Abstract

BackgroundADP-glucose pyrophosphorylase (AGPase), the key enzyme in plant starch biosynthesis, is a heterotetramer composed of two identical large subunits and two identical small subunits. AGPase has plastidial and cytosolic isoforms in higher plants, whereas it is mainly detected in the cytosol of grain endosperms in cereal crops. Our previous results have shown that the expression of the TaAGPL1 gene, encoding the cytosolic large subunit of wheat AGPase, temporally coincides with the rate of starch accumulation and that its overexpression dramatically increases wheat AGPase activity and the rate of starch accumulation, suggesting an important role.MethodsIn this study, we performed yeast one-hybrid screening using the promoter of the TaAGPL1 gene as bait and a wheat grain cDNA library as prey to screen out the upstream regulators of TaAGPL1 gene. And the barley stripe mosaic virus-induced gene-silencing (BSMV-VIGS) method was used to verify the functional characterization of the identified regulators in starch biosynthesis.ResultsDisulfide isomerase 1-2 protein (TaPDIL1-2) was screened out, and its binding to the TaAGPL1-1D promoter was further verified using another yeast one-hybrid screen. Transiently silenced wheat plants of the TaPDIL1-2 gene were obtained by using BSMV-VIGS method under field conditions. In grains of BSMV-VIGS-TaPDIL1-2-silenced wheat plants, the TaAGPL1 gene transcription levels, grain starch contents, and 1000-kernel weight also significantly increased.ConclusionsAs important chaperones involved in oxidative protein folding, PDIL proteins have been reported to form hetero-dimers with some transcription factors, and thus, our results suggested that TaPDIL1-2 protein could indirectly and negatively regulate the expression of the TaAGPL1 gene and function in starch biosynthesis.

Highlights

  • ADP-glucose pyrophosphorylase (AGPase), the key enzyme in plant starch biosynthesis, is a heterotetramer composed of two identical large subunits and two identical small subunits

  • The cDNA sequence of the TaAGPL1 gene, which was highly expressed in endosperm during the grain filling period in our previous study [10], was searched against the recently published International Wheat Genome Sequencing Consortium (IWGSC) databases (RefSeq v1.0) [21], and a high level (100% identities) to a chromosome-located contig (TraesCS1D01G427400.1) was found, suggesting its localization on 1D chromosome

  • Our experiment showed that the TaAGPL1-1D promoter qualitatively and quantitatively drove expression of the GUS gene (Fig. 1), arguing that this promoter contains cis-acting elements that regulate TaAGPL1-1D gene expression in wheat grains

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Summary

Introduction

ADP-glucose pyrophosphorylase (AGPase), the key enzyme in plant starch biosynthesis, is a heterotetramer composed of two identical large subunits and two identical small subunits. Our previous results have shown that the expression of the TaAGPL1 gene, encoding the cytosolic large subunit of wheat AGPase, temporally coincides with the rate of starch accumulation and that its overexpression dramatically increases wheat AGPase activity and the rate of starch accumulation, suggesting an important role. Our previous studies have demonstrated that the expression of the TaAGPL1 gene encoding the cytosolic large subunit of wheat AGPase shows similar changes to the rate of starch accumulation, and its transcripts in wheat grains are significantly and positively related to the activity of AGPase and the accumulation rate of grain starch [10]. Overexpression of TaAGPL1 markedly enhanced AGPase activity and the rate of starch accumulation in wheat grains [11] These data demonstrate that TaAGPL1 plays an important role in AGPase enzyme and starch biosynthesis in bread wheat and could have potential applications in wheat breeding to develop high-yield wheat cultivars [11]. The upstream regulatory mechanism of the TaAGPL1 gene family remains elusive

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