Glyoxysomal malate dehydrogenase in pumpkin: cloning of a cDNA and functional analysis of its presequence
1998
Kato, A. | Takeda-Yoshikawa, Y. | Hayashi, M. | Kondo, M. | Hara-Nishimura, I. | Nishimura, M.
Glyoxysomal malate dehydrogenase (gMDH) is an enzyme of the glyoxylate cycle that participates in degradation of storage oil. We have cloned a cDNA for gMDH from etiolated pumpkin cotyledons that encodes a polypeptide consisting of 356 amino acid residues. The nucleotide and N-terminal amino acid sequences revealed that gMDH is synthesized as a precursor with an N-terminal extrapeptide. The N-terminal presequence of 36 amino acid residues contains two regions homologous to those of other microbody proteins, which are also synthesized as large precursors. To investigate the functions of the N-terminal presequence of gMDH, we generated transgenic Arabidopsis that expressed a chimeric protein consisting of beta-glucuronidase and the N-terminal region of gMDH. Immunological and immunocytochemical studies revealed that the chimeric protein was imported into microbodies such as glyoxysomes and leaf peroxisomes and was then subsequently processed. Site-directed mutagenesis studies showed that the conserved amino acids in the N-terminal presequence, Arg-10 and His-17, function as recognition sites for the targeting to plant microbodies, and Cys-36 in the presequence is responsible for its processing. These results correspond to those from the analyses of glyoxysomal citrate synthase (gCS), which was also synthesized as a large precursor, suggesting that common mechanisms that can recognize the targeting or the processing of gMDH and gCS function in higher plant cells.
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