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1.
Plant J ; 103(6): 2025-2038, 2020 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32538516

ABSTRACT

Triacylglycerols have important physiological roles in photosynthetic organisms, and are widely used as food, feed and industrial materials in our daily life. Phospholipid:diacylglycerol acyltransferase (PDAT) is the pivotal enzyme catalyzing the acyl-CoA-independent biosynthesis of triacylglycerols, which is unique in plants, algae and fungi, but not in animals, and has essential functions in plant and algal growth, development and stress responses. Currently, this enzyme has yet to be examined in an evolutionary context at the level of the green lineage. Some fundamental questions remain unanswered, such as how PDATs evolved in photosynthetic organisms and whether the evolution of terrestrial plant PDATs from a lineage of charophyte green algae diverges in enzyme function. As such, we used molecular evolutionary analysis and biochemical assays to address these questions. Our results indicated that PDAT underwent divergent evolution in the green lineage: PDATs exist in a wide range of plants and algae, but not in cyanobacteria. Although PDATs exhibit the conservation of several features, phylogenetic and selection-pressure analyses revealed that overall they evolved to be highly divergent, driven by different selection constraints. Positive selection, as one major driving force, may have resulted in enzymes with a higher functional importance in land plants than green algae. Further structural and mutagenesis analyses demonstrated that some amino acid sites under positive selection are critically important to PDAT structure and function, and may be central in lecithin:cholesterol acyltransferase family enzymes in general.


Subject(s)
Acyltransferases/genetics , Algal Proteins/genetics , Biological Evolution , Plant Proteins/genetics , Plants/enzymology , Acyltransferases/chemistry , Acyltransferases/metabolism , Algal Proteins/metabolism , Phylogeny , Plant Proteins/metabolism , Plants/genetics , Protein Structure, Tertiary , Sequence Alignment , Triglycerides/metabolism
2.
FEMS Microbiol Lett ; 308(1): 40-7, 2010 Jul 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20487022

ABSTRACT

This study was aimed at describing the spectrum and dynamics of proteins associated with the membrane in the nitrogen-fixing bacterium Herbaspirillum seropedicae according to the availability of fixed nitrogen. Using two-dimensional electrophoresis we identified 79 protein spots representing 45 different proteins in the membrane fraction of H. seropedicae. Quantitative analysis of gel images of membrane extracts indicated two spots with increased levels when cells were grown under nitrogen limitation in comparison with nitrogen sufficiency; these spots were identified as the GlnK protein and as a conserved noncytoplasmic protein of unknown function which was encoded in an operon together with GlnK and AmtB. Comparison of gel images of membrane extracts from cells grown under nitrogen limitation or under the same regime but collected after an ammonium shock revealed two proteins, GlnB and GlnK, with increased levels after the shock. The P(II) proteins were not present in the membrane fraction of an amtB mutant. The results reported here suggest that changes in the cellular localization of P(II) might play a role in the control of nitrogen metabolism in H. seropedicae.


Subject(s)
Cell Membrane/chemistry , Gene Expression Regulation, Bacterial , Gene Expression Regulation, Enzymologic , Herbaspirillum/chemistry , Membrane Transport Proteins/analysis , Proteome/analysis , Quaternary Ammonium Compounds/metabolism , Bacterial Proteins/analysis , Cation Transport Proteins/analysis , Electrophoresis, Gel, Two-Dimensional , Herbaspirillum/physiology , Spectrometry, Mass, Matrix-Assisted Laser Desorption-Ionization
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