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Study of starch debranching enzymes in developing wheat kernels

Posted on:2003-06-06Degree:Ph.DType:Thesis
University:The University of Saskatchewan (Canada)Candidate:Netrphan, SupatchareeFull Text:PDF
GTID:2463390011485976Subject:Biology
Abstract/Summary:
Starch debranching enzymes, isoamylase (EC. 3.2.1.68) and limit dextrinase (EC. 3.2.1.41), are primarily involved in starch degradation during seed germination. Recently, they have also been implicated in starch biosynthesis. In this study, a 2,590-bp isoamylase cDNA, which encoded an 88-kDa isoamylase pre-protein containing the N-terminal transit peptide of 5 kDa, was isolated from a developing wheat kernel cDNA library. The recombinant protein produced in E. coli by expression of the cDNA exhibited isoamylase type-debranching enzyme activity. Accumulation of the 2.6-kb isoamylase transcripts in various tissues of wheat indicated the involvement of isoamylase in both starch synthesis in storage and non-storage organs, and starch degradation during seed germination. In the early stages of developing wheat kernels, the presence of a 1.7-kb transcript was observed. The 1.7-kb transcript encoded a 51-kDa truncated isoamylase, whose starch debranching enzyme activity could not be detected in vitro. Southern blot analysis showed that isoamylase gene existed as a single copy in the wheat genome. Therefore, various isoamylase transcripts may result from transcriptional modification of the existing gene and/or expression from a distantly related gene.;Western blot analysis using rabbit antibodies raised against wheat isoamylase detected a single polypeptide of 83-kDa from developing wheat kernels. Accumulation of isoamylase polypeptide increased as the kernels developed from five to 15 days post-anthesis (dpa), and then started to decrease in 20-dpa kernels until it could not be detected in mature kernels. Similar to the presence of isoamylase, highest activity of limit dextrinase was observed in 15-dpa wheat kernels. According to the amounts of polysaccharides present at different stages during wheat kernel development, the concentration of starch increased as kernels matured, while the amylose/amylopectin ratio remained constant until the kernels reached a fully matured stage. The relationships between concentrations of polysaccharides and the presence of isoamylase polypeptide, and the activity of limit dextrinase in developing wheat grains have suggested that debranching activities of starch debranching enzymes are essential to maintain constant ratio of amylose and amylopectin during wheat kernel development.
Keywords/Search Tags:Starch, Debranching enzymes, Wheat, Isoamylase, Kernels, Limit dextrinase
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