Purification and Characterization of Recombinant Sugarcane Sucrose Phosphate Synthase Expressed in E. coli and Insect Sf9 Cells: An Importance of the N-terminal Domain for an Allosteric Regulatory Property
Date
2016-01-30Author
Sawitri, Widhi Dyah
Narita, Hirotaka
Ishizaka-Ikeda, Etsuko
Sugiharto, Bambang
Hase, Toshiharu
Nakagawa, Atsushi
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Sucrose phosphate synthase (SPS) catalyses the transfer
of glycosyl group of uridine diphosphate glucose to
fructose-6-phosphate to form sucrose-6-phosphate. Plant
SPS plays a key role in photosynthetic carbon metabolisms,
which activity is modulated by an allosteric activator
glucose-6-phosphate (G6P). We produced recombinant
sugarcane SPS using Escherichia coli and Sf9 insect cells
to investigate its structure-function relationship. When expressed
in E. coli, two forms of SPS with different sizes
appeared; the larger was comparable in size with the authentic
plant enzyme and the shorter was trimmed the
N-terminal20kDa region off. In theinsectcells, only
enzyme with the authentic size was produced. We purified
the trimmed SPS and the full size enzyme from insect
cells and found their enzymatic properties differed significantly;
the full size enzyme was activated allosterically
by G6P, while the trimmed one showed a high activity
even without G6P. We further introduced a series of
N-terminal truncations up to 171 residue and found
G6P-independent activity was enhanced by the truncation.
These combined results indicated that the N-terminal
region of sugarcane SPS is crucial for the allosteric regulation
by G6P and may function like a suppressor domain
for the enzyme activity.
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- LSP-Jurnal Ilmiah Dosen [7301]