Ian J. Tetlow
University of Minnesota
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Journal of Experimental Botany | 2009
Fushan Liu; Amina Makhmoudova; E. A. Lee; Robin Wait; Michael J. Emes; Ian J. Tetlow
The amylose extender (ae(-)) mutant of maize lacks starch branching enzyme IIb (SBEIIb) activity, resulting in amylopectin with reduced branch point frequency, and longer glucan chains. Recent studies indicate isozymes of soluble starch synthases form high molecular weight complexes with SBEII isoforms. This study investigated the effect of the loss of SBEIIb activity on interactions between starch biosynthetic enzymes in maize endosperm amyloplasts. Results show distinct patterns of protein-protein interactions in amyloplasts of ae(-) mutants compared with the wild type, suggesting functional complementation for loss of SBEIIb by SBEI, SBEIIa, and SP. Coimmunoprecipitation experiments and affinity chromatography using recombinant proteins showed that, in amyloplasts from normal endosperm, protein-protein interactions involving starch synthase I (SSI), SSIIa, and SBEIIb could be detected. By contrast, in ae(-) amyloplasts, SSI and SSIIa interacted with SBEI, SBEIIa, and SP. All interactions in the wild-type were strongly enhanced by ATP, and broken by alkaline phosphatase, indicating a role for protein phosphorylation in their assembly. Whilst ATP and alkaline phosphatase had no effect on the stability of the protein complexes from ae(-) endosperm, radiolabelling experiments showed SP and SBEI were both phosphorylated within the mutant protein complex. It is proposed that, during amylopectin biosynthesis, SSI and SSIIa form the core of a phosphorylation-dependent glucan-synthesizing protein complex which, in normal endosperm, recruits SBEIIb, but when SBEIIb is absent (ae(-)), recruits SBEI, SBEIIa, and SP. Differences in stromal protein complexes are mirrored in the complement of the starch synthesizing enzymes detected in the starch granules of each genotype, reinforcing the hypothesis that the complexes play a functional role in starch biosynthesis.
Journal of Experimental Botany | 2012
Fushan Liu; Zaheer Ahmed; E. A. Lee; Elizabeth Donner; Qiang Liu; Regina Ahmed; Matthew K. Morell; Michael J. Emes; Ian J. Tetlow
amylose extender (ae−) starches characteristically have modified starch granule morphology resulting from amylopectin with reduced branch frequency and longer glucan chains in clusters, caused by the loss of activity of the major starch branching enzyme (SBE), which in maize endosperm is SBEIIb. A recent study with ae− maize lacking the SBEIIb protein (termed ae1.1 herein) showed that novel protein–protein interactions between enzymes of starch biosynthesis in the amyloplast could explain the starch phenotype of the ae1.1 mutant. The present study examined an allelic variant of the ae− mutation, ae1.2, which expresses a catalytically inactive form of SBEIIb. The catalytically inactive SBEIIb in ae1.2 lacks a 28 amino acid peptide (Val272–Pro299) and is unable to bind to amylopectin. Analysis of starch from ae1.2 revealed altered granule morphology and physicochemical characteristics distinct from those of the ae1.1 mutant as well as the wild-type, including altered apparent amylose content and gelatinization properties. Starch from ae1.2 had fewer intermediate length glucan chains (degree of polymerization 16–20) than ae1.1. Biochemical analysis of ae1.2 showed that there were differences in the organization and assembly of protein complexes of starch biosynthetic enzymes in comparison with ae1.1 (and wild-type) amyloplasts, which were also reflected in the composition of starch granule-bound proteins. The formation of stromal protein complexes in the wild-type and ae1.2 was strongly enhanced by ATP, and broken by phosphatase treatment, indicating a role for protein phosphorylation in their assembly. Labelling experiments with [γ-32P]ATP showed that the inactive form of SBEIIb in ae1.2 was phosphorylated, both in the monomeric form and in association with starch synthase isoforms. Although the inactive SBEIIb was unable to bind starch directly, it was strongly associated with the starch granule, reinforcing the conclusion that its presence in the granules is a result of physical association with other enzymes of starch synthesis. In addition, an Mn2+-based affinity ligand, specific for phosphoproteins, was used to show that the granule-bound forms of SBEIIb in the wild-type and ae1.2 were phosphorylated, as was the granule-bound form of SBEI found in ae1.2 starch. The data strongly support the hypothesis that the complement of heteromeric complexes of proteins involved in amylopectin synthesis contributes to the fine structure and architecture of the starch granule.
