Purification and Properties of Mesophyll and Bundle Sheath Cell alpha-Glucan Phosphorylases from Zea mays L. : Equivalence of the Enzymes with the Cytosol and Plastid Phosphorylases from Spinach.
Maneno muhimu
Kikemikali
Two major alpha-glucan phosphorylases (I and II) from leaves of the C(4) plant corn (Zea mays L.) were previously shown to be compartmented in mesophyll and bundle sheath cells, respectively (C Mateyka, C Schnarrenberger 1984 Plant Sci Lett 36: 119-123). The two enzymes were separated by chromatography on DEAE-cellulose and purified to homogeneity by affinity chromatography on immobilized starch, according to published procedures, as developed for the cytosol and chloroplast phosphorylase from the C(3) plant spinach. The two alpha-glucan phosphorylases have their pH optimum at pH 7. The specificity for polyglucans was similar for soluble starch and amylopectin, however, differed for glycogen (K(m) = 16 micrograms per milliliter for the mesophyll cell and 250 micrograms per milliliter for the bundle sheath cell phosphorylase). Maltose, maltotriose, and maltotetraose were not cleaved by either phosphorylase. If maltopentaose was used as substrate, the rate was about twice as high with the bundle sheath cell phosphorylase, than with the mesophyll cell phosphorylase. The phosphorylase I showed a molecular mass of 174 kilodaltons and the phosphorylase II of 195 kilodaltons for the native enzyme and of 87 and of 53 kilodaltons for the SDS-treated proteins, respectively. Specific antisera raised against mesophyll cell phosphorylase from corn leaves and against chloroplast phosphorylase from spinach leaves implied high similarity for the cytosol phosphorylase of the C(3) plant spinach with mesophyll cell phosphorylase of the C(4) plant corn and of chloroplast phosphorylase of spinach with the bundle sheath cell phosphorylase of corn.