@article{DauvilleeChochoisSteupetal.2006, author = {Dauvillee, David and Chochois, Vincent and Steup, Martin and Haebel, Sophie and Eckermann, Nora and Ritte, Gerhard and Ral, Jean-Philippe and Colleoni, Christophe and Hicks, Glenn and Wattebled, Fabrice and Deschamps, Philippe and Lienard, Luc and Cournac, Laurent and Putaux, Jean-Luc and Dupeyre, Danielle and Ball, Steven G.}, title = {Plastidial phosphorylase is required for normal starch synthesis in Chlamydomonas reinhardtii}, series = {The plant journal}, volume = {48}, journal = {The plant journal}, number = {2}, publisher = {Blackwell}, address = {Oxford}, issn = {0960-7412}, doi = {10.1111/j.1365-313X.2006.02870.x}, pages = {274 -- 285}, year = {2006}, abstract = {Among the three distinct starch phosphorylase activities detected in Chlamydomonas reinhardtii, two distinct plastidial enzymes (PhoA and PhoB) are documented while a single extraplastidial form (PhoC) displays a higher affinity for glycogen as in vascular plants. The two plastidial phosphorylases are shown to function as homodimers containing two 91-kDa (PhoA) subunits and two 110-kDa (PhoB) subunits. Both lack the typical 80-amino-acid insertion found in the higher plant plastidial forms. PhoB is exquisitely sensitive to inhibition by ADP-glucose and has a low affinity for malto-oligosaccharides. PhoA is more similar to the higher plant plastidial phosphorylases: it is moderately sensitive to ADP-glucose inhibition and has a high affinity for unbranched malto-oligosaccharides. Molecular analysis establishes that STA4 encodes PhoB. Chlamydomonas reinhardtii strains carrying mutations at the STA4 locus display a significant decrease in amounts of starch during storage that correlates with the accumulation of abnormally shaped granules containing a modified amylopectin structure and a high amylose content. The wild-type phenotype could be rescued by reintroduction of the cloned wild-type genomic DNA, thereby demonstrating the involvement of phosphorylase in storage starch synthesis.}, language = {en} } @article{RitteHeydenreichMahlowetal.2006, author = {Ritte, Gerhard and Heydenreich, Matthias and Mahlow, Sebastian and Haebel, Sophie and Koetting, Oliver and Steup, Martin}, title = {Phosphorylation of C6- and C3-positions of glucosyl residues in starch is catalysed by distinct dikinases}, series = {FEBS letters : the journal for rapid publication of short reports in molecular biosciences}, volume = {580}, journal = {FEBS letters : the journal for rapid publication of short reports in molecular biosciences}, number = {20}, publisher = {Elsevier}, address = {Amsterdam}, issn = {0014-5793}, doi = {10.1016/j.febslet.2006.07.085}, pages = {4872 -- 4876}, year = {2006}, abstract = {Glucan, water dikinase (GWD) and phosphoglucan, water dikinase (PWD) are required for normal starch metabolism. We analysed starch phosphorylation in Arabidopsis wildtype plants and mutants lacking either GWD or PWD using P-31 NMR. Phosphorylation at both C6- and C3-positions of glucose moieties in starch was drastically decreased in GWD-deficient mutants. In starch from PWD-deficient plants C3-bound phosphate was reduced to levels close to the detection limit. The latter result contrasts with previous reports according to which GWD phosphorylates both C6- and C3-positions. In these studies, phosphorylation had been analysed by HPLC of acid-hydrolysed glucans. We now show that maltose-6-phosphate, a product of incomplete starch hydrolysis, co-eluted with glucose-3-phosphate under the chromatographic conditions applied. Re-examination of the specificity of the dikinases using an improved method demonstrates that C6- and C3-phosphorylation is selectively catalysed by GWD and PWD, respectively.