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American Society of Plant Biologists Discrete Forms of Amylose Are Synthesized by Isoforms of GBSSI in Pea
a John Innes Centre, Colney, Norwich NR4 7UH, United Kingdom 1 To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail cathie.martin{at}bbsrc.ac.uk; fax 44-1603-450045
Amyloses with distinct molecular masses are found in the starch of pea embryos compared with the starch of pea leaves. In pea embryos, a granule-bound starch synthase protein (GBSSIa) is required for the synthesis of a significant portion of the amylose. However, this protein seems to be insignificant in the synthesis of amylose in pea leaves. cDNA clones encoding a second isoform of GBSSI, GBSSIb, have been isolated from pea leaves. Comparison of GBSSIa and GBSSIb activities shows them to have distinct properties. These differences have been confirmed by the expression of GBSSIa and GBSSIb in the amylose-free mutant of potato. GBSSIa and GBSSIb make distinct forms of amylose that differ in their molecular mass. These differences in product specificity, coupled with differences in the tissues in which GBSSIa and GBSSIb are most active, explain the distinct forms of amylose found in different tissues of pea. The shorter form of amylose formed by GBSSIa confers less susceptibility to the retrogradation of starch pastes than the amylose formed by GBSSIb. The product specificity of GBSSIa could provide beneficial attributes to starches for food and nonfood uses.
Starch is composed of two glucan polymers: amylose, a predominantly linear -1,4-linked glucan, and amylopectin, in which the -1,4-linked chains are branched extensively by 1,6-linkages. In higher plants, starch is made both in chloroplasts ("transitory" starch) in leaves and in amyloplasts ("reserve" or "storage" starch) in nonphotosynthetic storage organs. The small, disc-shaped granules of transitory starch show little variation between different plant species (French, 1984
Both the ratio of amylose to amylopectin in storage starch and the average size of the two polymers show significant variation between different plant species. These parameters also may differ between transitory and storage starch within one species and can vary with the developmental age of the plant organ and even within the granules themselves (Jane and Shen, 1992
In storage starch, amylose content can vary between 11 and 37%, but on average, it constitutes 30% of the total glucan (Shannon and Garwood, 1984
The molecular mass of amylose varies between species. For example, wheat amylose has an average degree of polymerization of 570 Glc units (equivalent to a molecular mass of
Both amylose and amylopectin are synthesized by starch synthases, which catalyze the transfer of Glc from ADP-Glc to the nonreducing end of glucan chains via an
GBSSI is bound tightly to the starch granule. The sequence of GBSSI is known for many plant species (Mason-Gamer et al., 1998
The mechanisms by which different isoforms of starch synthase catalyze the same reaction and yet generate polymer variation are not fully understood, but there is increasing evidence to suggest that isoform localization within the plastid and fundamental differences in kinetics and reaction mechanisms are important determinants of product specificity (Smith et al., 1997
The leaves and stem of waxy rice, the leaves and pericarp of waxy maize, the pericarp of waxy wheat, and the pods, leaves, and nodules of lam pea all contain amylose, implying that another gene (or genes) controls amylose production in the organs of these plants (Shannon and Garwood, 1984
The existence of two different forms of GBSSI, expressed in different parts of the plant in which the starches have a different polymer composition, suggests that GBSSI isoforms might have distinct characteristics that make specific contributions to amylose synthesis, although the structural similarities between GBSSI proteins are so high that this is not an obvious inference. In potato, by contrast, only one isoform of GBSSI has been described, and mutation of the gene encoding this protein (AMF) results in the complete elimination of amylose from tubers, leaves, and roots (Hovenkamp-Hermelink et al., 1987
In this article, we compare the molecular mass of amylose partially purified from the starch of pea leaves and embryos by gel-permeation chromatography and show that pea leaves contain an amylose that is distinct in its average molecular mass from that in embryos. A cDNA clone encoding a second isoform of pea GBSSI, designated GBSSIb (Denyer et al., 1997 We analyzed the nature of their products in vivo by expression of each in an amylose-free (amf; a GBSSI mutant) potato and show that both produce amylose but that their products are distinct. The molecular mass of amylose synthesized by GBSSIb in amf potato was the same as that of pea leaf amylose, but the amylose synthesized by GBSSIa was smaller. A difference in the physical properties of the starches synthesized by GBSSIa and GBSSIb also was observed. The significance of this difference with respect to the functional behavior of the polymers is discussed.
