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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Plant UDP-glucose Pyrophosphorylase : Function and Regulation

Meng, Meng January 2008 (has links)
UDP-glucose pyrophosphorylase (UGPase) is an important enzyme of carbohydrate metabolism in all living organisms. The main aim of this thesis was to investigate the function and regulation of plant UGP genes as well as the UGPase proteins. Both in vivo and in vitro approaches were used, including the use of transgenic plants deficient in UGPase activity, and using purified proteins and their mutants to elucidate the structure/ function properties of UGPase. In both Arabidopsis and aspen, there are two highly similar UGP genes being actively transcribed, but not to the same extent. For both species, the UGP genes could be classified into two categories: a “house-keeping” gene and a subsidiary gene, with the former functioning universally in all the tissues to support the normal growth, whereas the latter usually expressed at a lower level in most of the organs/tissues tested. Besides, the two UGP genes were also found being differentially regulated under abiotic stress conditions, e.g. low temperature. By investigating the Arabidopsis T-DNA insertion mutants, which respectively have one or both of the UGP genes knocked out, we noticed that as little as 10% of the remaining UGPase activity could still support normal growth and development under controlled conditions, with little or no changes in carbohydrate contents, including soluble sugars (e.g. sucrose), starch and cell wall polysaccharides. Those plants, however, had a significantly decreased fitness under field conditions, i.e. the plants most deficient in UGPase activity produced up to 50% less seeds than in wt. Therefore, we concluded that UGPase is not a rate-limiting enzyme in carbohydrate synthesis pathways, but still is essential in viability of Arabidopsis plants. In order to characterize two Arabidopsis UGPase isozymes, both proteins were heterologously overexpressed in prokaryotic cells and purified by affinity chromatography. The two isozymes showed little differences in physical and biochemical properties, including substrate specificity, Km values with substrates in both directions of the reaction, molecular masses, isoelectric point (pI), and equilibrium constant. On the other hand, possibilities of distinct post-translational regulatory mechanisms were indicated, based on amino acid (aa) motif analyses, and on 3D analyses of derived crystal structures of the two proteins. We used the heterologous bacterial system also to overexpress barley UGPase and several of its mutants, both single mutants and those with whole domains/ exons deleted. As a result, we have identified several aa residues/ protein domains that may be essential for structural integrity and catalytic/ substrate-binding properties of the protein. For instance, we found that the last exon of UGPase (8 aa at the end of C-terminus) was important for the protein ability to oligomerize and that Lys-260 and the second-to-last exon were essential for pyrophosphate (but not UDP-glucose) binding. The data emphasized the critical role of central part of the active site (so called NB-loop) in catalysis, but also pointed out to the role of N-terminus in catalysis and oligomerization, but not substrate binding, and that of C-terminus in both catalysis/substrate binding and oligomerization.

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