Amersham, Piscataway, NJ) equilibrated in resuspension buffer without EGTA (0.4 M mannitol and 10 mM KH2PO4, pH 7.2) to remove endogenous substrates.
PEP carboxylase as a cytosolic marker enzyme was monitored in a coupled assay with malic dehydrogenase (Sigma) according to Wedding and Kline (1994
Fumarase as mitochondrial marker was measured as described by Hill and Bradshaw (1969
Rubisco as a marker enzyme for plastids was measured as described by Siegel and Lane (1975
Organelles (about 5 mg of protein in 200 µL of resuspension buffer) were diluted in 1.2 mL of assay buffer (500 mM Tricine, pH 8.0, 25 mM MgCl2, and 1.125 mM NaHCO3) and were lysed by the addition of Tween 20 to a final concentration of 0.1% (v/v). After centrifugation at 15,000g for 5 min, the supernatant was purified from endogenous thioesters using PD-10 columns that were equilibrated and eluted with assay buffer. ACC activity assays were carried out in a volume of 50 µL in the presence of 250 mM Tricine, pH 8.0, 12.5 mM MgCl2, 0.46 mM NaHCO3, including 3,700 Bq 14C-hydrogencarbonate (ICN Pharmaceuticals, Costa Mesa, CA), 2 mM ATP, 2 mM DTT, and 16 µL of an organelle fraction. The reaction was started by the addition of 2.5 µL acetyl-CoA- or propionyl-CoA solution (1 mM acetyl-CoA/propionyl-CoA in 10 mM potassium phosphate buffer, pH 3.5) and was stopped after 10 min by adding 50 µL of 6 M HCl. Reaction mixtures were subsequently transferred to scintillation vials and were heated at 90°C for 45 min to evaporate the free radioactive hydrogen carbonate. After heating, scintillation mixture was added and radioactivity was determined in a liquid scintillation counter. The ACC activity directly correlates with the heat- and acid-stabile incorporation of 14C-hydrogencarbonate into acetyl-CoA or propionyl-CoA. Negative controls without thioesters were included in each series to determine the nonspecific carboxylation and radiochemical background. Herbicides (diclofop and cycloxydim) were dissolved in methanol and diluted with assay buffer so that the final methanol concentration in the assay was 0.2% (w/v). Protein concentration in the final lysates was determined with a modified Lowry assay as described in Bach et al. (1986
Proteins were identified by ESI-MS/MS as outlined in Kruft et al. (2001
We thank Jasmin Dürr, Dagmar Lewejohann, and Bärbel Weber for expert technical assistance. Received May 23, 2003; returned for revision June 23, 2003; accepted June 24, 2003.
Article, publication date, and citation information can be found at www.plantphysiol.org/cgi/doi/10.1104/pp.103.027375.
1 This work was supported by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft and by the Fonds der Chemischen Industrie.
2 These authors contributed equally to the work. * Corresponding author; e-mail braun{at}genetik.uni-hannover.de; fax 495117623608.
Abu-Elheiga L, Brikley WR, Zhong L, Chirala SS, Woldegiorgis G, Wakil SJ (2000) The subcellular localization of acetyl-CoA carboxylase 2. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 97: 14441449
Abu-Elheiga L, Jayakumar A, Baldini A, Chirala SS (1995) Human acetyl-CoA carboxylase: characterization, molecular cloning, and evidence for two isoforms. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 92: 40114015 Alban C, Baldet P, Axiotis S, Douce R (1993) Purification and characterization of 3-methylcrotonyl-coenzyme A carboxylase from higher plant mitochondria. Plant Physiol 102: 957965[Abstract] Alban C, Baldet P, Douce R (1994) Localization and characterization of two structurally different forms of acetyl-CoA carboxylase in young pea leaves, of which one is sensitive to aryloxyphenoxypropionate herbicides. Biochem J 300: 557565
Anderson MD, Che P, Song J, Nikolau BJ, Wurtele ES (1998) 3-Mehylcrotonyl-coenzyme A carboxylase is a component of the mitochondria leucine catabolic pathway in plants. Plant Physiol 118: 11271138 Bach TJ, Rogers DH, Rudney H (1986) Detergent-solubilization, purification, and characterization of membrane-bound 3-hydroxy-3-methylglutarylcoenzyme A reductase from radish seedlings. Eur J Biochem 154: 103111[Web of Science][Medline] Baldet P, Alban S, Axiotis S, Douce R (1993) Localization of free and bound biotin in cells from green pea leaves. Arch Biochem Biophys 303: 6773[CrossRef][Medline] Boardmann NK (1981) Thylakoid membrane formation in the higher plant chloroplast. Photosynthesis 10: 325339 Brody S, Mikolajczyk S (1988) Neurospora mitochondria contain an acyl carrier protein. Eur J Biochem 173: 353359[Medline] Chuman L, Brody S (1989) Acyl carrier protein is present in the mitochondria of plants and eukaryotic