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Molecular Characterization of a Carbon Transporter in Plastids from Heterotrophic Tissues: The Glucose 6-Phosphate/Phosphate AntiporterBirgit Kammerer1,a, Karsten Fischer1,a, Bettina Hilperta, Sabine Schuberta, Michael Gutensohna, Andreas Webera, and Ulf-Ingo Flüggeaa Botanisches Institut der Universität zu Köln, Lehrstuhl II, Gyrhofstrasse 15, D-50931 Cologne, Germany Correspondence to: Ulf-Ingo Flügge, uiflue{at}biolan.uni-koeln.de (E-mail), 49-221-470-5039 (fax).
Plastids of nongreen tissues import carbon as a source of biosynthetic pathways and energy. Within plastids, carbon can be used in the biosynthesis of starch or as a substrate for the oxidative pentose phosphate pathway, for example. We have used maize endosperm to purify a plastidic glucose 6-phosphate/phosphate translocator (GPT). The corresponding cDNA was isolated from maize endosperm as well as from tissues of pea roots and potato tubers. Analysis of the primary sequences of the cDNAs revealed that the GPT proteins have a high degree of identity with each other but share only ~38% identical amino acids with members of both the triose phosphate/phosphate translocator (TPT) and the phosphoenolpyruvate/phosphate translocator (PPT) families. Thus, the GPTs represent a third group of plastidic phosphate antiporters. All three classes of phosphate translocator genes show differential patterns of expression. Whereas the TPT gene is predominantly present in tissues that perform photosynthetic carbon metabolism and the PPT gene appears to be ubiquitously expressed, the expression of the GPT gene is mainly restricted to heterotrophic tissues. Expression of the coding region of the GPT in transformed yeast cells and subsequent transport experiments with the purified protein demonstrated that the GPT protein mediates a 1:1 exchange of glucose 6-phosphate mainly with inorganic phosphate and triose phosphates. Glucose 6-phosphate imported via the GPT can thus be used either for starch biosynthesis, during which process inorganic phosphate is released, or as a substrate for the oxidative pentose phosphate pathway, yielding triose phosphates.
During C3 photosynthesis, energy from solar radiation is used for the formation of phosphorylated C3 sugar phosphates, triose phosphates (trioseP), and 3-phosphoglycerate (3-PGA); these products are exported from the chloroplasts into the cytosol via the trioseP/3-PGA/phosphate translocator (TPT). In the mature leaves of most plants, the exported photosynthates are then used in the formation of sucrose, which is allocated via the phloem to the heterotrophic plant organs, such as young leaves, roots, seeds, fruits, or tubers. In these sink tissues, sucrose serves as a source of carbon and energy and is first cleaved by the action of invertases or sucrose synthase; the products of these reactions are converted into hexose phosphates.
Nongreen plastids of heterotrophic tissues are carbohydrate-importing organelles and, in the case of amyloplasts of storage tissues, the site of starch synthesis. Because these plastids are normally not able to generate hexose phosphates from C3 compounds due to the absence of fructose 1,6-bisphosphatase activity (
In nongreen tissues from most plants studied to date, glucose 6-phosphate (Glc6P) is the preferred hexose phosphate taken up by nongreen plastids. However, in amyloplasts from wheat endosperm, glucose 1-phosphate (Glc1P) rather than Glc6P is the precursor of starch biosynthesis (
The primary structure of the hexose phosphate/phosphate translocator from heterotrophic organs has to be quite different from that of the chloroplastic TPT because RNA gel blots showed that the latter is almost exclusively expressed in photosynthetic tissues but not in nongreen tissues (
Purification of the Glc6P/Phosphate Translocator from Maize Endosperm
After solubilization of the membranes, this preparation was loaded onto a HiTrap Q anion exchange column. The fraction of membrane proteins that did not bind to this column was subjected to heparin-Sepharose CL-6B chromatography. A protein fraction exhibiting a GPT transport activity in the reconstituted system was eluted at 90 mM NaCl (see Methods). As shown in Table 1, this procedure resulted in an ~200-fold increase of the specific GPT transport activity. The final fraction contained, besides a high molecular weight protein, two proteins with molecular masses of 31 and 30 kD (Figure 1, lane 3). Both proteins were excised from SDS-polyacrylamide gels and digested in situ with the endoproteinase Lys-C to gain information about the amino acid sequences of internal peptides.
