Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Wei-Ling Lue is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Wei-Ling Lue.


The Plant Cell | 2001

The Arabidopsis sex1 Mutant Is Defective in the R1 Protein, a General Regulator of Starch Degradation in Plants, and Not in the Chloroplast Hexose Transporter

Tien-Shin Yu; Heike Kofler; Rainer E. Häusler; Diana Hille; Ulf-Ingo Flügge; Samuel C. Zeeman; Alison M. Smith; Jens Kossmann; James R. Lloyd; Gerhard Ritte; Martin Steup; Wei-Ling Lue; Jychian Chen; Andreas P. M. Weber

Starch is the major storage carbohydrate in higher plants and of considerable importance for the human diet and for numerous technical applications. In addition, starch can be accumulated transiently in chloroplasts as a temporary deposit of carbohydrates during ongoing photosynthesis. This transitory starch has to be mobilized during the subsequent dark period. Mutants defective in starch mobilization are characterized by high starch contents in leaves after prolonged periods of darkness and therefore are termed starch excess (sex) mutants. Here we describe the molecular characterization of the Arabidopsis sex1 mutant that has been proposed to be defective in the export of glucose resulting from hydrolytic starch breakdown. The mutated gene in sex1 was cloned using a map-based cloning approach. By complementation of the mutant, immunological analysis, and analysis of starch phosphorylation, we show that sex1 is defective in the Arabidopsis homolog of the R1 protein and not in the hexose transporter. We propose that the SEX1 protein (R1) functions as an overall regulator of starch mobilization by controlling the phosphate content of starch.


The Plant Cell | 1998

A Mutant of Arabidopsis Lacking a Chloroplastic Isoamylase Accumulates Both Starch and Phytoglycogen

Samuel C. Zeeman; Takayuki Umemoto; Wei-Ling Lue; Pui Au-Yeung; Cathie Martin; Alison M. Smith; Jychian Chen

In this study, our goal was to evaluate the role of starch debranching enzymes in the determination of the structure of amylopectin. We screened mutant populations of Arabidopsis for plants with alterations in the structure of leaf starch by using iodine staining. The leaves of two mutant lines stained reddish brown, whereas wild-type leaves stained brownish black, indicating that a more highly branched polyglucan than amylopectin was present. The mutants were allelic, and the mutation mapped to position 18.8 on chromosome 1. One mutant line lacked the transcript for a gene with sequence similarity to higher plant debranching enzymes, and both mutants lacked a chloroplastic starch-hydrolyzing enzyme. This enzyme was identified as a debranching enzyme of the isoamylase type. The loss of this isoamylase resulted in a 90% reduction in the accumulation of starch in this mutant line when compared with the wild type and in the accumulation of the highly branched water-soluble polysaccharide phytoglycogen. Both normal starch and phytoglycogen accumulated simultaneously in the same chloroplasts in the mutant lines, suggesting that isoamylase has an indirect rather than a direct role in determining amylopectin structure.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2005

α-Amylase Is Not Required for Breakdown of Transitory Starch in Arabidopsis Leaves

Tien-Shin Yu; Samuel C. Zeeman; David Thorneycroft; Daniel C. Fulton; Hannah Dunstan; Wei-Ling Lue; Björn Hegemann; Shu-Yun Tung; Takayuki Umemoto; Andrew Chapple; Der-Long Tsai; Shue-Mei Wang; Alison M. Smith; Jychian Chen; Steven M. Smith

