4.8 Article

Arabidopsis glucosidase I mutants reveal a critical role of N-glycan trimming in seed development

Journal

EMBO JOURNAL
Volume 20, Issue 5, Pages 1010-1019

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/emboj/20.5.1010

Keywords

Arabidopsis; alpha-glucosidase I; cell differentiation; N-glycosylation; seed development

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Glycoproteins with asparagine-linked (N-linked) glycans occur in all eukaryotic cells, The function of their glycan moieties is one of the central problems in contemporary cell biology. N-glycosylation may modify physicochemical and biological protein properties such as conformation, degradation, intracellular sorting or secretion. We have isolated and characterized two allelic Arabidopsis mutants, gcs1-1 and gcs1-2, which produce abnormal shrunken seeds, blocked at the heart stage of development. The mutant seeds accumulate a low level of storage proteins, have no typical protein bodies, display abnormal cell enlargement and show occasional cell wall disruptions, The mutated gene has been cloned by T-DNA tagging. It codes for a protein homologous to animal and yeast alpha -glucosidase I, an enzyme that controls the first committed step for N-glycan trimming, Biochemical analyses have confirmed that trimming of the alpha1,2linked glucosyl residue constitutive of the N-glycan precursor is blocked in this mutant, These results demonstrate the importance of N-glycan trimming for the accumulation of seed storage proteins, the formation of protein bodies, cell differentiation and embryo development.

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