A comparison of peptide sequences obtained with entries in protein sequence databases using the BLASTP program (
Molecular Cloning of GPTs from Nongreen Tissues and Protein Characteristics From both the maize endosperm and the pea root cDNA libraries, several identical clones and one full-length cDNA were isolated. The cDNA from maize endosperm was 1647 bp and that from pea roots was 1609 bp, with coding regions of 1164 bp and 1203 bp, respectively. The coding regions correspond to 387 and 401 amino acid residues with predicted molecular masses of 42.4 kD (maize endosperm; ZmGPT13) and 43.7 kD (pea roots; PsGPT4). The sequence of the Lys-C peptide P1 was present in the N-terminal region of the mature ZmGPT13 protein, at amino acid residues 80 to 95 of the precursor protein, and the Lys-C peptide P2 was found at amino acid residues 181 to 191 of the precursor protein. A comparison of the cDNA sequences with entries in the EMBL nucleotide sequence database and the Swiss-Prot sequence database revealed no significant homologies with known proteins, except for a slight but significant similarity to the TPTs and the PPTs (see below). We also obtained clones from potato tubers (missing some base pairs at the 5' end) and cauliflower inflorescences, but they were not full length. Within the framework of the Arabidopsis genome sequencing project, sequences of chromosome 5 were recently released that contained the corresponding Arabidopsis GPT gene (accession number AB005232).
Analysis of the deduced GPT protein sequence revealed that these translocators are highly hydrophobic, with overall polarity indices of the deduced mature proteins of ~34% (
The location of the processing sites in the TPT proteins had been determined previously by N-terminal amino acid sequencing of the isolated mature protein or by radiosequencing of the labeled and in vitro-processed radioactively labeled TPT precursor protein (
As is the case for the TPTs and PPTs, the GPT proteins share a high degree of identity with each other (mature proteins, 79 to 83%). However, the GPTs share only ~38% identical amino acids with members of both the TPT and the PPT families. Thus, the GPTs represent a third group of plastidic phosphate translocators. This conclusion was confirmed by constructing a phylogenetic tree by using the distance matrix method (
Transport Characteristics of the GPT Protein
To study the transport characteristics of the GPT protein, the GPT cDNA encoding the mature part of the GPT was expressed in yeast cells. As outlined above, the exact position of the processing site was not definitely determined. This, however, appears to be of minor importance, because previous experiments had shown that the production of a functional plastidic transport protein with transport characteristics identical to those of the authentic protein can also be achieved by using the whole precursor protein ( The GPT cDNA from pea roots was fused to a DNA fragment encoding a His6-tag and subsequently subcloned into the yeast expression vector pEVP11. This construct was used to transform cells from the fission yeast Schizosaccharomyces pombe, and GPT was subsequently isolated to homogeneity from the membrane fraction by Ni2+-nitrilotriacetic acid chromatography and reconstituted into liposomes. Table 2 shows the substrate specificities of the GPT reconstituted into liposomes preloaded with different phosphorylated metabolites that function as exchangeable countersubstrates. For comparison, the substrate specificities of the histidine-tagged TPT and PPT proteins are also listed in Table 2.
