Abstract

The pathways for biosynthesis of glycogen in bacteria and starch in plants are evolutionarily and biochemically related. They are regulated primarily by ADP-glucose pyrophosphorylase, which evolved to satisfy metabolic requirements of a particular organism. Despite the importance of these two pathways, little is known about the mechanism that controls pyrophosphorylase activity or the location of its allosteric sites. Here, we report pyruvate-bound crystal structures of ADP-glucose pyrophosphorylase from the bacterium Agrobacterium tumefaciens, identifying a previously elusive activator site for the enzyme. We found that the tetrameric enzyme binds two molecules of pyruvate in a planar conformation. Each binding site is located in a crevice between the C-terminal domains of two subunits where they stack via a distinct β-helix region. Pyruvate interacts with the side chain of Lys-43 and with the peptide backbone of Ser-328 and Gly-329 from both subunits. These structural insights led to the design of two variants with altered regulatory properties. In one variant (K43A), the allosteric effect was absent, whereas in the other (G329D), the introduced Asp mimicked the presence of pyruvate. The latter generated an enzyme that was preactivated and insensitive to further activation by pyruvate. Our study furnishes a deeper understanding of how glycogen biosynthesis is regulated in bacteria and the mechanism by which transgenic plants increased their starch production. These insights will facilitate rational approaches to enzyme engineering for starch production in crops of agricultural interest and will promote further study of allosteric signal transmission and molecular evolution in this important enzyme family.

Highlights

  • The pathways for biosynthesis of glycogen in bacteria and starch in plants are evolutionarily and biochemically related

  • The Asp mutant of Gly-336 of the Escherichia coli ADP– Glc PPase exists in a preactivated state [4], and when its gene was transformed into a potato (Solanum tuberosum) plant, the resulting tubers had, on average, up to 35% more starch weight compared with control tubers [3]

  • We showed that the P103A mutant of E. coli ADP–Glc PPase fails to respond to its primary activator, FBP [18]

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Summary

Introduction

The pathways for biosynthesis of glycogen in bacteria and starch in plants are evolutionarily and biochemically related. Our study furnishes a deeper understanding of how glycogen biosynthesis is regulated in bacteria and the mechanism by which transgenic plants increased their starch production. These insights will facilitate rational approaches to enzyme engineering for starch production in crops of agricultural interest and will. ADP– glucose pyrophosphorylase (ATP:␣-D-glucose-1-phosphate adenylyltransferase; EC 2.7.7.27; ADP–Glc PPase) regulates the production of glycogen in bacteria and starch in plants, which are renewable and biodegradable carbon sources. This enzyme catalyzes ATP-dependent conversion of glucose 1-phosphate (Glc1P), producing pyrophosphate and ADP– glucose, which serves as the glucose moiety donor for polyglucan synthesis [1]. The Asp mutant of Gly-336 of the Escherichia coli ADP– Glc PPase exists in a preactivated state [4], and when its gene was transformed into a potato (Solanum tuberosum) plant, the resulting tubers had, on average, up to 35% more starch weight compared with control tubers [3]

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