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Analysis of the Functional Interaction of Arabidopsis Starch Synthase and Branching Enzyme Isoforms Reveals that the Cooperative Action of SSI and BEs Results in Glucans with Polymodal Chain Length Distribution Similar to Amylopectin

Starch synthase (SS) and branching enzyme (BE) establish the two glycosidic linkages existing in starch. Both enzymes exist as several isoforms. Enzymes derived from several species were studied extensively both in vivo and in vitro over the last years, however, analyses of a functional interaction...

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Autores principales: Brust, Henrike, Lehmann, Tanja, D'Hulst, Christophe, Fettke, Joerg
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4094495/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25014622
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0102364
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author Brust, Henrike
Lehmann, Tanja
D'Hulst, Christophe
Fettke, Joerg
author_facet Brust, Henrike
Lehmann, Tanja
D'Hulst, Christophe
Fettke, Joerg
author_sort Brust, Henrike
collection PubMed
description Starch synthase (SS) and branching enzyme (BE) establish the two glycosidic linkages existing in starch. Both enzymes exist as several isoforms. Enzymes derived from several species were studied extensively both in vivo and in vitro over the last years, however, analyses of a functional interaction of SS and BE isoforms are missing so far. Here, we present data from in vitro studies including both interaction of leaf derived and heterologously expressed SS and BE isoforms. We found that SSI activity in native PAGE without addition of glucans was dependent on at least one of the two BE isoforms active in Arabidopsis leaves. This interaction is most likely not based on a physical association of the enzymes, as demonstrated by immunodetection and native PAGE mobility analysis of SSI, BE2, and BE3. The glucans formed by the action of SSI/BEs were analysed using leaf protein extracts from wild type and be single mutants (Atbe2 and Atbe3 mutant lines) and by different combinations of recombinant proteins. Chain length distribution (CLD) patterns of the formed glucans were irrespective of SSI and BE isoforms origin and still independent of assay conditions. Furthermore, we show that all SS isoforms (SSI-SSIV) were able to interact with BEs and form branched glucans. However, only SSI/BEs generated a polymodal distribution of glucans which was similar to CLD pattern detected in amylopectin of Arabidopsis leaf starch. We discuss the impact of the SSI/BEs interplay for the CLD pattern of amylopectin.
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spelling pubmed-40944952014-07-15 Analysis of the Functional Interaction of Arabidopsis Starch Synthase and Branching Enzyme Isoforms Reveals that the Cooperative Action of SSI and BEs Results in Glucans with Polymodal Chain Length Distribution Similar to Amylopectin Brust, Henrike Lehmann, Tanja D'Hulst, Christophe Fettke, Joerg PLoS One Research Article Starch synthase (SS) and branching enzyme (BE) establish the two glycosidic linkages existing in starch. Both enzymes exist as several isoforms. Enzymes derived from several species were studied extensively both in vivo and in vitro over the last years, however, analyses of a functional interaction of SS and BE isoforms are missing so far. Here, we present data from in vitro studies including both interaction of leaf derived and heterologously expressed SS and BE isoforms. We found that SSI activity in native PAGE without addition of glucans was dependent on at least one of the two BE isoforms active in Arabidopsis leaves. This interaction is most likely not based on a physical association of the enzymes, as demonstrated by immunodetection and native PAGE mobility analysis of SSI, BE2, and BE3. The glucans formed by the action of SSI/BEs were analysed using leaf protein extracts from wild type and be single mutants (Atbe2 and Atbe3 mutant lines) and by different combinations of recombinant proteins. Chain length distribution (CLD) patterns of the formed glucans were irrespective of SSI and BE isoforms origin and still independent of assay conditions. Furthermore, we show that all SS isoforms (SSI-SSIV) were able to interact with BEs and form branched glucans. However, only SSI/BEs generated a polymodal distribution of glucans which was similar to CLD pattern detected in amylopectin of Arabidopsis leaf starch. We discuss the impact of the SSI/BEs interplay for the CLD pattern of amylopectin. Public Library of Science 2014-07-11 /pmc/articles/PMC4094495/ /pubmed/25014622 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0102364 Text en © 2014 Brust et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Brust, Henrike
Lehmann, Tanja
D'Hulst, Christophe
Fettke, Joerg
Analysis of the Functional Interaction of Arabidopsis Starch Synthase and Branching Enzyme Isoforms Reveals that the Cooperative Action of SSI and BEs Results in Glucans with Polymodal Chain Length Distribution Similar to Amylopectin
title Analysis of the Functional Interaction of Arabidopsis Starch Synthase and Branching Enzyme Isoforms Reveals that the Cooperative Action of SSI and BEs Results in Glucans with Polymodal Chain Length Distribution Similar to Amylopectin
title_full Analysis of the Functional Interaction of Arabidopsis Starch Synthase and Branching Enzyme Isoforms Reveals that the Cooperative Action of SSI and BEs Results in Glucans with Polymodal Chain Length Distribution Similar to Amylopectin
title_fullStr Analysis of the Functional Interaction of Arabidopsis Starch Synthase and Branching Enzyme Isoforms Reveals that the Cooperative Action of SSI and BEs Results in Glucans with Polymodal Chain Length Distribution Similar to Amylopectin
title_full_unstemmed Analysis of the Functional Interaction of Arabidopsis Starch Synthase and Branching Enzyme Isoforms Reveals that the Cooperative Action of SSI and BEs Results in Glucans with Polymodal Chain Length Distribution Similar to Amylopectin
title_short Analysis of the Functional Interaction of Arabidopsis Starch Synthase and Branching Enzyme Isoforms Reveals that the Cooperative Action of SSI and BEs Results in Glucans with Polymodal Chain Length Distribution Similar to Amylopectin
title_sort analysis of the functional interaction of arabidopsis starch synthase and branching enzyme isoforms reveals that the cooperative action of ssi and bes results in glucans with polymodal chain length distribution similar to amylopectin
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4094495/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25014622
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0102364
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