Evidently, inorganic phosphate, trioseP, and Glc6P are about equally well accepted as countersubstrates by the GPT. To a lesser extent, transport of 32P-phosphate was also supported by liposomes that had been preloaded with 3-PGA, whereas PEP only serves as a poor countersubstrate. Both Glc1P and fructose 6-phosphate (Frc6P) obviously cannot be transported by the GPT. These data are corroborated by measurements of the apparent kinetic constants of the GPT for the transport of 32P-phosphate and 14C-Glc6P. These data are listed in Table 3. The Km(app) (phosphate) and the Km(app)(Glc6P) values were determined to be 1.1 and 0.7 mM, respectively, and are comparable to the corresponding apparent inhibition constants (Ki values of 0.6 to 1.1 mM) and the Km(app)(phosphate) values of both the TPT and the PPT (0.8 to 1.0 mM;
The low Ki values of trioseP for the transport of both 32P-phosphate and 14C-Glc6P indicate that trioseP can effectively compete with these substrates for binding to the GPT. The Ki (3-PGA) values for the transport of phosphate and Glc6P are approximately twice as high, and the Ki (PEP) values are three to 10 times higher than the corresponding Km values. These data again indicate that 3-PGA is a poorer substrate of the GPT compared with phosphate and Glc6P and that PEP, under physiological conditions in which it has to compete with the other phosphorylated metabolites for binding to the GPT, is almost never transported by the GPT. Thus, the GPT represents a plastidic phosphate translocator with the ability to transport preferentially Glc6P and trioseP but also 3-PGA. This is in contrast to the transport characteristics of the TPT and the PPT (Table 2). Besides inorganic phosphate, the TPT transports only trioseP and 3-PGA, whereas the PPT mediates the exchange of inorganic phosphate for PEP. To determine the stoichiometry of the Glc6P/phosphate exchange mediated by the affinity-purified GPT, we measured the influx of 14C-Glc6P into phosphate-containing liposomes and compared it with the efflux of 32P-phosphate from 32P-phosphate-preloaded liposomes (see Methods). Loading of the liposomes with 32P-phosphate was performed after the GPT had been incorporated into the liposomal membranes. This procedure ensures that 32P-phosphate is taken up only by protein-containing liposomes from which it can be released after the subsequent addition of unlabeled Glc6P. Figure 4 shows the time-dependent export of 32P-phosphate after the addition of externally added Glc6P (1.3 mM) and the time course of the 14C-Glc6P import into phosphate-preloaded liposomes. In five independent experiments, the stoichiometry for phosphate/Glc6P exchange was close to 1 (0.99 ± 0.09). Similar results were obtained when 14C-Glc6P-preloaded liposomes were used, and the release of 14C-Glc6P was correlated with the uptake of 32P-phosphate into these liposomes (data not shown). Thus, the antiport mediated by the GPT proceeds via a 1:1 exchange mechanism.
Members of the Phosphate Translocator Family Display Differential Patterns of Expression
Thus, the three classes of phosphate translocator genes show differential patterns of expression. Whereas the TPT gene is predominantly present in tissues that perform photosynthetic carbon metabolism and the PPT gene appears to be ubiquitously expressed, the expression of the GPT gene is restricted mainly to heterotrophic tissues.
Import of the GPT into Nongreen Plastids and Chloroplasts
We also studied the import of the pea GPT precursor protein into isolated pea chloroplasts (Figure 6B), which subsequently were fractionated into a soluble fraction and fractions containing thylakoids and envelope membranes, respectively (
In this study, we describe the purification of the GPT protein from maize endosperm and the subsequent isolation of corresponding cDNAs from different plants. We used maize endosperm as starting material for the preparation of the protein because this tissue has been shown to possess a highly active GPT (
The alignment of the mature GPT proteins from various plants revealed an ~38% identity to the two already known classes of plastidic phosphate antiporters, the TPTs and the PPTs. Also, the phylogenetic tree, constructed on the basis of the available TPT, PPT, and GPT amino acid sequences, showed that the GPTs can be classified as a new group of plastidic phosphate antiporters (Figure 3). The mature parts of all three classes of phosphate translocators consist of ~317 to 330 amino acid residues and contain, remarkably, five regions of high similarity (Figure 2). This observation suggests that these conserved regions are of particular relevance for the transport function of these translocators. One of these regions contains a cluster of two positively charged amino acid residues (Lys-273 and Arg-274 of the spinach TPT). This cluster is presumably involved in substrate binding (
To study the transport function of the GPT in more detail, the GPT from pea roots was chosen as a representative and produced as a histidine-tagged protein in yeast cells. The recombinant protein was purified to homogeneity from these cells by affinity chromatography and reconstituted into artificial membranes. These experiments clearly revealed that the transport function of the GPT is different from those of both the TPT (mediating the transport of inorganic phosphate, trioseP, and 3-PGA) and the PPT as a PEP/phosphate antiporter (Table 2 and Table 3). The GPT accepts both Glc6P and trioseP as exchangeable countersubstrates for inorganic phosphate. It has a lower affinity toward 3-PGA, which is in accordance with a higher Ki (3-PGA) value compared with the corresponding Km values for the transport of phosphate and Glc6P. However, if one assumes that the concentration of 3-PGA in the tissue is at least one order of magnitude higher than that of trioseP (
