The higher plant ADP-glucose pyrophosphorylase is a heterotetramer consisting of two subunit types, which have evolved at different rates from a common ancestral gene. The potato tuber small subunit ( SS) displays both catalytic and regulatory properties, whereas the exact role of the large subunit (LS), which contains substrate and effector binding sites, remains unresolved. We identified a mutation, S302N, which increased the solubility of the recombinant potato tuber LS and, in turn, enabling it to form a homotetrameric structure. The LS302N homotetramer possesses very little enzyme activity at a level 100-fold less than that seen for the unactivated SS homotetramer. Unlike the SS enzyme, however, the LS302N homotetramer enzyme is neither activated by the effector 3-phosphoglycerate nor inhibited by Pi. When combined with the catalytically silenced SS, S-D143N, however, the LS302N-containing enzyme shows significantly enhanced catalytic activity and restored 3-PGA activation. This unmasking of catalytic and regulatory potential of the LS is conspicuously evident when the activities of the resurrected L-K41R.T51K.S302N homotetramer are compared with its heterotetrameric form assembled with S-D143N. Overall, these results indicate that the LS possesses catalytic and regulatory properties only when assembled with SS and that the net properties of the heterotetrameric enzyme is a product of subunit synergy.