4.7 Article

Cloning and functional characterization of a homoglutathione synthetase from pea nodules

Journal

PHYSIOLOGIA PLANTARUM
Volume 115, Issue 1, Pages 69-73

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BLACKWELL MUNKSGAARD
DOI: 10.1034/j.1399-3054.2002.1150107.x

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The thiol tripeptide glutathione (GSH; gammaGlu-Cys-Gly) is very abundant in legume nodules where it performs multiple functions that are critical for optimal nitrogen fixation. Some legume nodules contain another tripeptide, homoglutathione (hGSH; gammaGlu-Cys-betaAla), in addition to or instead of GSH. We have isolated from a pea (Pisum sativum L.) nodule library a cDNA, GSHS2, that is expressed in nodules but not in leaves. This cDNA was overexpressed in insect cells and its protein product was identified as a highly active and specific hGSH synthetase. The enzyme, the first of this type to be completely purified, is predicted to be a homodimeric cytosolic protein. It shows a specific activity of 3400 nmol hGSH min(-1) mg(-1) protein with a standard substrate concentration (5 mM beta-alanine) and K-m values of 1.9 mM for beta-alanine and 104 mM for glycine. The specificity constant (V-max/K-m) shows that the pure enzyme is 57.3-fold more specific for beta-alanine than for glycine. Southern blot analysis revealed that the gene is present as a single copy in the pea genome and that there are homologous genes in other legumes. We conclude that the synthesis of hGSH in pea nodules is catalysed by a specific hGSH synthetase and not by a GSH synthetase with broad substrate specificity.

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