Purification and properties of tobacco ferredoxin-dependent glutamate synthase, and isolation of corresponding cDNA clones

Abstract
Ferredoxin-dependent glutamate synthase (Fd-GOGAT, EC 1.4.7.1) was purified to electrophoretic homogeneity from leaves of tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum L.). The holoenzyme is a monomeric flavoprotein with a molecular weight of 164 kDa. Polyclonal rabbit antibodies against the purified enzyme were used to isolate a 450-bp Fd-GOGAT cDNA clone (C16) from a tobacco λgt11 expression library. A longer Fd-GOGAT cDNA clone (C35) encoding about 70% of the amino acids of tobacco Fd-GOGAT was isolated from a tobacco λgt10 cDNA library using C16 as the probe. The amino-acid sequence of the protein encoded by the Fd-GOGAT cDNA clone C35 was delineated. It is very likely that Fd-GOGAT is encoded by two genes in the amphidiploid genome of tobacco while only a single Fd-GOGAT gene appears to be present in the diploid genome of Nicotiana sylvestris. Two Fd-GOGAT isoenzymes could be distinguished in extracts of tobacco leaf protein. In contrast, a single Fd-GOGAT protein species was detected in leaves of Nicotiana sylvestris speg. et Comes. In tobacco leaves, the 6-kb Fd-GOGAT mRNA is about 50-fold less abundant than chloroplastic glutamine synthetase (EC 6.3.1.2) mRNA. Both Fd-GOGAT mRNA and Fd-GOGAT protein accumulated during greening of etiolated tobacco leaves, and a concomitant increase in Fd-GOGAT activity was observed. These results indicate that tobacco Fd-GOGAT gene expression is light-inducible. Levels of Fd-GOGAT mRNA in tobacco organs other than leaves were below the detection limit of our Northern-blot analysis. Polypeptides of Fd-GOGAT were present in tobacco leaves and, to a lesser extent, in pistils and anthers, but not in corollas, stems and roots. These results support organ specificity in tobacco Fd-GOGAT gene expression.