Chlorophyll2010

Pyruvate-Derived Amino Acids in Spinach Chloroplasts : Synthesis and Regulation during Photosynthetic Carbon Metabolism.

Plant physiology

confidence

Key findings

Biochemical study of pyruvate-derived amino acid synthesis in spinach chloroplasts; no clinical or biological endpoints reported.

View source on PubMed (PMID 16663866) ↗

Sample size
Not reported
Population
Spinach (Spinacia oleracea) chloroplasts (in vitro)
Dosing
Not reported
Duration
Not reported
Route
In vitro incubation
Blinding
not_reported
Controls
none
Drug class
porphyrin pigment
Full abstract

A probable carbon flow from the Calvin cycle to branched chain amino acids and lipids via phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP) and pyruvate was examined in spinach (Spinacia oleracea) chloroplasts. The interpendence of metabolic pathways in and outside chloroplasts as well as product and feedback inhibition were studied. It was shown that alanine, aromatic, and small amounts of branched chain amino acids were formed from bicarbonate in purified intact chloroplasts. Addition of PEP only favored formation of aromatic amino acids. Mechanisms of regulation remained unclear. Concentrations of PEP and pyruvate within the chloroplast impermeable space during photosynthetic carbon fixation were 15 times higher than in the reaction medium. A direct carbon flow to pyruvate was identified (0.1 micromoles per milligram chlorophyll per hour). Pyruvate was taken up by intact chloroplasts slowly, leading to the formation of lysine, alanine, valine, and leucine plus isoleucine (approximate ratios, 100-500:60-100:40-100:2-10). The K(m) for the formation of valine and leucine plus isoleucine was estimated to be 0.1 millimolar. Ten micromolar glutamate optimized the transamination reaction regardless of whether bicarbonate or pyruvate was being applied. Alanine and valine formation was enhanced by the addition of acetate to the reaction mixture. The enhancement probably resulted from an inhibition of pyruvate dehydrogenase by acetyl-S-coenzyme A formed from acetate, and resulting accumulation of hydroxyethylthiamine diphosphate and pyruvate. High concentrations of valine and isoleucine inhibited their own and each others synthesis and enhanced alanine formation. When pyruvate was applied, only amino acids were formed; when complemented with bicarbonate, fatty acids were formed as well. This is probably the result of a requirement of acetyl-S-coenzyme A-carboxylase for bicarbonate.

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