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Further insight into the involvement of PII1 in starch granule initiation in Arabidopsis leaf chloroplasts.

Camille VandrommeCorentin SprietJean-Luc PutauxDavid DauvilléeAdeline CourseauxChristophe D'HulstFabrice Wattebled
Published in: The New phytologist (2023)
The control of starch granule initiation in plant leaves is a complex process that requires active enzymes like SS4 or SS3 (Starch Synthase 4 and 3) and several non-catalytic proteins such as PII1 (Protein Involved in starch Initiation 1). In Arabidopsis leaves, Starch Synthase 4(SS4) is the main enzyme that control starch granule initiation, but in its absence, SS3 partly fulfills this function. How these proteins collectively act to control the initiation of starch granules remains elusive. PII1 and SS4 physically interact and PII1 is required for SS4 to be fully active. However, Arabidopsis mutants lacking SS4 or PII1 still accumulate starch granules. Combining pii1 KO mutation with either ss3 or ss4 KO mutations provide new insights of how the remaining starch granules are synthesized. The ss3 pii1 line still accumulates starch while the phenotype of ss4 pii1 is stronger than that of ss4. Our results indicate first that SS4 initiates starch granule synthesis in the absence of PII1 albeit being limited to one large lenticular granule per plastid. Second, that if in the absence of SS4, SS3 is able to initiate starch granules with low efficiency, this ability is further reduced with the additional absence of PII1.
Keyphrases
  • lactic acid
  • cell wall