The Arabidopsis thaliana genome encodes three α-amylase-like proteins (AtAMY1, AtAMY2, and AtAMY3). Only AtAMY3 has a predicted N-terminal transit peptide for plastidial localization. AtAMY3 is an unusually large α-amylase (93.5 kDa) with the C-terminal half showing similarity to other known α-amylases. When expressed in Escherichia coli, both the whole AtAMY3 protein and the C-terminal half alone show α-amylase activity. We show that AtAMY3 is localized in chloroplasts. The starch-excess mutant of Arabidopsis sex4, previously shown to have reduced plastidial α-amylase activity, is deficient in AtAMY3 protein. Unexpectedly, T-DNA knock-out mutants of AtAMY3 have the same diurnal pattern of transitory starch metabolism as the wild type. These results show that AtAMY3 is not required for transitory starch breakdown and that the starch-excess phenotype of the sex4 mutant is not caused simply by deficiency of AtAMY3 protein. Knock-out mutants in the predicted non-plastidial α-amylases AtAMY1 and AtAMY2 were also isolated, and these displayed normal starch breakdown in the dark as expected for extraplastidial amylases. Furthermore, all three AtAMY double knock-out mutant combinations and the triple knock-out degraded their leaf starch normally. We conclude that α-amylase is not necessary for transitory starch breakdown in Arabidopsis leaves.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2006

Similar protein phosphatases control starch metabolism in plants and glycogen metabolism in mammals.

Totte Niittylä; Sylviane Comparot-Moss; Wei-Ling Lue; Gaëlle Messerli; Martine Trevisan; Michael D. J. Seymour; John A. Gatehouse; Dorthe Villadsen; Steven M. Smith; Jychian Chen; Samuel C. Zeeman; Alison M. Smith

We report that protein phosphorylation is involved in the control of starch metabolism in Arabidopsis leaves at night. sex4 (starch excess 4) mutants, which have strongly reduced rates of starch metabolism, lack a protein predicted to be a dual specificity protein phosphatase. We have shown that this protein is chloroplastic and can bind to glucans and have presented evidence that it acts to regulate the initial steps of starch degradation at the granule surface. Remarkably, the most closely related protein to SEX4 outside the plant kingdom is laforin, a glucan-binding protein phosphatase required for the metabolism of the mammalian storage carbohydrate glycogen and implicated in a severe form of epilepsy (Lafora disease) in humans.


Plant Physiology | 2014

Plastidial NAD-Dependent Malate Dehydrogenase Is Critical for Embryo Development and Heterotrophic Metabolism in Arabidopsis

Seraina Beeler; Hung-Chi Liu; Martha Stadler; Tina B Schreier; Simona Eicke; Wei-Ling Lue; Elisabeth Truernit; Samuel C. Zeeman; Jychian Chen; Oliver Kötting

Reduction-oxidation homeostasis of plastids is crucial for embryo development and heterotrophic metabolism in Arabidopsis. In illuminated chloroplasts, one mechanism involved in reduction-oxidation (redox) homeostasis is the malate-oxaloacetate (OAA) shuttle. Excess electrons from photosynthetic electron transport in the form of nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate, reduced are used by NADP-dependent malate dehydrogenase (MDH) to reduce OAA to malate, thus regenerating the electron acceptor NADP. NADP-MDH is a strictly redox-regulated, light-activated enzyme that is inactive in the dark. In the dark or in nonphotosynthetic tissues, the malate-OAA shuttle was proposed to be mediated by the constitutively active plastidial NAD-specific MDH isoform (pdNAD-MDH), but evidence is scarce. Here, we reveal the critical role of pdNAD-MDH in Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) plants. A pdnad-mdh null mutation is embryo lethal. Plants with reduced pdNAD-MDH levels by means of artificial microRNA (miR-mdh-1) are viable, but dark metabolism is altered as reflected by increased nighttime malate, starch, and glutathione levels and a reduced respiration rate. In addition, miR-mdh-1 plants exhibit strong pleiotropic effects, including dwarfism, reductions in chlorophyll levels, photosynthetic rate, and daytime carbohydrate levels, and disordered chloroplast ultrastructure, particularly in developing leaves, compared with the wild type. pdNAD-MDH deficiency in miR-mdh-1 can be functionally complemented by expression of a microRNA-insensitive pdNAD-MDH but not NADP-MDH, confirming distinct roles for NAD- and NADP-linked redox homeostasis.


