Arabidopsis PAP17 is a dual-localized purple acid phosphatase up-regulated during phosphate deprivation, senescence, and oxidative stress

dc.contributor.author Macintosh, Gustavo
dc.contributor.author O’Gallagher, Bryden
dc.contributor.author Ghahremani, Mina
dc.contributor.author Stigter, Kyla
dc.contributor.author Walker, Emma J. L.
dc.contributor.author Pyc, Michal
dc.contributor.author Liu, Ang-Yu
dc.contributor.author Mullen, Robert T.
dc.contributor.author Plaxton, William C.
dc.contributor.department Roy J. Carver Department of Biochemistry, Biophysics and Molecular Biology (CALS)
dc.date.accessioned 2022-02-18T13:14:22Z
dc.date.available 2022-02-18T13:14:22Z
dc.date.issued 2022-01-05
dc.description.abstract A 35 kDa monomeric purple acid phosphatase (APase) was purified from cell wall extracts of Pi starved (–Pi) Arabidopsis thaliana suspension cells and identified as AtPAP17 (At3g17790) by mass spectrometry and N-terminal microsequencing. AtPAP17 was de novo synthesized and dual-localized to the secretome and/or intracellular fraction of –Pi or salt-stressed plants, or senescing leaves. Transiently expressed AtPAP17–green fluorescent protein localized to lytic vacuoles of the Arabidopsis suspension cells. No significant biochemical or phenotypical changes associated with AtPAP17 loss of function were observed in an atpap17 mutant during Pi deprivation, leaf senescence, or salinity stress. Nevertheless, AtPAP17 is hypothesized to contribute to Pi metabolism owing to its marked up-regulation during Pi starvation and leaf senescence, broad APase substrate selectivity and pH activity profile, and rapid repression and turnover following Pi resupply to –Pi plants. While AtPAP17 also catalyzed the peroxidation of luminol, which was optimal at pH 9.2, it exhibited a low Vmax and affinity for hydrogen peroxide relative to horseradish peroxidase. These results, coupled with absence of a phenotype in the salt-stressed or –Pi atpap17 mutant, do not support proposals that the peroxidase activity of AtPAP17 contributes to the detoxification of reactive oxygen species during stresses that trigger AtPAP17 up-regulation.
dc.description.comments This is a manuscript of an article published as O’Gallagher, Bryden, Mina Ghahremani, Kyla Stigter, Emma JL Walker, Michal Pyc, Ang-Yu Liu, Gustavo C. MacIntosh, Robert T. Mullen, and William C. Plaxton. "Arabidopsis PAP17 is a dual-localized purple acid phosphatase up-regulated during phosphate deprivation, senescence, and oxidative stress." Journal of Experimental Botany 73 (2022): 382-399. doi:10.1093/jxb/erab409. Posted with permission.
dc.identifier.uri https://dr.lib.iastate.edu/handle/20.500.12876/WwPgP1Oz
dc.language.iso en
dc.publisher Oxford University Press on behalf of the Society for Experimental Biology
dc.source.uri https://doi.org/10.1093/jxb/erab409 *
dc.subject.disciplines DegreeDisciplines::Life Sciences::Biochemistry, Biophysics, and Structural Biology
dc.subject.disciplines DegreeDisciplines::Life Sciences::Plant Sciences::Botany
dc.subject.keywords hydrogen peroxide metabolism
dc.subject.keywords peroxidase
dc.subject.keywords phosphate metabolism
dc.subject.keywords phosphate starvation response
dc.subject.keywords purple acid phosphatase
dc.subject.keywords reactive oxygen species
dc.subject.keywords salinity stress
dc.subject.keywords senescence
dc.title Arabidopsis PAP17 is a dual-localized purple acid phosphatase up-regulated during phosphate deprivation, senescence, and oxidative stress
dc.title.alternative Biochemical and molecular characterization of AtPAP17: a dual-localized, low molecular weight Arabidopsis purple acid phosphatase upregulated during phosphate deprivation, senescence, and oxidative stress
dc.type article
dspace.entity.type Publication
relation.isAuthorOfPublication 6879aca5-82d6-4301-ac56-17db07ad2bb8
relation.isOrgUnitOfPublication c70f85ae-e0cd-4dce-96b5-4388aac08b3f
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