Developmental analysis of maize endosperm proteome suggests a pivotal role for pyruvate orthophosphate dikinase. (17/59)

Although the morphological steps of maize (Zea mays) endosperm development are well described, very little is known concerning the coordinated accumulation of the numerous proteins involved. Here, we present a proteomic study of maize endosperm development. The accumulation pattern of 409 proteins at seven developmental stages was examined. Hierarchical clustering analysis allowed four main developmental profiles to be recognized. Comprehensive investigation of the functions associated with clusters resulted in a consistent picture of the developmental coordination of cellular processes. Early stages, devoted to cellularization, cell division, and cell wall deposition, corresponded to maximal expression of actin, tubulins, and cell organization proteins, of respiration metabolism (glycolysis and tricarboxylic acid cycle), and of protection against reactive oxygen species. An important protein turnover, which is likely associated with the switch from growth and differentiation to storage, was also suggested from the high amount of proteases. A relative increase of abundance of the glycolytic enzymes compared to tricarboxylic acid enzymes is consistent with the recent demonstration of anoxic conditions during starch accumulation in the endosperm. The specific late-stage accumulation of the pyruvate orthophosphate dikinase may suggest a critical role of this enzyme in the starch-protein balance through inorganic pyrophosphate-dependent restriction of ADP-glucose synthesis in addition to its usually reported influence on the alanine-aromatic amino acid synthesis balance.  (+info)

Itaconate, an isocitrate lyase-directed inhibitor in Pseudomonas indigofera. (18/59)

Enzymes catalyzing steps from ethanol to acetyl-coenzyme A, from malate to pyruvate, and from pyruvate to glucose 6-phosphate were identified in ethanol-grown Pseudomonas indigofera. Enzymes catalyzing the catabolism of glucose to pyruvate via the Entner-Doudoroff pathway were identified in glucose-grown cells. Phosphofructokinase could not be detected in Pseudomonas indigofera. Itaconate, a potent inhibitor of isocitrate lyase, abolished growth of P. indigofera on ethanol at concentrations that had little effect upon growth on glucose. The date obtained through enzyme analyses and studies of itaconate inhibition with both extracts and toluene-treated cells suggest that itaconate selectively inhibits and reduces the specific activity of isocitrate lyase.  (+info)

Overproduction of C4 photosynthetic enzymes in transgenic rice plants: an approach to introduce the C4-like photosynthetic pathway into rice. (19/59)

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Cool C4 photosynthesis: pyruvate Pi dikinase expression and activity corresponds to the exceptional cold tolerance of carbon assimilation in Miscanthus x giganteus. (20/59)

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Steady state and exchange kinetics of pyruvate, phosphate dikinase from Propionibacterium shermanii. (21/59)

Evidence is presented based on requirements for exchange in the partial reactions, initial velocity and exchange kinetics and product inhibition, that the pyruvate, phosphate dikinase reaction of propionibacteria occurs by a nonclassical Tri Uni Uni Ping Pong mechanism. The mechanism involves a pyrophosphoryl enzyme, a phosphoryl enzyme, and the free enzyme, and three functionally distinct and independent substrate sites. On the first site, there is pyrophosphorylation of the enzyme by ATP with subsequent release of AMP. The pyrophosphoryl moiety then reacts at the second site with Pi yielding the product PPi and the phosphoryl from of the enzyme. At the third site pyruvate is phosphorylated yielding P-enolpyruvate and the free enzyme. The three catalytic sites are proposed to be linked by a histidyl residue which functions as a pyrophosphoyrl- and phosphoryl-carrier between the three sites. This proposal is based on the following observations. (A) The patterns of the double reciprocal plots of the initial velocities were all parallel; (b) product inhibition between each pair of substrates and products of the three partial reactions were competitive, i.e. ATP against AMP, Pi against PPi, and pyruvate against P-enolpyruvate; (c) the other product inhibitions, with one exception, were noncompetitive as required by the nonclassical ping-pong mechanism; (d) ATP or P-enolpyruvate was required for the Pi in equilibrium PPi exchange reaction which is in accord with the participation of a pyrosphosphoryl or phosphoryl form of the enzyme in this exchange; (e) the ATP in equilibrium AMP exchange and pyruvate in equilibrium P-enolpyruvate exchange did not require additional substrates. In addition, the inhibition and participation in the exchange reactions of the alpha,beta and beta,gamma-methylene analogues of ATP and of the methylene analogue of inorganic pyrophosphate were investigated and the results were in accord with the proposed mechanism. The combined evidence provides a well documented example of a three site nonclassical Tri Uni Uni Ping Pong mechanism.  (+info)

Proteins from multiple metabolic pathways associate with starch biosynthetic enzymes in high molecular weight complexes: a model for regulation of carbon allocation in maize amyloplasts. (22/59)

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Epistatic interactions between Opaque2 transcriptional activator and its target gene CyPPDK1 control kernel trait variation in maize. (23/59)

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Detecting ricin: sensitive luminescent assay for ricin A-chain ribosome depurination kinetics. (24/59)

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