micro-organisms. Eur J Biochem 184: 643649[Web of Science][Medline] Déle C, Calmès É, Matéjicek A (2002a) SNP markers for black-grass (Alopecurus myosuroides Huds.) genotypes resistant to acetyl-CoA carboxylase inhibiting herbicides. Theor Appl Genet 104: 11141120[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline] Déle C, Wang T, Darmency H (2002b) An isoleucine-leucine substitution in chloroplastic acetyl-CoA carboxylase from green foxtail (Setaria viridis L. Beauv.) is responsible for resistance to cyclohexanedione herbicide sethoxydim. Planta 214: 421427[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline] Egli MA, Gengenbach BG, Gromwald JW, Somers DA, Wyse DL (1993) Characterization of maize acetyl-coenzyme A carboxylase. Plant Physiol 101: 499506[Abstract] Egli MA, Lutz SM, Somers DA, Gengenbach BG (1995) A maize acetylcoenzyme A carboxylase cDNA sequence. Plant Physiol 108: 12991300[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline]
Eubel H, Jänsch L, Braun H (2003) New insights into the respiratory chain of plant mitochondria: supercomplexes and a unique composition of complex II. Plant Physiol 133: 274286
Gornicki P, Faris J, King I, Podkowinski J, Gill B, Haselkorn R (1997) Plastid localized acetyl-CoA carboxylase of bread wheat is encoded by a single gene on each of the three ancestral chromosome sets. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 94: 1417914184 Gornicki P, Haselkorn R (1993) Wheat acetyl-CoA carboxylase. Plant Mol Biol 22: 547552[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline]
Gueguen V, Macherel D, Jaquinod M, Douce R, Bourguignon J (2000) Fatty acid and lipoic acid biosynthesis in higher plant mitochondria. J Biol Chem 275: 50165025
Heazlewood JL, Howell KA, Whelan J, Millar AH (2003) Towards an analysis of the rice mitochondrial proteome. Plant Physiol 132: 230242 Hill RL, Bradshaw RA (1969) Fumarase. Methods Enzymol 13: 9199 Huang S, Sirikhachornkit A, Faris JD, Su X, Gill BS, Haselkorn R, Gornicki P (2002) Phylogenetic analysis of the acetyl-CoA carboxylase and 3-phosphoglycerate kinase loci in wheat and other grasses. Plant Mol Biol 48: 805820[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline] Jänsch L, Kruft V, Schmitz UK, Braun HP (1996) New insights into the composition, molecular mass and stoichiometry of the protein complexes of plant mitochondria. Plant J 9: 357368[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline]
Jordan SW, Cronan JE Jr (1997) A new metabolic link: The acyl carrier protein of lipid synthesis donates lipoic acid to the pyruvate dehydrogenase complex in Escherichia coli and mitochondria. J Biol Chem 272: 1790317906 Kannangara GC, Gough SP, Hansen B, Rasmussen JN, Simpson DJ (1977) A homogenizer with replaceable blades for bulk isolation of active barley chloroplasts. Carlsberg Res Commun 42: 431440 Kannangara CG, Stumpf PK (1972) Fat metabolism in higher plants: a prokaryotic type acetyl CoA carboxylase in spinach chloroplasts. Arch Biochem Biophys 152: 8391[Medline]
Klein PR, Mullet JE (1986) Regulation of chloroplast-encoded chlorophyll-binding protein translation during higher plant chloroplast biogenesis. J Biol Chem 261: 1113811145
Klein PR, Mullet JE (1987) Control of gene expression during higher plant chloroplast biogenesis: protein synthesis and transcript levels of psaA-psaB and rbc1 in the dark. J Biol Chem 262: 43414348
Konishi T, Sasaki Y (1994) Compartmentalization of two forms of acetyl-CoA carboxylase in plants and the origin of their tolerance towards herbicides. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 91: 35983601
Konishi T, Shinohara K, Yamada K, Sasaki Y (1996) Acetyl-CoA carboxylase in higher plants: most plants other than the Gramineae have both the prokaryotic and the eukaryotic forms of this enzyme. Plant Cell Physiol 37: 117122
Kruft V, Eubel H, Werhahn W, Jänsch L, Braun HP (2001) Proteomic approach to identify novel mitochondrial functions in Arabidopsis thaliana. Plant Physiol 127: 16941710 Kügler M, Jänsch L, Kruft V, Schmitz UK, Braun HP (1997) Analysis of the chloroplast protein complexes by blue-native polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Photosynth Res 53: 3544[CrossRef] Kyhse-Andersen J (1984) Electroblotting of multiple gels: a simple apparatus without buffer tank for rapid transfer of proteins from polyacrylamide to nitrocellulose. J Biochem Biophys Methods 10: 203209[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline] Mikolajczyk S, Brody S (1990) De novo fatty acid synthesis mediated by acyl carrier protein in Neurospora crassa mitochondria. Eur J Biochem 187: 431437[Medline] Musgrove JE, Johnson RA, Ellis RJ (1987) Dissociation of the ribulosebisphosphate-carboxylase large-subunit binding protein into dissimilar subunits. Eur J Biochem 163: 52934[Web of Science][Medline] Neuhoff V, Stamm R, Pardowitz I, Arold N, Erhardt W, Taube D (1990) Essential problems in quantification of proteins following colloidal staining with Coomassie Brilliant Blue dyes in polyacrylamide gels, and their solution. Electrophoresis 11: 101117[CrossRef][Medline]
