Activation of interspecies-hybrid Rubisco enzymes to assess different models for the Rubisco-Rubisco activase interaction

Wachter, Rebekka M. and Salvucci, Michael E. and Carmo-Silva, A. Elizabete and Barta, Csengele and Genkov, Todor and Spreitzer, Robert J. (2013) Activation of interspecies-hybrid Rubisco enzymes to assess different models for the Rubisco-Rubisco activase interaction. Photosynthesis Research, 117 (1-3). pp. 557-566. ISSN 0166-8595

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Abstract

Ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (Rubisco) is prone to inactivation from non-productive binding of sugar-phosphates. Reactivation of Rubisco requires conformational remodeling by a specific chaperone, Rubisco activase. Rubisco activase from tobacco and other plants in the family Solanaceae is an inefficient activator of Rubisco from non-Solanaceae plants and from the green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii. To determine if the Rubisco small subunit plays a role in the interaction with Rubisco activase, a hybrid Rubisco (SSNT) composed of tobacco small subunits and Chlamydomonas large subunits was constructed. The SSNT hybrid, like other hybrid Rubiscos containing plant small subunits, supported photoautotrophic growth in Chlamydomonas, but growth in air was much slower than for cells containing wild-type Rubisco. The kinetic properties of the SSNT hybrid Rubisco were similar to the wild-type enzyme, indicating that the poor growth in air was probably caused by disruption of pyrenoid formation and the consequent impairment of the CO 2concentrating mechanism. Recombinant Rubisco activase from Arabidopsis activated the SSNT hybrid Rubisco and hybrid Rubiscos containing spinach and Arabidopsis small subunits at rates similar to the rates with wild-type Rubisco. However, none of the hybrid Rubiscos was activated by tobacco Rubisco activase. That replacement of Chlamydomonas small subunits with plant small subunits does not affect the species-specific interaction between Rubisco and Rubisco activase suggests that the association is not dominated by the small subunits that surround the Rubisco central solvent channel. Therefore, the geometry of a side-on binding mode is more consistent with the data than a top-on or ring-stacking binding mode.

Item Type:
Journal Article
Journal or Publication Title:
Photosynthesis Research
Uncontrolled Keywords:
/dk/atira/pure/subjectarea/asjc/1300/1303
Subjects:
?? CHLAMYDOMONASCHLOROPLASTCO FIXATIONCONFORMATIONAL REMODELINGMOLECULAR CHAPERONEPROTEIN-PROTEIN INTERACTIONPLANT SCIENCECELL BIOLOGYBIOCHEMISTRY ??
ID Code:
75858
Deposited By:
Deposited On:
21 Oct 2015 05:01
Refereed?:
Yes
Published?:
Published
Last Modified:
15 Sep 2023 00:21