Plant chloroplasts store starch during the day, which acts as a source of carbohydrates and energy at night. Starch granule initiation relies on the elongation of malto-oligosaccharide primers. In Arabidopsis thaliana, PROTEIN TARGETING TO STARCH 2 (PTST2) and STARCH SYNTHASE 4 (SS4) are essential for the selective binding and elongation of malto-oligosaccharide primers, respectively, and very few granules are initiated in their absence. However, the precise origin and metabolism of the primers remain unknown. Potential origins of malto-oligosaccharide primers include de novo biosynthesis or their release from existing starch granules. For example, the endoamylase α-AMYLASE 3 (AMY3) can cleave a range of malto-oligosaccharides from the granule surface during starch degradation at night, some of which are branched. In the Arabidopsis double mutant deficient in the two debranching enzymes ISOAMYLASE 3 (ISA3) and LIMIT DEXTRINASE (LDA), branched malto-oligosaccharides accumulate in the chloroplast stroma. Here, we reveal that the isa3 lda double mutant shows a substantial increase in granule number per chloroplast, caused by these branched malto-oligosaccharides. The amy3 isa3 lda triple mutant, which lacks branched malto-oligosaccharides, has far fewer granules than isa3 lda, and its granule numbers are barely higher than in the wild type. Plants lacking both ISA3 and LDA and either PTST2 or SS4 show granule over-initiation, indicating that this process occurs independently of the recently described granule initiation pathway. Our findings provide insight into how and where starch granules are initiated. This knowledge can be used to alter granule number and morphological characteristics, traits known to affect starch properties.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/plphys/kiaf002 | DOI Listing |
Plant Physiol
January 2025
Institute of Molecular Plant Biology, ETH Zurich, 8092 Zurich, Switzerland.
Plant chloroplasts store starch during the day, which acts as a source of carbohydrates and energy at night. Starch granule initiation relies on the elongation of malto-oligosaccharide primers. In Arabidopsis thaliana, PROTEIN TARGETING TO STARCH 2 (PTST2) and STARCH SYNTHASE 4 (SS4) are essential for the selective binding and elongation of malto-oligosaccharide primers, respectively, and very few granules are initiated in their absence.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPLoS One
August 2017
Instituto de Agrobiotecnología (CSIC/UPNA/Gobierno de Navarra). Iruñako etorbidea 123, Mutiloabeti, Nafarroa, Spain.
Although there is a great wealth of data supporting the occurrence of simultaneous synthesis and breakdown of storage carbohydrate in many organisms, previous 13CO2 pulse-chase based studies indicated that starch degradation does not operate in illuminated Arabidopsis leaves. Here we show that leaves of gwd, sex4, bam4, bam1/bam3 and amy3/isa3/lda starch breakdown mutants accumulate higher levels of starch than wild type (WT) leaves when cultured under continuous light (CL) conditions. We also show that leaves of CL grown dpe1 plants impaired in the plastidic disproportionating enzyme accumulate higher levels of maltotriose than WT leaves, the overall data providing evidence for the occurrence of extensive starch degradation in illuminated leaves.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Biol Chem
December 2012
Institute for Agricultural Sciences, ETH Zurich, Universitätsstrasse 2, 8092 Zurich, Switzerland.
In this study, we investigated which enzymes are involved in debranching amylopectin during transient starch degradation. Previous studies identified two debranching enzymes, isoamylase 3 (ISA3) and limit dextrinase (LDA), involved in this process. However, plants lacking both enzymes still degrade substantial amounts of starch.
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