Ohlrogge JB, Kuhn DN, Stumpf PK (1979) Subcellular localization of acyl carrier protein in leaf protoplasts of Spinacia oleracea. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 76: 11941198 Peeters N, Small I (2001) Dual targeting to mitochondria and chloroplasts. Biochim Biophys Acta 1541: 5463[Medline] Post-Breitenmiller D (1996) Biochemistry and molecular biology of wax production in plants. Annu Rev Plant Biochem Mol Biol 47: 405430
Post-Beitenmiller D, Roughan G, Ohlrogge JB (1992) Regulation of plant fatty acid biosynthesis: analysis of acyl-coenzyme A and acyl-acyl-carrier protein substrate pools in spinach and pea chloroplasts. Plant Physiol 100: 923930
Reverdatto S, Beilinson V, Nielsen NC (1999) A multisubunit acetyl coenzyme A carboxylase from soybean. Plant Physiol 119: 961978 Roughan PG (1987) Long-chain fatty acid synthesis and utilization by isolated chloroplasts. Methods Enzymol 148: 327337 Runswick MJ, Fearnley IM, Skehel JM, Walker JE (1991) Presence of an acyl carrier protein in NADH:ubiquinone oxidoreductase from bovine heart mitochondria. FEBS Lett 286: 121124[CrossRef][Medline] Sackmann U, Zensen R, Röhlen D, Jahnke U, Weiss H (1991) The acylcarrier protein in Neurospora crassa mitochondria is a subunit of NADH: ubiquinone reductase (complex I). Eur J Biochem 200: 463469[Medline] Sasaki Y, Hakamada K, Suama Y, Nagano Y, Furusawa R (1993) Chloroplast-encoded protein as a subunit of acetyl-CoA carboxylase in pea plant. J Biol Chem 268: 2518825123 Schägger H (2001) Blue-native gels to isolate protein complexes from mitochondria. Methods Cell Biol 65: 23144[Web of Science][Medline] Schägger H, von Jagow G (1987) Tricine-sodium dodecyl sulfatepolyacrylamide gel electrophoresis for the separation of proteins in the range from 1 to 100 kDa. Anal Biochem 166: 368379[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline] Schägger H, von Jagow G (1991) Blue native electrophoresis for isolation of membrane protein complexes in enzymatically active form. Anal Biochem 199: 223231[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline] Schneider R, Brors B, Massow M, Weiss H (1997) Mitochondrial fatty acid synthesis: a relic of endosymbiontic origin and a specialized means for respiration. FEBS Lett 407: 249252[CrossRef][Medline] Schulte W, Töpfer R, Stracke R, Schell J, Martini N (1997) Multi-functional acetyl-CoA carboxylase from Brassica napus is encoded by a multi-gene family: indication for plastidic localization of at least one isoform. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 94: 43653470 Shintani DK, Ohlrogge JB (1994) The characterization of a mitochondrial acyl carrier protein isoform isolated from Arabidopsis thaliana. Plant Physiol 104: 12211229[Abstract] Siegel MI, Lane MD (1975) Ribulose-diphosphate carboxylase from spinach leaves. Methods Enzymol 42: 472480 Takabe T, Takabe T, Akazawa T (1985) Biosynthesis of P700-chlorophyll a protein complex, plastocyanin and the b6f complex. Plant Physiol 81: 6066
Wada H, Shintani D, Ohlrogge J (1997) Why do mitochondria synthesize fatty acids? Evidence for the involvement in lipoic acid production. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 94: 15911596 Wedding RT, Kline K (1994) Comparative studies of coupled assays for phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase. Physiol Plant 92: 197200[CrossRef]
Werhahn W, Niemeyer A, Jänsch L, Kruft V, Schmitz UK, Braun HP (2001) Purification and characterization of the preprotein translocase of the outer mitochondrial membrane from Arabidopsis thaliana: identification of multiple forms of TOM20. Plant Physiol 125: 943954 Zensen R, Husmann H, Schneider R, Peine T, Weiss H (1992) De novo synthesis and desaturation of fatty acids at the mitochondrial acyl-carrier protein, a subunit of NADH:ubiquinone oxidoreductase in Neurospora crassa. FEBS Lett 310: 179181[CrossRef][Medline] This article has been cited by other articles:
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| HOME | HELP | FEEDBACK | SUBSCRIPTIONS | ARCHIVE | SEARCH | TABLE OF CONTENTS |
| ASPB Publications | PLANT PHYSIOLOGY® | THE PLANT CELL | |
|---|---|---|---|