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Plant Physiology 142:1343-1345 (2006) © 2006 American Society of Plant Biologists Regulation of Starch Metabolism in Arabidopsis LeavesUniversity of Illinois, Urbana, IL 61801
Starch is the main form by which plants store carbohydrate and is a major photosynthetic product in many species. Despite the importance of starch, there is still much more that needs to be learned about its synthesis and subsequent degradation. An article by Smith et al. (2004)
Starch can be found in large amounts in fruits, seeds, rhizomes, and tubers, as well as photosynthetic tissues. After cellulose, starch is the most abundant carbohydrate in many species of plant (Esau, 1977
Starch molecules are polymers of Glu in two configurations: amylose, which is mostly unbranched, and amylopectin, which is branched. Amylose is predominately made up of
Starch synthesis begins with the synthesis of ADP-Glu from Glu-1-P and ATP via ADP-Glu pyrophosphorylase. Starch synthases use ADP-Glu as a substrate. Granule-bound starch synthase, the enzyme responsible for amylose synthesis, is located within the starch granules, while other isoforms of starch synthase, together with starch-branching enzymes, synthesize amylopectin (for review, see Ball and Morell, 2003
The majority of the early work identifying the components of starch degradation was done in vitro. However, recent studies utilizing mutant and knockout plants have led to the revision of much of what was previously known about starch degradation. Many of the enzymes identified as belonging to the degradation pathway have multiple isoforms, which can be either plastidic or cytosolic (for review, see Lloyd et al., 2005
In leaves, starch degradation starts with the phosphorylation of a small portion of Glu residues of amylopectin by glucan-water dikinase (GWD). In potato (Solanum tuberosum) plants expressing an antisense construct of GWD and in Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) GWD-deficient sex1 mutants, there is a dramatic excess of starch in the leaves, indicating the importance of GWD in starch degradation. A second dikinase, phosphoglucan-water dikinase, identified from Arabidopsis leaves, is also required for normal rates of starch degradation. Despite its importance, the significance of glucan phosphorylation is unknown, other than it is a prerequisite for normal rates of starch degradation by other enzymes. One hypothesis is that it makes the granule matrix more accessible to starch-degrading enzymes (for review, see Lloyd et al., 2005
Although
Amylases, though able to cleave the
The major exports from the plastid as a result of starch degradation are maltose (produced by the action of
Arabidopsis L. Heynth plants were grown in 12 h light/dark and leaves were harvested for RNA at 11 time points during a 24-h period for array analysis. These time points corresponded to those that have been previously used for metabolic data sampling and focused on transition times from light to dark or dark to light. Forty-eight genes were selected for particular attention due to their known or hypothesized association with starch synthesis, metabolism, or transport of intermediates across the chloroplast membrane. The results of this study highlight the complexity of starch synthesis and degradation and how much is still unknown about the process. It might be anticipated that enzymes that function in the same pathway would have similar diurnal patterns of gene transcription. However, for many of the genes, this was not the case. A lack of coordination between changes in transcript levels and in enzyme levels was also observed. This highlights the importance of posttranscriptional regulation for regulating both the amount of the enzymes and their activities. While relatively little change occurred in transcript levels for the majority of the genes involved in starch synthesis during the 24-h period, the transcript level of both granule-bound starch synthase and starch synthase II increased dramatically during the dark-to-light transition. It was hypothesized that the diel change in expression of these two enzymes could be due to their location within the starch granule; as the granule is degraded, the proteins are lost at night, necessitating resynthesis of the proteins.
Transcripts encoding many of the enzymes of starch degradation showed a common pattern of change over 24 h. Levels fell progressively during the dark and increased in the latter part of the light period. However, levels of some of the proteins were shown not to change substantially, suggesting an important role for posttranscriptional regulation. Among those genes whose levels decreased during the dark period and increased rapidly during the light, there was a group of genes that appeared to be coordinately regulated. Nevertheless, these apparently coordinately regulated genes do not encode the complete pathway of starch degradation. Mutant studies have demonstrated that some of the encoded enzymes are not strictly necessary for starch degradation, while some enzymes that have been shown to be necessary (for example, The entire transcriptome was searched for other transcripts with expression patterns similar to the coordinately expressed set, revealing a small number of genes of unknown function containing putative plastid transit peptide sequences. The potential involvement of these enzymes in starch degradation is currently under investigation.
