4.4 Article

The activity of Rubisco's molecular chaperone, Rubisco activase, in leaf extracts

Journal

PHOTOSYNTHESIS RESEARCH
Volume 108, Issue 2-3, Pages 143-155

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11120-011-9667-8

Keywords

Rubisco; Molecular chaperone; Heat stress; CO2 assimilation; AAA plus protein; Photosynthesis

Categories

Funding

  1. United States Department of Agriculture, Agricultural Research Service
  2. United States Department of Energy, Office of Basic Energy Sciences [DE-AI02-97ER20268]

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Rubisco frequently undergoes unproductive interactions with its sugar-phosphate substrate that stabilize active sites in an inactive conformation. Restoring catalytic competence to these sites requires the molecular chiropractic activity of Rubisco activase (activase). To make the study of activase more routine and physiologically relevant, an assay was devised for measuring activase activity in leaf extracts based on the ATP-dependent activation of inactive Rubisco. Control experiments with an Arabidopsis activase-deficient mutant confirmed that the rate of Rubisco activation was dependent on the concentration of activase in the extracts. Activase catalyzed Rubisco activation at rates equivalent to 9-14% catalytic sites per min in desalted extracts of Arabidopsis, camelina, tobacco, cotton, and wheat. Faster rates were observed in a transgenic line of Arabidopsis that expresses only the beta-isoform of activase, whereas no activity was detected in a line that expresses only the a-isoform. Activase activity was also low or undetectable in rice, maize, and Chlamydomonas, revealing differences in the stability of the enzyme in different species. These differences are discussed in terms of the ability of activase subunits to remain associated or to reassociate into active oligomers when the stromal milieu is diluted by extraction. Finally, the temperature response of activase activity in leaf extracts differed for Arabidopsis, camelina, tobacco, and cotton, corresponding to the respective temperature responses of photosynthesis for each species. These results confirmed the exceptional thermal lability of activase at physiological ratios of activase to Rubisco.

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