A translocator that is specific for the transport of phosphate, trioseP, 3-PGA, PEP, and Glc6P but not of Glc1P has been described for a number of nongreen tissues, that is, pea roots (
Until recently, many believed that these transport processes are mediated by a TPT-like phosphate translocator that also accepts the other phosphorylated metabolites as substrates. Our findings clearly show that these metabolites are not transported by a single transport system that is able to mediate the transport of the metabolites mentioned before but rather by a set of different members of the phosphate translocator family with partially overlapping substrate specificities. The TPT is obviously absent in nongreen tissues. In these tissues, the transport of trioseP (and of 3-PGA) can proceed by an exchange with either Glc6P or inorganic phosphate, whose processes are mediated by the GPT. Under physiological conditions, PEP is not transported by the GPT but rather is transported by the recently discovered PPT that is present in all tissues, although its transcripts are more abundant in nongreen tissues (
As shown in Table 2, Glc6P is transported mainly in exchange for inorganic phosphate and trioseP. In nongreen plastids of starch-storing tissues, the imported Glc6P can be used as the substrate for the oxidative pentose phosphate pathway, yielding trioseP as a countersubstrate for the GPT. The reducing equivalents formed by this metabolic pathway are required for the reduction of nitrite and for the biosynthesis of amino acids (
We showed earlier that the TPT can switch from an antiport to a uniport mechanism if high substrate concentrations on both sides of the membrane are provided ( Taken together, these data show that the GPT links the cytosolically located conversion of sucrose and hexoses to Glc6P with metabolic reactions within the plastid, that is, the biosynthesis of starch and the oxidative pentose phosphate pathway that delivers reduction equivalents for the reduction of nitrite and the biosynthesis of amino acids. Its function in nongreen tissues is depicted in Figure 7.
As expected from the physiological function of the GPT protein, GPT-specific transcripts are barely detectable in photosynthetic tissues but are abundant in heterotrophic tissues that utilize Glc6P for starch synthesis, for example, potato tubers, maize kernels, and pea roots. For the developing endosperm from maize and barley, it has been shown recently that the key enzyme for starch biosynthesis, ADP-glucose pyrophosphorylase, is present mainly in the cytosol rather than in the plastids (
The data presented here demonstrate that the GPT protein can also be imported into photosynthetically active plastids (Figure 6); likewise, low expression of the GPT gene can be detected in green tissues (Figure 5). The reason for the observed low abundance in green tissues might be that the GPT activity is restricted to specialized cells. It has been shown that the envelope of guard cell chloroplasts contains a GPT-like transport activity ( Overall, we have identified the GPT as one of the main devices to provide plastids with carbon for starch biosynthesis and/or as the substrate for the oxidative pentose phosphate pathway at the molecular level. The analysis of transgenic plants with an altered activity of the GPT will show to what extent the GPT is actually involved in these processes.
Plant Material, cDNA Cloning, and RNA Gel Blot Analysis
Maize (Zea mays), pea (Pisum sativum), and potato (Solanum tuberosum) plants were grown in the greenhouse, and cauliflower (Brassica oleracea) inflorescences were obtained from the local market. Isolation of poly(A)+ RNA from pea leaves, cauliflower inflorescences, and maize endosperm, the subsequent syntheses of cDNAs that were cloned into
Isolation of the Glucose 6-Phosphate/Phosphate Translocator and Cloning of Its cDNA
Approximately 10 mg of the isolated membranes was suspended in 0.9 mL of buffer C (10 mM Tricine-KOH, pH 7.5, 0.2% n-dodecylmaltoside, and 1 mM phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride) and solubilized by the addition of 0.24 mL of 20% n-dodecylmaltoside. After 2 min on ice, the suspension was diluted by the addition of 1.2 mL of buffer C and centrifuged for 3 min at 27,000g. The supernatant was applied to a HiTrap Q column (5 mL; Pharmacia Biotechnology) that had been equilibrated with buffer C. The pass-through of the column containing most of the glucose 6-phosphate (Glc6P)/phosphate exchange transport activity, as measured by reconstitution of the various fractions into artificial membranes ( From the 31-kD protein, sequences of two peptides were obtained: KTQVVPVQSEGAQRLK (P1) and KVAVSFTHIIK (P2). Two degenerate oligonucleotide probes were designed on the basis of the peptide sequence P1: 5'-d(AARACICARGTIGTICCIGTICA)-3' (O1) and 5'-d(GTIGTICCIGTICARWIIGARGGIGC)-3' (O2), where R is A or G, Y is C or T, W is A or T, and I is inosine.