Pea Leaf Amylose Has a Greater Molecular Mass Than Pea Embryo Amylose Amylose was partially purified from pea leaf and pea embryo starch by butanol precipitation, and its molecular mass distribution was analyzed by gel filtration chromatography. The results are shown in Figure 1 . For both leaf and embryo, an initial contaminating amylopectin-containing peak (wavelength of maximal absorbance [ max] of 550 nm) was eluted in fractions 18 to 23. Pea leaf amylose ( max of 610 nm) appeared to have a higher molecular mass (peak elution fractions 38 to 41, corresponding to a dextran equivalent peak molecular mass of 655,390 ± 10 D) (Figure 1A) than pea embryo amylose ( max of 620 nm; peak elution fractions 41 and 42, corresponding to a dextran equivalent peak molecular mass of 470,210 ± 10 D) (Figure 1B). The high max values indicate that the amylose fractions had little or no contamination with branched glucans.
A cDNA encoding the major GBSSI protein in pea embryos, GBSS1a, has been cloned and characterized (Dry et al., 1992
Isolation and Characterization of a Full-Length cDNA Clone for Pea GBSSIb
The derived amino acid sequence of GBSSIb predicts a 613amino acid polypeptide of 67.6 kD, which shows significant similarity (68.8% identity and 75.6% similarity) to the predicted sequence of pea GBSSIa (Figure 2A)
. The N-terminal region of full-length GBSSIb contains the amino acid sequence 5'-GMNLIFVGTEVAPWSKTGGLGDVL-3', which is identical to that obtained from protein sequencing of GBSSIb extracted from lam pod starch (Denyer et al., 1997
Mature GBSSIb is a protein of 58.4 kD (528 amino acids) and has a predicted pI of 6.44. Mature GBSSIa is a protein of 58.3 kD (528 amino acids) with a predicted pI of 6.22. The two mature peptide sequences are 73% identical (80% similar). Both possess the N-terminal KTGGL motif thought to be responsible for binding ADP/ADP-Glc and the C-terminal KTGGL "look-alike" motif that has been shown to influence the kinetic properties of potato GBSSI in vitro (Edwards et al., 1999a
However, a database search showed that mature GBSSIb is more similar (76.5% identity and 83.5% similarity) to mature potato GBSSI than it is to GBSSIa from pea. A phylogenetic tree of GBSSI from several species is shown in Figure 2B. There appear to be two major classes. One class consists entirely of GBSSI from monocots. The second class includes all of the GBSSI forms from dicots and one isoform from wheat, GBSSII, which is expressed in leaves (Vrinten and Nakamura, 2000
Differential Expression of GBSSI Isoforms in Pea
Expression of GBSSIa and GBSSIb in E. coli To determine whether the different isoforms of GBSSI from pea had different enzyme specificities, both proteins were expressed in E. coli for analysis of their kinetic properties. For all expression analyses, GBSSI proteins with an N-terminal S-tag fusion peptide were used. Both GBSSIa and GBSSIb were synthesized in approximately the same amounts in the soluble phase of E. coli (0.024 to 0.026 µg/µL, as measured by the S-tag assay), and both had the correct molecular mass of 60 kD, as judged by protein gel blot analysis (Figure 4)
.
