Nonspecific phospholipase C3 of radish has phospholipase D activity towards glycosylinositol phosphoceramide.
Rumana Yesmin HasiToshiki IshikawaKeigo SunagawaYoshimichi TakaiHanif AliJunji HayashiRyushi KawakamiKeizo YuasaMutsumi AiharaKaori KanemaruHiroyuki ImaiTamotsu TanakaPublished in: FEBS letters (2022)
Glycosylinositol phosphoceramide (GIPC) is a major sphingolipid in the plasma membranes of plants. Previously, we found an enzyme activity that produces phytoceramide 1-phosphate (PC1P) by hydrolysis of the D position of GIPC in cabbage and named this activity as GIPC-phospholipase D (PLD). Here, we purified GIPC-PLD by sequential chromatography from radish roots. Peptide mass fingerprinting analysis revealed that the potential candidate for GIPC-PLD protein was nonspecific phospholipase C3 (NPC3), which has not been characterized as a PLD. The recombinant NPC3 protein obtained by heterologous expression system in Escherichia coli produced PC1P from GIPC and showed essentially the same enzymatic properties as those we characterized as GIPC-PLD in cabbage, radish and Arabidopsis thaliana. From these results, we conclude that NPC3 is one of the enzymes that degrade GIPC.