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Identification of the Soluble Starch Synthase Activities of Maize Endosperm

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TLDR
DU1 and zSSI accounted for the great majority of soluble SS activity present in developing endosperm, and the relative activity of the two isozymes did not change significantly during the starch biosynthetic period.
Abstract
This study identified the complement of soluble starch synthases (SSs) present in developing maize (Zea mays) endosperm. The product of the du1 gene, DU1, was shown to be one of the two major soluble SSs. The C-terminal 450 residues of DU1 comprise eight sequence blocks conserved in 28 known or predicted glucan synthases. This region of DU1 was expressed in Escherichia coli and shown to possess SS activity. DU1-specific antisera detected a soluble endosperm protein of more than 200 kD that was lacking in du1- mutants. These antisera eliminated 20% to 30% of the soluble SS activity from kernel extracts. Antiserum against the isozyme zSSI eliminated approximately 60% of the total soluble SS, and immunodepletion of du1- mutant extracts with this antiserum nearly eliminated SS activity. Two soluble SS activities were identified by electrophoretic fractionation, each of which correlated specifically with zSSI or DU1. Thus, DU1 and zSSI accounted for the great majority of soluble SS activity present in developing endosperm. The relative activity of the two isozymes did not change significantly during the starch biosynthetic period. DU1 and zSSI may be interdependent, because mutant extracts lacking DU1 exhibited a significant stimulation of the remaining SS activity.

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Starch: its metabolism, evolution, and biotechnological modification in plants.

TL;DR: Progress in identifying the enzymatic machinery required for the synthesis of amylopectin, the glucose polymer responsible for the insoluble nature of starch, is assessed.
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In Posidonia oceanica cadmium induces changes in DNA methylation and chromatin patterning

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Expression profiling of genes involved in starch synthesis in sink and source organs of rice

TL;DR: Using quantitative real-time RT-PCR, an examination was made of the expression profiles of 27 rice genes encoding six classes of enzymes, i.e. ADPglucose pyrophosphorylase (AGPase), starch synthase, starch branching enzyme, starch debranching enzymes, starch phosphorylases, and disproportionating enzyme in developing seeds and leaves.
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Starch biosynthesis in cereal endosperm

TL;DR: The current review summarizes the recent research findings related to starch biosynthesis in cereal endosperm, with a particular focus on rice.
References
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Ed Harlow, +1 more
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Journal ArticleDOI

Microscopy of starch : evidence of a new level of granule organization

TL;DR: In this paper, the structural level of the granule involves the organization of the amylopectin lamellae into effectively spherical "blocklets" which range in diameter from 20 to 500 nm depending on starch botanical type and their location in granule, and the presence of short, radial "channels" of amorphous material within starch granules from some starch varieties.
Journal ArticleDOI

Molecular identification and isolation of the Waxy locus in maize.

TL;DR: Evidence is presented that the Wx locus encodes a starch granule-bound 58 kd polypeptide that is synthesized in vitro as a 65 kd precursor and it is shown that a mutation caused by the controlling element Dissociation is attributable to an insertion of approximately 2.4 kb at the WX locus.
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