No significant starch synthase activity was found associated with GBSSIa under any of the conditions tested. This agrees with the results obtained when GBSSIa was solubilized from pea embryos (Smith, 1990
In contrast, GBSSIb had activity that was very similar to that of GBSSI from potato tuber (Edwards et al., 1999a
Like potato GBSSI, pea GBSSIb exhibited a lag in initiating glucan synthesis of 1 to 4 min, depending on amylopectin concentration (data not shown). GBSSIb showed processive rather than distributive activity (the enzyme preferentially added successive Glc units to a single glucan chain rather than to different chains) when supplied with 100 mM maltotriose and 2.5 mg/mL amylopectin (data not shown), as does potato GBSSI (Denyer et al., 1999
Expression of GBSSIa and GBSSIb in the amf Mutant of Potato Starch from developing tubers of independent transformants was screened for the presence of GBSSI by Coomassie blue staining of polyacrylamide gels and by protein gel blot analysis (Figure 5) . For the GBSSIa lines, 24 of 50 transformants were found to express substantial amounts of GBSSIa comparable to the amount of GBSSI found in wild-type potato (Figure 5A). Lines Ia.5, Ia.7, Ia.12, and Ia.3 (used as a control because no GBSSI protein was visible) were used for further analysis. The transformation efficiency of plasmid pBinGBSSIb was approximately the same as that of pBinGBSSIa, but the expression levels of GBSSIb generally were relatively low, especially compared with the amount of GBSSI in wild-type potato (Figure 5B).
This may have been because the gene construct had a rather short leader sequence (49 nucleotides), which could have limited the efficient translation of GBSSIb in transgenic potato, or because unusual codons at the start of the GBSSIb sequence limited translation in potato because the levels of GBSSIa and GBSSIb transcript were equivalent in the transgenic lines used for further analysis (data not shown). The GBSSIb-expressing lines Ib.12 and Ib.4 were studied further, together with the nonexpressing line Ib.8.
Starch Synthase Activity and Protein Synthesis in amf Potato
When these results were compared with the amounts of GBSSI made in each line (Table 4), it was clear that GBSSIa encoded an active GBSSI. However, the specific activity of GBSSIb in the amf background was much higher than that of GBSSIa. Ia.12 produced GBSSIa protein at a level equivalent to the level of potato GBSSI in wild-type potato (0.25 µg GBSSI protein/mg starch; Figure 5A), whereas Ib.12 synthesized 250 times less GBSSIb protein (0.001 µg GBSSI protein/mg starch; Figure 5B). The results are summarized in Table 4 and show that although GBSSIa is active in vivo, GBSSIb encodes a distinct protein with a significantly higher specific activity than GBSSIa (at least 10-fold higher) in vivo.
Interestingly, comparison of enzyme activities in solution (Table 1) and on the starch granule (Table 4) implies that both proteins are activated significantly by association with the starch granule. In fact, activation probably requires the incorporation of GBSSIa into the starch granule, because in vitro assays of soluble GBSSIa (expressed in E. coli) with added starch granules did not show starch synthase activity. The precise degree of activation was impossible to calculate for GBSSIa, because no activity could be detected for the soluble form. For GBSSIb, the specific activity of the soluble form expressed in E. coli was calculated to be 0.3 µmol·min-1·mg-1 GBSSI protein (with maltooligosaccharides as substrate; Table 2), and on the amf starch, it was measured as 3.4 µmol·min-1·mg-1 GBSSI protein (a 10-fold activation).
High-Performance Anion-Exchange Chromatography Analysis of the Soluble Products of GBSSIa and GBSSIb
Analysis of Transgenic Starch
In some granules, the most intensely staining ring was closer to the periphery than to the center. In the Ib lines, there were many fewer blue cores and fewer but more evenly stained rings. These differences in amylose localization were reproduced in independent transgenic lines. The significance of these differences in staining pattern between GBSSIa and GBSSIb starch is under investigation, but they suggest that the two isoforms may synthesize amylose preferentially in different regions of the starch granule.
