Aspartate kinase and the synthesis of aspartate-derived amino acids in wheat

Abstract
Aspartate kinase (EC 2.7.2.4.) has been purified from 7 day etiolated wheat (Triticum aestivum L. var. Maris Freeman) seedlings and from embryos imbibed for 8 h. The enzyme was 50% inhibited by 0.25 mM lysine. In this study wheat aspartate kinase was not inhibited by threonine alone or cooperatively with lysine; these results contrast with those published previously. In vivo regulation of the synthesis of aspartate-derived amino acids was examined by feeding [14C]acetate and [35S]sulphate to 2–3 day germinating wheat embryos in culture in the presence of exogenous amino acids. Lysine (1 mM) inhibited lysine synthesis by 86%. Threonine (1 mM) inhibited threonine synthesis by 79%. Lysine (1 mM) plus threonine (1 mM) inhibited threonine synthesis by 97%. Methionine synthesis was relatively unaffected by these amino acids, suggesting that there are important regulatory sites other than aspartate kinase and homoserine dehydrogenase. [35S]sulphate incorporation into methionine was inhibited 50% by lysine (2 mM) plus threonine (2 mM) correlating with the reported 50% inhibition of growth by these amino acids in this system. The synergistic inhibition of growth, methionine synthesis and threonine synthesis by lysine plus threonine is discussed in terms of lysine inhibition of aspartate kinase and threonine inhibition of homoserine dehydrogenase.