Author
Listed:
- Rong Fan
(Huazhong Agricultural University)
- Zeyuan Guan
(Huazhong Agricultural University)
- Guanghong Zhou
(Huazhong Agricultural University)
- Xi Yang
(Huazhong Agricultural University)
- Fei Zhang
(Huazhong Agricultural University)
- Menglong Wu
(Huazhong Agricultural University)
- Xuecui Wang
(Huazhong Agricultural University)
- Jian Liu
(Huazhong Agricultural University)
- Pei Chen
(Huazhong Agricultural University)
- Yanjun Liu
(Huazhong Agricultural University)
- Delin Zhang
(Huazhong Agricultural University)
- Ping Yin
(Huazhong Agricultural University)
- Junjie Yan
(Huazhong Agricultural University)
Abstract
Amylopectin, the primary form of starch in plant leaves, seeds and tubers, features a tree-like architecture with branched glucose chains. Excess branches result in the formation of soluble phytoglycogen instead of starch granules. In higher plants and green algae, the debranching enzyme isoamylase ISA1 forms either homomultimer or hetero-multimer with ISA2 to facilitate branch trimming and starch granule formation, but the molecular basis remains largely unknown. In this study, we reconstitute the rice OsISA1-ISA2 complex in vitro and determine the cryo-EM structures of the OsISA1 homodimer, as well as the malto-oligosaccharide (MOS)-free and MOS-bound OsISA1-ISA2 heterocomplex. The OsISA1 dimer shows a tail-to-tail rod-like architecture, whereas the OsISA1-ISA2 complex mainly exhibits as a trimer, with OsISA2 flanking on the N-terminal segments of the dimeric OsISA1. Combined with comprehensive biochemical analyses, these structural data elucidate the organization of the ISA1-ISA2 heterocomplex in higher plants and demonstrate how ISA1 and ISA2 cooperate during amylopectin biosynthesis.
Suggested Citation
Rong Fan & Zeyuan Guan & Guanghong Zhou & Xi Yang & Fei Zhang & Menglong Wu & Xuecui Wang & Jian Liu & Pei Chen & Yanjun Liu & Delin Zhang & Ping Yin & Junjie Yan, 2025.
"Amylopectin branch trimming and biosynthesis elucidated by the rice isoamylase ISA1-ISA2 heterocomplex,"
Nature Communications, Nature, vol. 16(1), pages 1-14, December.
Handle:
RePEc:nat:natcom:v:16:y:2025:i:1:d:10.1038_s41467-025-60944-6
DOI: 10.1038/s41467-025-60944-6
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