Amylose synthesis was obtained in vitro from purified Chlamydomonas reinhardtii starch granules. Labeling experiments clearly indicate that initially the major granulebound starch synthase extends glucans available on amylopectin. Amylose synthesis occurs thereafter at rates approaching or exceeding those of net polysaccharide synthesis. Although these results suggested that amylose originates from cleavage of a pre-existing external amylopectin chain, such transfer of chains from amylopectin to amylose was directly evidenced from pulse-chase experiments. The structure of the in vitro synthesized amylose could not be distinguished from in vivo synthesized amylose by a variety of methods. Moreover high molecular mass branched amylose synthesis preceded that of the low molecular mass, suggesting that chain termination occurs consequently to glucan cleavage. Short pulses of synthesis followed by incubation in buffer with or without ADP-Glc prove that transfer requires the presence of the glucosyl-nucleotide. Taken together, these observations make a compelling case for amylopectin acting as the in vivo primer for amylose synthesis. They further prove that extension is followed by cleavage. A model is presented that can explain the major features of amylose synthesis in plants. The consequences of intensive amylose synthesis on the crystal organization of amylopectin are reported through wide angle x-ray analysis of the in vitro synthesized polysaccharides.
Granule-bound starch synthase I (GBSS I) is responsible for the synthesis of amylose in starch granules. A heterologous cassava GBSS I gene was tested for its ability to restore amylose synthesis in amylose-free (amf ) potato mutants. For this purpose, the cassava GBSS I was equipped with different transit peptides. In addition, a hybrid containing the potato transit peptide, the Nterminal 89 amino acids of the mature potato GBSS I, and the C-terminal part of cassava GBSS I was prepared. The transgenic starches were first analysed by iodine staining. Only with the hybrid could full phenotypic complementation of the amf mutation be achieved in 13% of the plants. Most transformants showed partial complementation, but interestingly the size of the blue core was similar in all granules derived from one tuber of a given plant. The amylose content was only partially restored, up to 60% of wild-type values or potato GBSS I-complemented plants; however, the GBSS activity in these granules was similar to that found in wild-type ones. From this, and the observation that the hybrid protein (a partial potato GBSS I look-alike) performs best, it was concluded that potato and cassava GBSS I have different intrinsic properties and that the cassava enzyme is not fully adapted to the potato situation.
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