4.8 Article

Heat stability of maize endosperm ADP-glucose pyrophosphorylase is enhanced by insertion of a cysteine in the N terminus of the small subunit

Journal

PLANT PHYSIOLOGY
Volume 139, Issue 4, Pages 1625-1634

Publisher

AMER SOC PLANT BIOLOGISTS
DOI: 10.1104/pp.105.067637

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ADP-glucose pyrophosphorylase (AGPase) is a key regulatory enzyme in starch biosynthesis. However, plant AGPases differ in several parameters, including spatial and temporal expression, allosteric regulation, and heat stability. AGPases of cereal endosperms are heat labile, while those in other tissues, such as the potato (Solanum tuberosum) tuber, are heat stable. Sequence comparisons of heat-stable and heat-labile AGPases identified an N-terminal motif unique to heat-stable enzymes. Insertion of this motif into recombinant maize (Zea mays) endosperm AGPase increased the half-life at 58 degrees C more than 70-fold. K-m values for physiological substrates were unaffected, although K-cat was doubled. A cysteine within the inserted motif gives rise to small subunit homodimers not found in the wild-typemaize enzyme. Placement of this N-terminal motif into a mosaic small subunit containing the N terminus from maize endosperm and the C terminus from potato tuber AGPase increases heat stability more than 300-fold.

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