Plant Physiology | 2009

Starch Synthesis in Arabidopsis Is Achieved by Spatial Cotranscription of Core Starch Metabolism Genes

Huang-Lung Tsai; Wei-Ling Lue; Kuan-Jen Lu; Ming-Hsiun Hsieh; Shue-Mei Wang; Jychian Chen

Starch synthesis and degradation require the participation of many enzymes, occur in both photosynthetic and nonphotosynthetic tissues, and are subject to environmental and developmental regulation. We examine the distribution of starch in vegetative tissues of Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) and the expression of genes encoding core enzymes for starch synthesis. Starch is accumulated in plastids of epidermal, mesophyll, vascular, and root cap cells but not in root proper cells. We also identify cells that can synthesize starch heterotrophically in albino mutants. Starch synthesis in leaves is regulated by developmental stage and light. Expression of gene promoter-β-glucuronidase fusion constructs in transgenic seedlings shows that starch synthesis genes are transcriptionally active in cells with starch synthesis and are inactive in root proper cells except the plastidial phosphoglucose isomerase. In addition, ADG2 (for ADPG PYROPHOSPHORYLASE2) is not required for starch synthesis in root cap cells. Expression profile analysis reveals that starch metabolism genes can be clustered into two sets based on their tissue-specific expression patterns. Starch distribution and expression pattern of core starch synthesis genes are common in Arabidopsis and rice (Oryza sativa), suggesting that the regulatory mechanism for starch metabolism genes may be conserved evolutionarily. We conclude that starch synthesis in Arabidopsis is achieved by spatial coexpression of core starch metabolism genes regulated by their promoter activities and is fine-tuned by cell-specific endogenous and environmental controls.


Plant Physiology | 1997

Characterization of a Maize [beta]-Amylase cDNA Clone and Its Expression during Seed Germination

Shue-Mei Wang; Wei-Ling Lue; Shu-Yuann Wu; Hsiu-Wen Huang; Jychian Chen

A maize (Zea mays L.) cDNA clone (pZMB2) encoding [beta]-amylase was isolated from a cDNA library prepared from the aleurone RNA of germinating kernels. The cDNA encodes a predicted product of 488 amino acids with significant similarity to known [beta]-amylases from barley (Hordeum vulgare), rye (Secale cereale), and rice (Oryza sativa). Glycine-rich repeats found in the carboxyl terminus of the endosperm-specific [beta]-amylase of barley and rye are absent from the maize gene product. The N-terminal sequence of the first 20 amino acids of a [beta]-amylase peptide derived from purified protein is identical to the 5th through 24th amino acids of the predicted cDNA product, indicating the absence of a conventional signal peptide in the maize protein. Recombinant inbred mapping data indicate that the cDNA clone is single-copy gene that maps to chromosome 7L at position 83 centimorgans. Northern blot analysis and in vitro translation-immunoprecipitation data indicate that the maize [beta]-amylase is synthesized de novo in the aleurone cells but not in the scutellum during seed germination.


Plant Molecular Biology | 1996

Phytohormone-regulated beta-amylase gene expression in rice.

Shue-Mei Wang; Wei-Ling Lue; Klaus Eimert; Jychian Chen

The expression of β-amylase genes in rice (Oryza sativa) and its regulation by phytohormones gibberellic acid (GA) and abscisic acid (ABA) were examined. Upon germination β-amylase is synthesizedde novo in aleurone cells and (GA) is not required. Exogenous addition of GA does not enhance the β-amylase activity, while ABA inhibits the β-amylase activity, mRNA accumulation, and the germination of rice seeds. GA can reverse ABA inhibition of β-amylase expression, but not ABA inhibition of seed germination. Such regulation represents a new interaction of ABA and GA.


Plant Physiology | 2000

Mutation of Arabidopsis Plastid Phosphoglucose Isomerase Affects Leaf Starch Synthesis and Floral Initiation

Tien-Shin Yu; Wei-Ling Lue; Shue-Mei Wang; Jychian Chen


Plant Journal | 2002

Characterization of ADG1, an Arabidopsis locus encoding for ADPG pyrophosphorylase small subunit, demonstrates that the presence of the small subunit is required for large subunit stability

Shue-Mei Wang; Wei-Ling Lue; Tien-Shin Yu; Jih-hau Long; Chen-nai Wang; Klaus Eimert; Jychian Chen

Collaboration


Dive into the Wei-Ling Lue's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Shue-Mei Wang

National Taiwan University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge