37 research outputs found

    Experimental evidence for a hydride transfer mechanism in plant glycolate oxidase catalysis

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    In plants, glycolate oxidase is involved in the photorespiratory cycle, one of the major fluxes at the global scale. To clarify both the nature of the mechanism and possible differences in glycolate oxidase enzyme chemistry from C3 and C4 plant species, we analyzed kinetic parameters of purified recombinant C3 (Arabidopsis thaliana) and C4 (Zea mays) plant enzymes and compared isotope effects using natural and deuterated glycolate in either natural or deuterated solvent. The 12C/13C isotope effect was also investigated for each plant glycolate oxidase protein by measuring the 13C natural abundance in glycolate using natural or deuterated glycolate as a substrate. Our results suggest that several elemental steps were associated with an hydrogen/deuterium isotope effect and that glycolate α-deprotonation itself was only partially rate-limiting. Calculations of commitment factors from observed kinetic isotope effect values support a hydride transfer mechanism. No significant differences were seen between C3 and C4 enzymes

    Limiting etioplast gene expression induces apical hook twisting during skotomorphogenesis of Arabidopsis seedlings

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    When covered by a layer of soil, seedling development follows a dark-specific program (skotomorphogenesis). In the dark, seedlings consist of small, non-green cotyledons, a long hypocotyl, and an apical hook to protect meristematic cells. We recently highlighted the role played by mitochondria in the high energy-consuming reprogramming of Arabidopsis skotomorphogenesis. Here, the role played by plastids, another energy-supplying organelle, in skotomorphogenesis is investigated. This study was conducted in dark conditions to exclude light signals so as to better focus on those produced by plastids. It was found that limitation of plastid gene expression (PGE) induced an exaggerated apical hook bending. Inhibition of PGE was obtained at the levels of transcription and translation using the antibiotics rifampicin (RIF) and spectinomycin, respectively, as well as plastid RPOTp RNA polymerase mutants. RIF-treated seedlings also showed expression induction of marker nuclear genes for mitochondrial stress, perturbation of mitochondrial metabolism, increased ROS levels, and an augmented capacity of oxygen consumption by mitochondrial alternative oxidases (AOXs). AOXs act to prevent overreduction of the mitochondrial electron transport chain. Previously, we reported that AOX1A, the main AOX isoform, is a key component in the developmental response to mitochondrial respiration deficiency. In this work, we suggest the involvement of AOX1A in the response to PGE dysfunction and propose the importance of signaling between plastids and mitochondria. Finally, it was found that seedling architecture reprogramming in response to RIF was independent of canonical organelle retrograde pathways and the ethylene signaling pathway

    Do metabolic changes underpin physiological responses to water limitation in alfalfa (Medicago sativa) plants during a regrowth period?

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    Drought is one of the most limiting factors on crop productivity under Mediterranean conditions, where the leguminous species alfalfa (Medicago sativa L.) is extensively cultivated. Whereas the effect of drought on plant performance has been widely described at leaf and nodule levels, less attention has been given to plant-nodule interactions and their implication on metabolites exchange during a regrowth period, when water is limiting. For this purpose, physiological characterization and metabolite profiles in different plant organs and nodules were undertaken under water deficit, including regrowth after removal of aerial parts. In order to study in more detail how nitrogen (N) metabolism was affected by water stress, plants were labelled with Nenriched isotopic air (15N2) using especially designed chambers. Water stress affected negatively water status and photosynthetic machinery. Metabolite profile and isotopic composition analyses revealed that, water deficit induced major changes in the accumulation of amino acids (proline, asparagine, histidine, lysine and cysteine), carbohydrates (sucrose, xylose and pinitol) and organic acids (fumarate, succinate and maleic acid) in the nodules in comparison with other organs. The lower 15N-labeling observed in serine, compared with other amino acids, was related with its high turnover rate, which in turn, indicates its potential implication in photorespiration. Isotopic analysis of amino acids also revealed that proline synthesis in the nodule was a local response to water stress and not associated with a feedback inhibition from the leaves.. Water deficit induced extensive reprogramming of wholeplant C and N metabolism, including when the aerial part was removed to trigger regrowth

    Production and hydrolysis of amide : chemical mechanisms, isotopy and applications : study of glutamine synthetase