Quantitative and Qualitative Analysis of Amylose In the case of pea GBSSIb, the failure of the pea protein to fully complement amylose production in the amf line probably was attributable to the low levels of GBSSIb production achieved (Figure 5B). However, in the case of GBSSIa, high levels of protein (equivalent to those of wild-type GBSSI) were produced in the transgenic lines (Figure 5A). This finding implies that GBSSIa encodes an isoform of GBSSI distinct from that in potato that cannot fully complement potato GBSSI activity. When amyloses from lines Ia.12 and Ib.12 were concentrated by butanol precipitation and analyzed by gel permeation chromatography, they had different molecular masses (Figures 7A and 7B) . In line Ia.12, the mass of amylose (peak fractions 42 to 43; peak measured as 367,320 ± 10 D) was significantly smaller than that of Ib.12 (peak fraction 39; peak measured as 655,390 ± 10 D). Amylose from line Ib.12 appeared to have a molecular mass that was very similar to that of pea leaf amylose (peak at 655,390 ± 10 D; Figure 1A). The amylose from pea embryos appeared to be intermediate in size (peak at 470,210 ± 10 D; Figure 1B) between that in Ia.12 potato starch (peak at 367,320 ± 10 D) and that in Ib.12 potato starch (peak at 655,390 ± 10 D).
These findings suggested that GBSSIa was not the only enzyme that contributed to amylose synthesis in pea embryo. To investigate this further, amylose was concentrated from the lam mutant of pea (SIM 503; Denyer et al., 1995 By contrast, GBSSIb synthesized most of the amylose in pea leaves. Although GBSSIa was expressed at a low level in pea leaves (Figure 3), the low specific activity of this protein suggests that it makes a very minor contribution to the synthesis of amylose in pea leaves compared with GBSSIb. To confirm that the size of the amylose synthesized was principally a function of the activity of the specific isoform of GBSSI in a particular tissue, amylose from amf lines expressing GBSSIa was extracted. The amount of amylose in this leaf starch was extremely low, but it clearly had a low peak molecular mass (370 kD), typical of the product of GBSSIa, as seen in amf potato tubers (Figure 7E). The sizes of amyloses from wild-type and GBSSIb potato leaves are shown, for comparison, in the supplementary material (see supplementary data online). No amylose was detected in amf leaf starch. Therefore, GBSSIa makes low molecular mass amylose in both tubers and leaves, establishing GBSSI isoform specificity as a major determinant of amylose functionality in higher plants. Our kinetic data indicated that GBSSIb was very similar to potato GBSSI in its activity and specificity (Tables 1 and 2). Interestingly, the potato amylose from the diploid control line had a relatively high molecular mass, comparable to that synthesized by GBSSIb in the amf potato line (Figures 7C and 7D).
Effects of GBSSI Isoforms on Short Chains of Amylopectin Fluorophore-assisted gel electrophoresis was used to examine the chain length distribution of the amylopectin shorter chains (6 to 35 Glc units) after debranching with isoamylase. No significant differences were observed between any of the transgenic lines, the amf mutant, the wild type, or the fully complemented mutant BW101 (data not shown). We conclude that GBSSIa and GBSSIb make no contribution to the synthesis of short glucan chains in amylopectin. However, in our hands, fluorophore-assisted gel electrophoresis did not resolve chain lengths with a degree of polymerization >35 with accuracy, so it is possible that these proteins could contribute to the synthesis of long chains in amylopectin.
Physicochemical Analysis of Potato Starches We measured two features, the Tm of the starch granules and the solution properties of the starches, because these parameters are particularly dependent on amylose content. The starches of the wild type, amf, amf expressing GBSSIa (lines Ia.5 and Ia.12), and amf expressing GBSSIb (line Ib.12) were compared. Line Ia.5 was included in this comparison because its amylose content was exactly the same as that of line Ib.12 (0.8%), whereas line Ia.12 had slightly higher amylose composition (1.0%). Differences in the Tm of the starches were measured by differential scanning calorimetry (DSC). The onset temperature (Tonset) for melting of wild-type potato starch was 63.9°C and that of amf was 70.3°C, confirming that amylose reduces Tm significantly. The Tonset of Ia.12 starch was 70.7°C, that of Ia.5 was 70.5°C, and that of Ib.12 was 67.5°C. These data show that the small amount of amylose present in the Ib.12 starch significantly decreased the Tonset for starch melting. However, the equivalent amount of amylose in Ia.5 or slightly more in Ia.12 starch did not shift the Tonset significantly from that observed for amf starch. These data indicate that the molecular mass of amylose does influence the Tonset for melting of starch granules.
