Abstract

Assimilation of nitrogen is an essential biological process for plant growth and productivity. Here we show that three chloroplast enzymes involved in nitrogen assimilation, glutamate synthase (GOGAT), nitrite reductase (NiR) and glutamine synthetase (GS), separately assemble into distinct protein complexes in spinach chloroplasts, as analyzed by western blots under blue native electrophoresis (BN-PAGE). GOGAT and NiR were present not only as monomers, but also as novel complexes with a discrete size (730 kDa) and multiple sizes (>120 kDa), respectively, in the stromal fraction of chloroplasts. These complexes showed the same mobility as each monomer on two-dimensional (2D) SDS-PAGE after BN-PAGE. The 730 kDa complex containing GOGAT dissociated into monomers, and multiple complexes of NiR reversibly converted into monomers, in response to the changes in the pH of the stromal solvent. On the other hand, the bands detected by anti-GS antibody were present not only in stroma as a conventional decameric holoenzyme complex of 420 kDa, but also in thylakoids as a novel complex of 560 kDa. The polypeptide in the 560 kDa complex showed slower mobility than that of the 420 kDa complex on the 2D SDS-PAGE, implying the assembly of distinct GS isoforms or a post-translational modification of the same GS protein. The function of these multiple complexes was evaluated by in-gel GS activity under native conditions and by the binding ability of NiR and GOGAT with their physiological electron donor, ferredoxin. The results indicate that these multiplicities in size and localization of the three nitrogen assimilatory enzymes may be involved in the physiological regulation of their enzyme function, in a similar way as recently described cases of carbon assimilatory enzymes.

Highlights

  • Intracellular enzymes are pertinently distributed and/or colocalized with functionally related proteins rather than evenly dispersed within cells or organelles, and dynamically change their states in response to environmental changes, for the biological reactions to proceed efficiently in a highly controlled fashion [1,2]

  • blue native PAGE (BN-PAGE) is a powerful tool for separating protein complexes from biological membranes and the soluble fraction under native conditions [12], which was used for the above analyses of the Calvin cycle enzymes [6] and ferredoxin-NADP+ oxidoreductase (FNR) [7,8]

  • We found each of nitrite reductase (NiR), glutamine synthetase (GS) and GOGAT assembled into discrete protein complexes in the chloroplasts of spinach leaves, and the dissociation profile of these complexes varied in response to the changes in the stromal conditions

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Summary

Introduction

Intracellular enzymes are pertinently distributed and/or colocalized with functionally related proteins rather than evenly dispersed within cells or organelles, and dynamically change their states in response to environmental changes, for the biological reactions to proceed efficiently in a highly controlled fashion [1,2].

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