Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UNIPROT:P00790 (PGA)
2,475 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Photosynthetic carbon metabolism was investigated in antisense Arabidopsis lines with decreased expression of sucrose phosphate synthase (SPS) and cytosolic fructose-1,6-bisphosphatase (cFBPase). In the light, triose phosphates are exported from the chloroplast and converted to sucrose via cFBPase and SPS. At night, starch is degraded to glucose, exported and converted to sucrose via SPS. cFBPase therefore lies upstream and SPS downstream of the point at which the pathways for sucrose synthesis in the day and night converge. Decreased cFBPase expression led to inhibition of sucrose synthesis; accumulation of phosphorylated intermediates; Pi-limitation of photosynthesis; and stimulation of starch synthesis. The starch was degraded to maintain higher levels of sugars and a higher rate of sucrose export during the night. This resembles the response in other species when expression of enzymes in the upper part of the sucrose biosynthesis pathway is reduced. Decreased expression of SPS inhibited sucrose synthesis, but phosphorylated intermediates did not accumulate and carbon partitioning was not redirected towards starch. Sugar levels and sucrose export was decreased during the night as well as during the day. Although ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate regeneration and photosynthesis were inhibited, the PGA/triose-P ratio remained low and the ATP/ADP ratio high, showing that photosynthesis was not limited by the rate at which Pi was recycled during end-product synthesis. Two novel responses counteracted the decrease in SPS expression and explain why phosphorylated intermediates did not accumulate, and why allocation was not altered in the antisense SPS lines. Firstly, a threefold decrease of PPi and a shift of the UDP-glucose/hexose phosphate ratio favoured sucrose synthesis and prevented the accumulation of phosphorylated intermediates. Secondly, there was no increase of AGPase activity relative to cFBPase activity, which would prevent a shift in carbon allocation towards starch synthesis. These responses are presumably triggered when sucrose synthesis is decreased in the night, as well as by day.
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PMID:Decreased expression of two key enzymes in the sucrose biosynthesis pathway, cytosolic fructose-1,6-bisphosphatase and sucrose phosphate synthase, has remarkably different consequences for photosynthetic carbon metabolism in transgenic Arabidopsis thaliana. 1099 87

Cytosolic ATP-dependent phosphofructokinase (PFK) from spinach leaves (Spinacia oleracea L.) was enriched 2600-fold by (NH(4))(2)SO(4) fractionation, DEAE anion exchange chromatography, Blue Sepharose CL-6B, and ATP agarose type 3-affinity chromatography. The final preparation had a specific activity of 417 nkat per milligram protein and exhibited four bands between 50 and 70 kilodaltons following denaturing electrophoresis. Only one band of ATP- and fructose 6-phosphate (F-6-P)-dependent, Pistimulated activity was detected following isoelectric focusing PAGE and nondenaturing discontinuous PAGE of the final preparation. Crude extracts contained, in addition to the band observed in the final preparation, a second band that was inhibited by Pi. The latter band is presumably chloroplastic PFK. PFK was stimulated by the anions Pi(2-), Cl(-), SO(4) (2-), NO(3) (-), HAsO(4) (2-), and HCO(3) (-) but was not affected by NH(4) (+). Pi and Mg(2+) changed the response of PFK toward pH and affected the saturation kinetics of F-6-P. In general, activity was highest when Pi was high and (or) Mg(2+) was low. Phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP), 2-PGA, and PPi, but not 3-PGA, inhibited PFK. Although the inhibition by PEP and 2-PGA was reduced or relieved by Pi, the inhibition by PPi was not affected by Pi. F-2, 6-P(2) had no effect upon the activity of PFK. It is proposed that, in the cytosol of spinach leaves, PFK is likely to be more active during the dark, when cytosolic Pi levels are high, than in the light.
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PMID:Cytosolic phosphofructokinase from spinach leaves : I. Purification, characteristics, and regulation. 1666 57