The regulation of starch-degradation genes was also the topic of a paper by Lu et al. (2005)
The studies by Smith et al. (2004)
The study by Smith et al. (2004)
www.plantphysiol.org/cgi/doi/10.1104/pp.104.900209
Asatsuma S, Sawada C, Itoh K, Okito M, Kitajima A, Mitsui T (2005) Involvement of alpha-amylase I-1 in starch degradation in rice chloroplasts. Plant Cell Physiol 46: 858869 Ball SG, Morell MK (2003) From bacterial glycogen to starch: understanding the biogenesis of the plant starch granule. Annu Rev Plant Biol 54: 207233[CrossRef][Medline] Chia T, Thorneycroft D, Chapple A, Messerli G, Chen J, Zeeman SC, Smith SM, Smith AM (2004) A cytosolic glucosyltransferase is required for conversion of starch to sucrose in Arabidopsis leaves at night. Plant J 37: 853863[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline] Delatte T, Umhang M, Trevisan M, Eicke S, Thorneycroft D, Smith SM, Zeeman SC (2006) Evidence for distinct mechanisms of starch granule breakdown in plants. J Biol Chem 281: 1205012059 Esau K (1977) Anatomy of Seed Plants, Ed 2. John Wiley & Sons, New York Kerk D, Bulgrien J, Smith DW, Barsam B, Veretnik S, Gribskov M (2002) The complement of protein phosphatase catalytic subunits encoded in the genome of Arabidopsis. Plant Physiol 129: 908925 Kerk D, Conley TR, Rodriguez FA, Tran HT, Nimick M, Muench DG, Moorhead GBG (2006) A chloroplast-localized dual-specificity protein phosphatase in Arabidopsis contains a phylogenetically dispersed and ancient carbohydrate-binding domain, which binds the polysaccharide starch. Plant J 46: 400413[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline] Lloyd JR, Kossmann J, Ritte G (2005) Leaf starch degradation comes out of the shadows. Trends Plant Sci 10: 130137[Web of Science][Medline] Lu Y, Gehan JP, Sharkey TD (2005) Daylength and circadian effects on starch degradation and maltose metabolism. Plant Physiol 138: 22802291 Lu Y, Sharkey TD (2004) The role of amylomaltase in maltose metabolism in the cytosol of photosynthetic cells. Planta 218: 466473[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline] Lu Y, Sharkey TD (2006) The importance of maltose in transitory starch breakdown. Plant Cell Environ 29: 353366[CrossRef][Medline] Niittylä T, Comparot-Moss S, Lue W-L, Messerli G, Trevisan M, Seymour MDJ, Gatehouse JA, Villadsen D, Smith SM, Chen J, et al (2006) Similar protein phosphatases control starch metabolism in plants and glycogen metabolism in mammals. J Biol Chem 281: 1181511818 Niittylä T, Messerli G, Trevisan M, Chen J, Smith AM, Zeeman SC (2004) A previously unknown maltose transporter essential for starch degradation in leaves. Science 303: 8789 Smith AM, Zeeman SC, Smith SM (2005) Starch degradation. Annu Rev Plant Biol 56: 7398[CrossRef][Medline] Smith SM, Fulton DC, Chia T, Thorneycroft D, Chapple A, Dunstan H, Hylton C, Zeeman SC, Smith AM (2004) Diurnal changes in the transcriptome encoding enzymes of starch metabolism provide evidence for both transcriptional and posttranscriptional regulation of starch metabolism in Arabidopsis leaves. Plant Physiol 136: 26872699 Tetlow IJ, Wait R, Lu Z, Akkasaeng R, Bowsher CG, Esposito S, Kosar-Hashemi B, Morell MK, Emes MJ (2004) Protein phosphorylation in amyloplasts regulates starch branching enzyme activity and protein-protein interactions. Plant Cell 16: 694708 Yu TS, Zeeman SC, Thorneycroft D, Fulton DC, Dunstan H, Lue WL, Hegemann B, Tung SY, Umemoto T, Chapple A, et al (2005) alpha-Amylase is not required for breakdown of transitory starch in Arabidopsis leaves. J Biol Chem 280: 97739779
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