}, language = {en} } @article{KreftGeorgievaBaeumleretal.2006, author = {Kreft, Oliver and Georgieva, Radostina and B{\"a}umler, Hans and Steup, Martin and M{\"u}ller-R{\"o}ber, Bernd and Sukhorukov, Gleb B. and M{\"o}hwald, Helmuth}, title = {Red blood cell templated polyelectrolyte capsules : a novel vehicle for the stable encapsulation of DNA and proteins}, issn = {1022-1336}, doi = {10.1002/marc.200500777}, year = {2006}, abstract = {A novel method for the encapsulation of biomacromolecules, such as nucleic acids and proteins, into polyelectrolyte microcapsules is described. Fluorescence-labelled double-stranded DNA and human serum albumin (HSA) are used as model substances for encapsulation in hollow microcapsules templated on human erythrocytes. The encapsulation procedure involves an intermediate drying C, step. The accumulation of DNA and HSA in the capsules is observed by confocal laser scanning microscopy, UV spectroscopy, and flourimetry. The mechanism of encapsulation is discussed}, language = {en} } @article{DeschampsHaferkampDauvilleeetal.2006, author = {Deschamps, Philippe and Haferkamp, Ilka and Dauvillee, David and Haebel, Sophie and Steup, Martin and Buleon, Alain and Putaux, Jean-Luc and Colleoni, Christophe and d'Hulst, Christophe and Plancke, Charlotte and Gould, Sven and Maier, Uwe and Neuhaus, Heinz Eckhard and Ball, Steven G.}, title = {Nature of the periplastidial pathway of starch synthesis in the cryptophyte Guillardia theta}, issn = {1535-9778}, doi = {10.1128/Ec.00380-05}, year = {2006}, abstract = {The nature of the periplastidial pathway of starch biosynthesis was investigated with the model cryptophyte Guillardia theta. The storage polysaccharide granules were shown to be composed of both amylose and amylopectin fractions with a chain length distribution and crystalline organization very similar to those of starch from green algae and land plants. Most starch granules displayed a shape consistent with biosynthesis occurring around the pyrenoid through the rhodoplast membranes. A protein with significant similarity to the amylose-synthesizing granule-bound starch syntbase 1 from green plants was found as the major polypeptide bound to the polysaccharide matrix. N-terminal sequencing of the mature protein proved that the precursor protein carries a nonfunctional transit peptide in its bipartite topogenic signal sequence which is cleaved without yielding transport of the enzyme across the two inner plastid membranes. The enzyme was shown to display similar affinities for ADP and UDP-glucose, while the V-max measured with UDP-glucose was twofold higher. The granule-bound starch synthase from Guillardia theta was demonstrated to be responsible for the synthesis of long glucan chains and therefore to be the functional equivalent of the amylose- synthesizing enzyme of green plants. Preliminary characterization of the starch pathway suggests that Guillardia theta utilizes a UDP-glucose-based pathway to synthesize starch}, language = {en} } @article{FettkeChiaEckermannetal.2006, author = {Fettke, J{\"o}rg and Chia, Tansy and Eckermann, Nora and Smith, Alison M. and Steup, Martin}, title = {A transglucosidase necessary for starch degradation and maltose metabolism in leaves at night acts on cytosolic heteroglycans (SHG)}, issn = {0960-7412}, doi = {10.1111/j.1365-313X.2006.02732.x}, year = {2006}, abstract = {The recently characterized cytosolic transglucosidase DPE2 (EC 2.4.1.25) is essential for the cytosolic metabolism of maltose, an intermediate on the pathway by which starch is converted to sucrose at night. In in vitro assays, the enzyme utilizes glycogen as a glucosyl acceptor but the in vivo acceptor molecules remained unknown. In this communication we present evidence that DPE2 acts on the recently identified cytosolic water-soluble heteroglycans (SHG) as does the cytosolic phosphorylase (EC 2.4.1.1) isoform. By using in vitro two-step C-14 labeling assays we demonstrate that the two transferases can utilize the same acceptor sites of the SHG. Cytosolic heteroglycans from a DPE2-deficient Arabidopsis mutant were characterized. Compared with the wild type the glucose content of the heteroglycans was increased. Most of the additional glucosyl residues were found in the outer chains of SHG that are released by an endo- alpha-arabinanase (EC 3.2.1.99). Additional starch-related mutants were characterized for further analysis of the increased glucosyl content. Based on these data, the cytosolic metabolism of starch-derived carbohydrates is discussed}, language = {en} }