The solution properties of the starches were examined using a rheometer, which involves measuring viscosity changes while the starch suspension is heated and then cooled with constant stirring. This type of analysis provides insight into how the starch may behave as a paste or a sauce. Upon heating, the granules swell and the viscosity of the suspension increases. A point of maximum swelling is reached, known as the peak paste viscosity. Upon further heating, the viscosity decreases (Flipse et al., 1996
During this period, the viscosity increases again, a process known as retrogradation, which is a negative attribute of starches for food uses and for nonfood uses as coatings and paints, because it involves the formation of "skins." Although retrogradation can be strongly influenced by the amylopectin component of starch, it also is correlated positively to increasing amylose content (Visser et al., 1997 The details of the rheological analysis of wild-type, amf, Ia.5, and Ia.12 starches are shown in Figure 8A . All of the starches started to increase in viscosity at a similar temperature, and the differences in Tonset observed in the DSC analysis were not observed using this method. The peak pasting viscosities differed considerably between wild-type and amf starch, but the inclusion of low levels of amylose in lines Ia.5 and Ia.12 reduced the peak pasting viscosity compared with that in amf starch, indicating that this feature is not related linearly to amylose content.
Upon cooling, the setback (the final viscosity of the starch gel) was much higher for wild-type starch than for amf starch, demonstrating the importance of amylose content to retrogradation. The increasing amounts of amylose in Ia.5 and Ia.12 starches increased the setback. We compared the starches from lines Ia.5 and Ib.12, which had identical amylose contents (0.8%), to determine the influence of amylose molecular mass on the rheological profiles. These data are shown in Figure 8B. The Tonset and the peak pasting viscosities of the two starches were identical, but the setback of Ia.5 starch was lower than that of Ib.12 starch, indicating that the longer amylose produced by GBSSIb is more susceptible to retrogradation than the shorter amylose produced by GBSSIa.
Isoforms of GBSSI in Pea Our analysis of genes encoding GBSSI in pea has demonstrated that at least two genes that encode isoforms can catalyze the incorporation of Glc from ADP-Glc into glucan. Both isoforms are tightly bound to starch granules and therefore are granule-bound starch synthases. Their deduced primary amino acid sequences support this interpretation. Despite their structural similarity, these isoforms of GBSSI are not identical. First, they are expressed differentially in plant organs, GBSSIa being expressed predominantly in pea embryos, where storage starch is synthesized, and GBSSIb being expressed predominantly in leaves, where transitory starch is synthesized, although it is expressed in embryos as well (Denyer et al., 1997 The two isoforms of GBSSI from pea also have distinct catalytic properties. GBSSIa activity cannot be measured in vitro using standard assay procedures for starch synthases, whereas GBSSIb activity is detected readily in vitro. Comparison of the kinetic properties of GBSSIb with those of other GBSSI proteins suggests that they are very similar to those of potato GBSSI in terms of its specific catalytic properties and the size of the amylose it synthesizes in vivo. Interestingly, both GBSSIa and GBSSIb are activated upon incorporation into starch granules. The degree of activation is impossible to estimate for GBSSIa because no activity can be detected in vitro (implying a very significant activation upon association with starch granules). For GBSSIb, we estimate activation upon association with the starch granule to be at least 10-fold.
Differences in the Products of GBSSI Isoforms Differences in the location of the enzymes (or active enzymes) within the granule might influence product specificity through differences in the supply of ADP-Glc substrate (concentration and rate of diffusion) to different places and in the space available for the synthesis of new glucan. The importance of granule association to GBSSIa activity is particularly clear, because no activity of this isoform was detected in vitro. In addition, microheterogeneity within the granule might influence both where this enzyme is active and the specific nature of its product.
