4.7 Article

Posttranslational regulation of pyruvate, orthophosphate dikinase in developing rice (Oryza sativa) seeds

Journal

PLANTA
Volume 224, Issue 4, Pages 924-934

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00425-006-0259-3

Keywords

Oryza sativa; protein kinase/phosphatase; Pyruvate, orthophosphate dikinase; PPDK regulatory protein; rice seed development; seed metabolism

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Pyruvate, orthophosphate dikinase (PPDK; E.C.2.7.9.1) is most well known as a photosynthetic enzyme in C-4 plants. The enzyme is also ubiquitous in C-3 plant tissues, although a precise non-photosynthetic C-3 function(s) is yet to be validated, owing largely to its low abundance in most C-3 organs. The single C-3 organ type where PPDK is in high abundance, and, therefore, where its function is most amenable to elucidation, are the developing seeds of graminaceous cereals. In this report, we suggest a non-photosynthetic function for C-3 PPDK by characterizing its abundance and posttranslational regulation in developing Oryza sativa (rice) seeds. Using primarily an immunoblot-based approach, we show that PPDK is a massively expressed protein during the early syncitial-endosperm/-cellularization stage of seed development. As seed development progresses from this early stage, the enzyme undergoes a rapid, posttranslational down-regulation in activity and amount via regulatory threonyl-phosphorylation (PPDK inactivation) and protein degradation. Immunoblot analysis of separated seed tissue fractions (pericarp, embryo + aleurone, seed embryo) revealed that regulatory phosphorylation of PPDK occurs in the non-green seed embryo and green outer pericarp layer, but not in the endosperm + aleurone layer. The modestly abundant pool of inactive PPDK (phosphorylated + dephosphorylated) that was found to persist in mature rice seeds was shown to remain largely unchanged (inactive) upon seed germination, suggesting that PPDK in rice seeds function in developmental rather than in post-developmental processes. These and related observations lead us to postulate a putative function for the enzyme that aligns its PEP to pyruvate-forming reaction with biosynthetic processes that are specific to early cereal seed development.

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