Abstract

Arginine acts as a precursor of polyamines in plants in two known pathways, agmatine and ornithine routes. It is decarboxylated to agmatine by arginine decarboxylase, and then transformed to putrescine by the consecutive action of agmatine iminohydrolase and N-carbamoylputrescine amidohydrolase. Alternatively, it can be hydrolyzed to ornithine by arginase and then decarboxylated by ornithine decarboxylase to putrescine. Some plants lack a functional ornithine pathway, but all have one or two arginases that can have dual cellular localization, in mitochondria and plastids. It was recently shown that arginases from Arabidopsis thaliana and soybean act also as agmatinases, thus they can produce putrescine directly from agmatine. Therefore, arginase (together with arginine decarboxylase) can complement putrescine production in plastids, providing a third polyamine biosynthesis pathway in plants. Phylogenetic analysis suggests that arginases, highly conserved in the plant kingdom, create the only group of enzymes recognized in the family of ureohydrolases in plants. Arginases are metalloenzymes with binuclear manganese cluster in the active site. In this work, two arginases from A. thaliana and Medicago truncatula are structurally characterized and their binding properties are discussed. Crystal structures with bound ornithine show that plant hexameric arginases engage a long loop from the neighboring subunit to stabilize α-amino and carboxyl groups of the ligand. This unique ligand binding mode is unobserved in arginases from other domains of life. Structural analysis shows that substrate binding by residues from two neighboring subunits might also characterize some prokaryotic agmatinases. This feature of plant arginases is most likely the determinant of their ability to recognize not only arginine but also agmatine as their substrates, thus, to act as arginase and agmatinase.

Highlights

  • Arginine has the highest nitrogen to carbon ratio of all proteinogenic amino acids which makes it an effective storage form for organic nitrogen in plants; it may be responsible for up to half of the stored nitrogen in plant seeds (Winter et al, 2015)

  • Complementary DNA of M. truncatula and A. thaliana was obtained with the use of SuperScript II reverse transcriptase (Life Technologies), as well as oligo dT (15 and 18) primers and total RNA isolated from leaves with an RNeasy Plant Mini Kit (Qiagen)

  • The studies show that Arabidopsis ARGAHs present dual localization, they can be targeted to plastids (Patel et al, 2017)

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Summary

Introduction

Arginine has the highest nitrogen to carbon ratio of all proteinogenic amino acids which makes it an effective storage form for organic nitrogen in plants; it may be responsible for up to half of the stored nitrogen in plant seeds (Winter et al, 2015). Arginine plays a critical role in nitrogen metabolism and recycling in plants (Slocum, 2005). Unlike animals, rather recycle nitrogen in the form of urea instead of excreting it (Sirko and Brodzik, 2000). Under high nitrogen supply, arginine may secure proline production through degradation to ornithine (Forlani et al, 2015). Arginine can be converted to putrescine, g-aminobutyric acid, or nicotine, playing a key role in development and stress management in plants (Siddappa et al, 2018). Arginine catabolism is used to mobilize nitrogen reserves and it is used as a part of plant defensive mechanism (Siddappa et al, 2018)

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