Our analysis showed that pea leaves contain a longer form of amylose in their starch granules than do pea embryos. There have been reports of many factors that influence the molecular mass of amylose, including the developmental stage of the tissue (Yun and Matheson, 1992 This specificity in the product of different GBSSI isoforms represents an additional explanation for the differences in the molecular mass of amylose that has not been considered previously. Although GBSSIa is expressed weakly in leaves, its relatively low expression, coupled with its relatively low specific activity (compared with that of GBSSIb), indicates that GBSSIb is the major GBSSI isoform activity in leaves. Embryo starch consists of amylose that is intermediate in size between the product of GBSSIa and that of GBSSIb. This finding indicates that both GBSSIa and GBSSIb operate to synthesize amylose in pea embryos.
Both proteins can be detected in embryos bound tightly to starch (Denyer et al., 1997 GBSSIa and GBSSIb may be expressed in the same cells of the embryo, and the amylose produced would be the result of their combined specificities. Alternatively, GBSSIa and GBSSIb may be expressed in different cells of the embryo, but upon extraction, the starch granules they synthesize would become mixed. The fact that GBSSIa and GBSSIb synthesize discrete forms of amylose in pea embryos suggests that isoform specificity is a major determinant of amylose molecular mass, at least in the starch of pea embryos.
Our data provide evidence for specificity in starch composition being provided by the differential use of GBSSI isoforms in different tissues of the plant. A recent phylogenetic analysis of the Rosaceae has shown two loci encoding GBSSI in all subfamilies (Evans et al., 2000
Based on structural analysis, the GBSSI proteins of cereal storage organs appear quite distinct from those active in dicot storage organs (Figure 2B). These structural differences may imply differences in catalytic activity/specificity, which also could affect product specificity. It has been reported that cereal endosperm starch contains amylose of higher molecular mass than that in pea embryos but lower than that in potato tubers (Gerard et al., 2001
Interestingly, a GBSSI gene from cassava failed to complement the amf mutant in full production of amylose when transformed into this line of potato. These data suggest that cassava GBSSI and potato GBSSI also may be distinct in their activities in plants (Salehuzzaman et al., 1999 Our experimental analysis of GBSSI isoforms from pea in potato was complicated by the very low levels of expression of GBSSIb we were able to obtain in the amf line. This meant that none of the transgenic lines showed full complementation of the amf phenotype, despite GBSSIb being a protein with very similar activity and specificity to the potato GBSSI encoded by the AMF locus and expressed in potato tubers. We do not know the reason why such low levels of GBSSIb protein were obtained in our transgenic experiments, but we suspect problems as a result of inefficient translation caused by the short leader sequence in the gene construct or differences in codon use between pea and potato, which might have limited GBSSIb protein production, because mRNA levels for the two genes in the different potato lines were equivalent. However, one advantage of comparing lines with low GBSSIb activity with those expressing GBSSIa is that lines with similar production of amylose were compared despite the very different specific activities of the two isoforms in vivo. We conclude that differences between the amyloses synthesized by the two isoforms resulted from different product specificities and were not caused by differences in the overall level of GBSSI activity.
Given the facts that GBSSIb is a significantly more active enzyme than GBSSIa, both in vitro and in vivo (i.e., it has a much higher specific activity), and that recent data suggest that the molecular mass of amylose is correlated positively with the level of GBSSI activity in potato (Fulton et al., 2002
Physical Properties of Starches Synthesized by Different GBSSI Isoforms Retrogradation also is a very important feature of starches; it involves the tendency of starches to form skins after heating. Retrogradation can be measured from the viscosity changes that occur upon cooling of starches. Amylose composition is associated strongly with retrogradation, so the wild-type starch increased in viscosity quickly after cooling, whereas the amf starch showed a very slow, low-level increase in viscosity. Significantly, the starch synthesized by GBSSIb (Ib.12) showed a more rapid increase to a higher viscosity than the starch synthesized by GBSSIa (Ia.5) after cooling. These results suggest that the shorter amylose synthesized by GBSSIa may provide beneficial properties to starch pastes in terms of retrogradation.
