IIBBA   05544
INSTITUTO DE INVESTIGACIONES BIOQUIMICAS DE BUENOS AIRES
Unidad Ejecutora - UE
artículos
Título:
Oligomerization of the Reversibly Glycosylated Polypeptide: its role during rice plant development and in the regulation of self-glycosylation".
Autor/es:
DE PINO V,; MARINO BUSJLE C; MORENO S
Revista:
PROTOPLASMA
Editorial:
SPRINGER WIEN
Referencias:
Lugar: Viena; Año: 2013 vol. 250 p. 111 - 119
ISSN:
0033-183X
Resumen:
A multigenic family of self-glycosylating proteins
named reversibly glycosylated polypeptides, designated
as RGPs, have been usually associated with carbohydrate
metabolism, although they are an enigma both at the functional,
as well as at the structural level. In this work, we used
biochemical approaches to demonstrate that complex formation
is linked to rice plant development, in which class 1
Oryza sativa RGP (OsRGP) would be involved in an early
stage of growing plants, while class 2 OsRGP would be
associated with a late stage linked to an active polysaccharide
synthesis that occurs during the elongation of plant.
Here, a further investigation of the complex formation of the
Solanum tuberosum RGP (StRGP) was performed. Results
showed that disulfide bonds are at least partially responsible
for maintaining the oligomeric protein structure, so that the
nonreduced StRGP protein showed an apparent higher molecular
weight and a lower radioglycosylation of the monomer
with respect to its reduced form. Hydrophobic cluster
analysis and secondary structure prediction revealed that
class 2 RGPs no longer maintained the Rossman fold described
for class 1 RGP. A 3D structure of the StRGP protein
resolved by homology modeling supports the possibility
of intercatenary disulfide bridges formed by exposed
cysteines residues C79, C303 and C251 and they are most
probably involved in complex formation occurring into the
cell cytoplasm.

