Abstract

The aim of this work was to study the pathway(s) of sugar phosphate metabolism in chloroplasts of the unicellular green alga, Dunaliella marina (Volvocales). Phosphofructokinase, detectable in crude cell extracts, copurifled with intact chloroplasts on sucrose density gradients. In isolated chloroplasts, phosphofructokinase activity displayed latency to the same degree as chloroplast marker enzymes. From the quantitative distribution of enzyme activities in fractionated cells, it is concluded that there is an exclusive localization of phosphofructokinase in chloroplasts. In addition, no separation into multiple forms could be achieved. For the study of regulatory properties, chloroplast phosphofructokinase was partially purified by ammonium sulfate fractionation followed by DEAE-cellulose chromatography. The pH optimum of the enzyme activity was 7.0 and was not altered with varying concentrations of substrates or low-molecular-weight effectors. Fructose 6-phosphate showed a sigmoidal saturation curve whose shape was further changed with varying protein concentrations of the preparation. The second substrate, ATP, gave a hyperbolic saturation curve with a Michaelis constant of 60 μ m. At a Mg 2+ concentration of 2.5 m m, ATP concentrations exceeding 1 m m inhibited the enzyme in a positive cooperative manner. The same type of inhibition was observed with other phosphorylated intermediates of carbon metabolism, the most efficient being phospho enolpyruvate, glycolate 2-phosphate, glycerate 3-phosphate, and glycerate 2-phosphate. Inorganic phosphate was the only activator found for phosphofructokinase. With nonsaturating fructose 6-phosphate concentrations, P i activated in a positive cooperative fashion, while no activation occurred with saturating fructose 6-phosphate concentrations. In the presence of either an activator or an inhibitor, the sigmoidal shape of the fructose 6-phosphate saturation curve was altered. Most notably, the activator P i could relieve the inhibitory action of ATP, phospho enolpyruvate, glycerate 3-phosphate, glycerate 2-phosphate, and glycolate 2-phosphate. Based on these experimental findings, the regulatory properties of D. marina chloroplast phosphofructokinase are discussed with respect to its playing a key role in the regulation of chloroplast starch metabolism during a light/dark transition. All available evidence is compatible with the interpretation that phosphofructokinase is active only in the dark thus channeling starch degradation products into glycolysis.

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