Preparation of Starch Starch was prepared essentially according to the methods of Edwards et al. (1995)
Starch Analysis
Gel Filtration Chromatography
Chain Lengths of Amylopectin
Amylose Content
Iodine Staining
Isolation and Sequencing of cDNA Clones
Three positive clones were obtained and subcloned into the EcoRI site of pBluescript SK+, and the sequences were determined. All three clones were full length (2100 bp). The 5' end of the GBSSIb cDNA encodes a peptide sequence that conforms to the consensus sequence for chloroplast transit peptides (Gavel and von Heijne, 1990
Isolation of RNA, Poly(A)+ RNA, Reverse TranscriptaseMediated PCR, and DNA Gel Blot Analysis
For quantitative reverse transcriptasemediated PCR, 1 µL of cDNA was amplified as described by Frohman et al. (1988)
Construction of Expression Plasmids for Mature GBSSIa and GBSSIb
The expression constructs were prepared as in-frame S-tag fusions between the NcoI-BamHI sites (GBSSIa) or NcoI-EcoRI sites (GBSSIb) of pStag (Edwards et al., 1999a
Expression of GBSSIa and GBSSIb in Escherichia coli
SDS-PAGE and Immunoblot Analysis
Starch Synthase Assays
Bacterial Extracts
GBSSIa (pStag19) also was assayed in the presence of the following: 200 mg/mL amylopectin; 10 mg/mL glycogen; 25% (v/v) glycerol; 5 and 25 mg/mL amylose-free potato starch; perchloric acidtreated amylose-free starch granules; 1 mM UDPG; debranched (isoamylase-treated) amylopectin; 10 mg/mL amylose (solubilized by sonication and boiling); 10 mg/mL amylose and 100 mM maltotriose; 100 mM maltooligosaccharides from G3 to G7; 60 mM ADP-Glc; no DTT; E. coli chaperonins, GROESL, GROE, GROS, and GROL on one plasmid (Gatenby et al., 1990
Processivity assays were performed in the presence of 1 mM ADP-Glc, 100 mM maltotriose, 2.5 mg/mL amylopectin, and 1.84 kBq ADP-U-14C-Glc. The reactions were allowed to proceed for 1 h at 25°C, and the products were processed using the resin method and analyzed by high-performance anion-exchange chromatography as described previously (Edwards et al., 1999a
Potato Starch Granules
Processivity assays were performed as described above except that they contained 40 to 80 mg of starch granules and 1.84 kBq of ADP-U-14C-Glc, were incubated for 1 h at 25°C, and were not boiled to terminate. Reaction products were processed using the resin method and analyzed by high-performance anion-exchange chromatography as described previously (Edwards et al., 1999a
Construction of Sense Binary Vectors and Transformation of amf Potato
Measurement of Physicochemical Properties Precisely 10 mg of starch was transferred to a stainless-steel pan, and the starch content of the pan was adjusted to 20% by adding an appropriate amount of water. The pan was sealed and allowed to equilibrate overnight. The samples were heated from 40 to 100°C at a scanning rate of 10°C/min. An empty sample pan was used as a reference. For each endotherm, the onset temperature of gelatinization and the difference in enthalpy were computed automatically.
Determination of the Solution Properties of Transgenic Starches
Accession Numbers
We thank Trevor Wang and Stephen Bornmann for critical reading and helpful comments on the manuscript and Gay Adams for help in preparation of the manuscript. This work was financed by the European Union FAIR program (Grant CT 95-0568 to R.G.F.V. and C.M.). A.E. was funded by the Biotechnology and Biological Science Research Council Wealth-Creating Products of Plants Initiative (Grant 208/WCP11512), and work at the John Innes Centre was funded by a Competitive Strategic Grant from the Biotechnology and Biological Science Research Council to the John Innes Centre.
Online version contains Web-only data. Article, publication date, and citation information can be found at www.plantcell.org/cgi/doi/10.1105/tpc.002907. Received March 7, 2002; accepted April 24, 2002.
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