A first-strand cDNA was prepared using poly(A)+ RNA from maize endosperm, an oligo(dT)15 anchor primer (rapid amplification of cDNA ends [RACE] adapter primer [RA primer; 5'-d[CCACGAGTC-GACTCTAGAGCTCGGATCCT T[ T ]15-3']]), and a cDNA preamplification system, according to the instructions given by the manufacturer (Gibco-BRL Life Technologies, Eggenstein, Germany). The resulting single-stranded cDNA was the template for the RACE procedure using oligonucleotides O1 and the RA primer as forward and reverse primers, respectively. The first reaction contained 2 µL of cDNA from the first-strand reaction, 0.1 µM RA primer, 1 µM nested RACE primer 1 (5'-d[CCACGAGTCGACTCTAG]-3'), 1 µM gene-specific primer O1, 1.5 mM MgCl2, 200 µM deoxynucleotide triphosphates, and 2 units of Taq polymerase in a final volume of 50 µL. The reaction was heated for 5 min at 94°C, and the subsequent amplification consisted of three cycles of 10 min at 37°C, 2 min at 55°C, and 1 min at 94°C, followed by 35 cycles of 1 min at 55°C, 2 min at 72°C, and 1 min at 94°C. The assay was then diluted by a factor of 100 and used for the second RACE reaction containing 2 µL of the first RACE reaction, 0.2 µM nested RACE primer 2 (5'-d[CTCTAGAGCTCGGATCC]-3'), 1 µM nested primer O2, 1.5 mM MgCl2, 200 µM deoxynucleotide triphosphates, and 2 units of Taq polymerase in a final volume of 50 µL. The reaction was heated for 2.5 min at 95°C, and the subsequent amplification consisted of 30 cycles of 45 sec at 94°C, 60 sec at 45°C, and 70 sec at 72°C, followed by incubation for 5 min at 72°C. The generated DNA fragment (1200 bp) was then used for a plaque hybridization screening of cDNA libraries from maize endosperm, pea roots, potato tubers, and cauliflower inflorescences. Positive plaques were purified, and the inserts were excised and subcloned into the pBluescript KS+ (Stratagene, La Jolla, CA) for partial sequencing at both ends (
Heterologous Expression of the Glc6P/Phosphate Translocator cDNA in Yeast Cells
Protein Import Assay
Reconstitution of Transport Activities
For the determination of substrate specificities, kinetic properties, and the stoichiometry of the Glc6P/phosphate exchange, the recombinant GPT protein that had been purified to apparent homogeneity by Ni2+-nitrilotriacetic acid chromatography from S. pombe cells ( After freezing and thawing, 32P-phosphate was added to half of the proteoliposomes (final specific activity of 9000 cpm/nmol). After 40 min at 20°C, the external substrate was removed from both types of liposomes by chromatography on Sephadex G-25 (Pharmacia Biotechnology), which had been equilibrated with 20 mM Tricine-NaOH, pH 7.6, 130 mM sodium gluconate, and 50 mM potassium gluconate. The eluted 32P-phosphate-containing liposomes were used for the determination of the time course of 32P-phosphate release, which was initiated by externally added Glc6P (1.3 mM).
The time-dependent uptake of 14C-Glc6P (1.3 mM, specific activity of 6000 dpm/nmol) was monitored by using the other type of liposomes. Transport reactions were terminated by an inhibitor stop in combination with removal of the external radioactivity by passing aliquots of the liposomes over a Dowex AG-1X8 (Bio-Rad Laboratories, Munich, Germany) column, which had been preequilibrated with 180 mM sodium acetate (
1 The first two authors contributed equally to this article.
This work was funded by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft, the Fonds der Chemischen Industrie, and the European Community BIOTECH Programme as part of the Project of Technological Priority 1993-1996. Received September 2, 1997; accepted November 11, 1997.
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