Methionine and threonine synthesis are limited by homoserine availability and not the activity of homoserine kinase in Arabidopsis thaliana
pmid: 15703056
Methionine and threonine synthesis are limited by homoserine availability and not the activity of homoserine kinase in Arabidopsis thaliana
SummaryHomoserine kinase (HSK) produces O‐phospho‐l‐homoserine (HserP) used by cystathionine γ‐synthase (CGS) for Met synthesis and threonine synthase (TS) for Thr synthesis. The effects of overexpressing Arabidopsis thaliana HSK, CGS, and Escherichia coli TS (eTS), each controlled by the 35S promoter, were compared. The results indicate that in Arabidopsis Hser supply is the major factor limiting the synthesis of HserP, Met and Thr. HSK is not limiting and CGS or TS control the partitioning of HserP. HSK overexpression had no effect on the level of soluble HserP, Met or Thr, however, when treated with Hser these plants produced far more HserP than wild type. Met and Thr also accumulated markedly after Hser treatment but the increase was similar in HSK overexpressing and wild‐type plants. CGS overexpression was previously shown to increase Met content, but had no effect on Thr. After Hser treatment Met accumulation increased in CGS‐overexpressing plants compared with wild type, whereas HserP declined and Thr was unaffected. Arabidopsis responded differentially to eTS expression depending on the level of the enzyme. At the highest eTS level the Thr content was not increased, but the phenotype was negatively affected and the T1 plants died before reproducing. Comparatively low eTS did not affect phenotype or Thr/Met level, however after Hser treatment HserP and Met accumulation were reduced compared with wild type and Thr was increased slightly. At intermediate eTS activity seedling growth was retarded unless Met was supplied and CGS expression was induced, indicating that eTS limited HserP availability for Met synthesis.
- University of Minnesota System United States
- Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey United States
- University of Minnesota Morris United States
- Agricultural Research Service United States
- Agricultural Research Service - Midwest Area United States
Threonine, Arabidopsis Proteins, Carbon-Oxygen Lyases, Arabidopsis, Kinetics, Phosphotransferases (Alcohol Group Acceptor), Methionine, Homoserine, Promoter Regions, Genetic
Threonine, Arabidopsis Proteins, Carbon-Oxygen Lyases, Arabidopsis, Kinetics, Phosphotransferases (Alcohol Group Acceptor), Methionine, Homoserine, Promoter Regions, Genetic
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