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    La nutrition azotée des bactéries et des plantes est actuellement un sujet de grande importance, notamment pour comprendre comment améliorer les voies métaboliques aboutissant à l’assimilation de l’azote et à plus grande échelle, optimiser des apports d’engrais et augmenter le rendement des cultures. Dans ce contexte, la réaction d’amidation catalysée par la glutamine synthétase (GS), qui fixe l’ammonium (NH₄)⁺ en glutamine, est cruciale car elle est à la fois le point d’entrée de l’azote dans les végétaux, et une étape-clef du recyclage de l’azote (en particulier, NH₄⁺ photorespiratoire). Dans cette étude, nous nous sommes intéressés à la cinétique enzymatique et au mécanisme chimique de la GS. Des systèmes analytiques (HPLC, RMN , GC-MS) ont  été optimisés pour permettre la mesure de l’activité enzymatique in vitro et pour réaliser des analyses par spectrométrie de masse à ratio isotopique. Avec ces techniques, nous avons pu regarder précisément les effets isotopiques ¹²C/¹³C, ¹⁴N/¹⁵N et H₂O/D₂O (solvant) lors de la catalyse, en utilisant la GS d’E. coli et d’Arabidopsis thaliana (GS1,2). Nos résultats montrent qu’il n’y a pas d’effet isotopique ¹²C/¹³C, mais qu’il y a un fractionnement ¹⁴N/¹⁵N de »16‰. En outre, il y a un effet inverse du solvant (réaction 1.5 à 2 fois plus rapide dans D₂O).  Cela suggère que la création de la liaison C----N (amidation) est partiellement limitante (engagement catalytique de »14% seulement) et que le réseau de ponts hydrogènes dans le site actif est crucial pour déterminer la vitesse de la réaction. L’apparition d’effets ¹⁴N/¹⁵N inverses dans certaines circonstances et les effets drastiques causés par une substitution du cofacteur métallique (Mg²⁺) suggèrent en outre que l’étape d’amidation peut être réversible et que la coordination par un métal joue un rôle très important pour stabiliser les intermédiaires de la réaction, en interaction avec le solvant. Ainsi, dans son solvant naturel qu’est H₂O, la GS réalise une réaction ‘chimiquement difficile’ (barrière énergétique élevée de l’amidation) rendue possible par le clivage de l’ATP et son caractère exergonique.Nitrogen nutrition in bacteria and plants is currently an important topic, in particular to identify key points for metabolic improvements in N assimilation and more generally, to optimize fertilization and crop yield. In such a context, the amidation reaction catalyzed by glutamine synthetase (GS), which fixes ammonium (NH₄)⁺ into glutamine, is of crucial importance since it both represents the N entry in plants and the main step of N recycling (such as photorespiratory (NH₄)⁺. Here, we examined GS kinetics and chemical mechanism. Analytical methods (HPLC, NMR, GC-MS) have been set up so as to measure in vitro activities and isotopic abundance by isotope ratio mass spectrometry. These gave access to isotope effects (¹²C/¹³C, ¹⁴N/¹⁵N et H₂O/D₂O – solvent) during catalysis, with the GS from either E. coli or A. thaliana (GS1,2). Our results show that there no ¹²C/¹³C isotope effect but there is significant ¹⁴N/¹⁵N isotope fractionation of ca. 16‰. In addition, there is an inverse solvent isotope effect (reaction 1.5 to 2 times faster in D₂O). This suggests that forming the C----N bond (amidation) is partially rate-limiting (catalytic commitment of ca. 14% only) and the H-bond network in the active site is of substantial importance for the reaction rate. The occurrence of inverse ¹⁴N/¹⁵N isotope effects under certain circumstances as well as the drastic impact of changing the metal cofactor (Mg²⁺)) indicate that the amidation step can be reversible and that the coordination by the metal plays a key role in stabilizing reaction intermediates, by interfacing the solvent. In other words, in its natural solvent H₂O, the GS catalyses an intrinsically ‘difficult’ reaction (high energy barrier of amidation) made possible by both ATP cleavage and its exergonic nature

    The Impact of Photorespiratory Glycolate Oxidase Activity on Arabidopsis thaliana Leaf Soluble Amino Acid Pool Sizes during Acclimation to Low Atmospheric CO2 Concentrations

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    International audiencePhotorespiration is a metabolic process that removes toxic 2-phosphoglycolate produced by the oxygenase activity of ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase. It is essential for plant growth under ambient air, and it can play an important role under stress conditions that reduce CO2 entry into the leaf thus enhancing photorespiration. The aim of the study was to determine the impact of photorespiration on Arabidopsis thaliana leaf amino acid metabolism under low atmospheric CO2 concentrations. To achieve this, wild-type plants and photorespiratory glycolate oxidase (gox) mutants were given either short-term (4 h) or long-term (1 to 8 d) low atmospheric CO2 concentration treatments and leaf amino acid levels were measured and analyzed. Low CO2 treatments rapidly decreased net CO2 assimilation rate and triggered a broad reconfiguration of soluble amino acids. The most significant changes involved photorespiratory Gly and Ser, aromatic and branched-chain amino acids as well as Ala, Asp, Asn, Arg, GABA and homoSer. While the Gly/Ser ratio increased in all Arabidopsis lines between air and low CO2 conditions, low CO2 conditions led to a higher increase in both Gly and Ser contents in gox1 and gox2.2 mutants when compared to wild-type and gox2.1 plants. Results are discussed with respect to potential limiting enzymatic steps with a special emphasis on photorespiratory aminotransferase activities and the complexity of photorespiration

    Sensitive, highly resolved, and quantitative H-1-C-13 NMR data in one go for tracking metabolites in vegetal extracts

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    The quantification of metabolites is essential for understanding and improving biological systems. With the aim to quantify in one map a complex mixture composed of low concentrated metabolites, a new experiment called the H-1-C-13 QUIPU HSQC allows improving of both resolution and sensitivity for investigation of vegetal extracts

    Leaf green-white variegation is advantageous under N deprivation in Pelargonium x hortorum

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    Variegation (patchy surface area with different colours) is a common trait of plant leaves. In green-white variegated leaves, two tissues with contrasted primary carbon metabolisms (autotrophic in green and heterotrophic in white tissues) are juxtaposed. It is generally believed that variegation is detrimental to growth due to the lower photosynthetic surface area. However, the common occurrence of leaf variegation in nature raises the question of a possible advantage under certain circumstances. Here, we examined growth and metabolism of variegated Pelargonium x hortorum L.H.Bailey using metabolomics techniques under N deprivation. Our results showed that variegated plants tolerate N deficiency much better, i.e. do not stop leaf biomass production after 9 weeks of N deprivation, even though the growth of green plants is eventually arrested and leaf senescence is triggered. Metabolic analysis indicates that white areas are naturally enriched in arginine, which decreases a lot upon N deprivation, probably to feed green areas. This process may compensate for the lower proteolysis enhancement in green areas and thus contribute to maintaining photosynthetic activity. We conclude that under our experimental conditions, leaf variegation was advantageous under prolonged N deprivation
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