Theoretical and Applied Genetics | 2015
Jixun Luo; Regina Ahmed; Behjat Kosar-Hashemi; Oscar Larroque; Vito M. Butardo; Greg Tanner; Michelle L. Colgrave; Narayana M. Upadhyaya; Ian J. Tetlow; Michael J. Emes; Anthony A. Millar; Stephen A. Jobling; Matthew K. Morell; Zhongyi Li
Key messageThe distribution of starch synthase I and starch branching enzyme IIb between the starch granule and amyloplast stroma plays an important role in determining endosperm amylose content of cereal grains.AbstractStarch synthase IIa (SSIIa) catalyses the polymerisation of intermediate length glucan chains of amylopectin in the endosperm of cereals. Mutations of SSIIa genes in barley and wheat and inactive SSIIa variant in rice induce similar effects on the starch structure and the amylose content, but the severity of the phenotypes is different. This study compared the levels of transcripts and partitioning of proteins of starch synthase I (SSI) and starch branching enzyme IIb (SBEIIb) inside and outside the starch granules in the developing endosperms of these ssIIa mutants and inactive SSIIa variant. Pleiotropic effects on starch granule-bound proteins suggested that the different effects of SSIIa mutations on endosperm amylose content of barley, wheat and rice are determined by the distribution of SSI and SBEIIb between the starch granule and amyloplast stroma in cereals. Regulation of starch synthesis in ssIIa mutants and inactive SSIIa variant may be at post-translational level or the altered amylopectin structure deprives the affinity of SSI and SBEIIb to amylopectin.
Plant Science | 2003
Ian J. Tetlow; C.G. Bowsher; Michael J. Emes
Abstract Chromoplasts were extracted from the perianth of the wild Meadow Buttercup ( Ranunculus acris L.) and purified by sucrose density gradient centrifugation. Analysis of marker enzymes indicated that chromoplast preparations were essentially free of contamination by cytosol, mitochondria and microbodies. The distribution and recovery of glycolytic enzymes indicated an incomplete sequence of enzymes for this pathway in chromoplasts. Fructose 1, 6- bis phosphate aldolase (aldolase) was the only glycolytic enzyme for which unequivocal evidence of localisation within chromoplast preparations could not be obtained. Sub-cellular fractionation and immunological studies using antibodies raised against spinach cytosolic and chloroplastic aldolase, revealed that over 40% of its activity was associated with a washed particulate/membrane fraction in chromoplasts, but this could be removed with 1.2 M NaCl. It is concluded that Ranunculus chromoplasts do not possess a plastidial form of aldolase, and that the aldolase measured in the plastid fraction is a cytosolic form associating with plastid membranes. Isolated buttercup chromoplasts possess a functional oxidative pentose-phosphate pathway (OPPP) which could be monitored as 14 CO 2 release following incubation with [U- 14 C]-glucose 6-phosphate (Glc6P). 14 CO 2 was not evolved when [U- 14 C]-glucose 1-phosphate (Glc1P) was supplied to chromoplasts suggesting this compound is not transported into the intact organelle and that no interconversion of hexose-phosphate by phosphoglucomutase occurred outside the plastid. Transport experiments using native chromoplast vesicles preloaded with inorganic orthophosphate indicated that these organelles transported Glc6P and dihydroxyacetone phosphate (DHAP), but not Glc1P. The chromoplasts isolated from this wild plant have similar enzymic components and transport properties to other chromoplasts studied to date.
Journal of Experimental Botany | 2003
Michael J. Emes; Caroline G. Bowsher; C. Hedley; Michael M. Burrell; E. S. F. Scrase-Field; Ian J. Tetlow
Journal of Experimental Botany | 2007
Caroline G. Bowsher; Edward F.A.L. Scrase-Field; Sergio Esposito; Michael J. Emes; Ian J. Tetlow
Journal of Experimental Botany | 2003
Emma J. Davies; Ian J. Tetlow; Caroline G. Bowsher; Michael J. Emes
Archive | 1999
Michael J. Emes; Ian J. Tetlow; Caroline Grace Bowsher
Archive | 2016
Michael J. Emes; Ian J. Tetlow; Fushan Liu
応用糖質科学 : 日本応用糖質科学会誌 | 2013
尚子 クロフツ; 奈津子 阿部; 那緒子 追留; Ian J. Tetlow; Michael J. Emes; 保典 中村; 直子 藤田
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Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation
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