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1.
Polyphenol oxidase (PPO) activity increased markedly in the micropylar region of the endosperm of tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum) seeds after radicle protrusion. Tissue-printing analyses demonstrated that the majority of the activity is localized in the micropylar area. The increase in the activity was due to the increase in the amounts of enzyme. Within the micropylar endosperm region, two PPO isozymes were immunologically detected whose apparent molecular masses were estimated to be approximately 58 and 59 kDa, respectively, by SDS-PAGE. Although PPO activity also developed in the lateral portion of the endosperm, the level of this activity was much lower as compared with that in the micropylar region. Furthermore, the isozyme pattern in the lateral portion differed from that in the micropylar portion. The 58 kDa isozyme that was detected in the latter portion was absent, and only 59 kDa PPO was detectable in the former one. When the endosperm tissues were wounded, an enhancement of the enzyme activity was observed in the wounded region. The wound-induced development of the enzyme activity was associated with the induction of 58 kDa isozyme.  相似文献   

2.
Electron microscopic observations of the endosperm of tomato ( Lycopersicon esculentum Mill.) seeds revealed that changes in the cell wall structures along with the vacuolation of protein bodies occurred in the micropylar portion of the endosperm prior to germination. No changes were detected at that time in the rest of the endosperm. Endo‐β‐mannanase activity was restricted to the micropylar region of the endosperm prior to germination. Cell wall digestion by this pregerminative mannanase seemed to be associated with the changes in cell wall structures occurring in the micropylar region prior to germination. The protein content in the micropylar part of the endosperm began to decrease shortly after imbibition and attained about 40% of the initial level by the time of radicle protrusion (38 h after imbibition). On the other hand, only slight changes in the content were detected in the lateral endosperm during the same time; the protein content in the lateral endosperm decreased only after germination started. In conformity with the results on protein contents, proteolytic activity began to develop first in the micropylar portion prior to germination, and then in the lateral portion after germination. Thus, the timing of the biochemical activation of the endosperm after imbibition differed between the micropylar and the lateral region. Some qualitative differences in patterns of polypeptides synthesized in vivo were detected, as analyzed by pulse‐labeling and fluorography, between the micropylar and the lateral portions of the endosperm of seeds imbibed for 25 h. This suggests that processes of the biochemical activation of the endosperm may be qualitatively, as well as quantitatively, different depending on the regions of the endosperm.  相似文献   

3.
Laminarin-hydrolysing activity developed in the endosperm of tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum) seeds following germination. The enzyme was basic (pI>10) and the apparent molecular mass was estimated to be 35 kDa by SDS-PAGE. It was specific for linear beta-1,3-glucan substrates. Laminarin was hydrolysed by the enzyme to yield a mixture of oligoglucosides, indicating that the enzyme had an endo-action pattern. Thus, the enzyme was identified as beta-1,3- endoglucanase (EC 3.2.1.39). The activity of the enzyme developed in the endosperm after radicle protrusion (germination) had occurred and the enzyme activity was localized exclusively in the micropylar region of the endosperm where the radicle had penetrated. When the lateral endosperm region, where no induction of the enzyme occurred, was wounded (cut or punctured), there was a marked enhancement of beta-1,3-glucanase activity. Thus the post-germinative beta-1, 3-glucanase activity in the micropylar endosperm portion might be brought about by wounding resulting from endosperm rupture by radicle penetration.  相似文献   

4.
Endo-beta-mannanase (EC 3.2.1.78) is involved in hydrolysis of the mannan-rich cell walls of the tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum Mill.) endosperm during germination and post-germinative seedling growth. Different electrophoretic isoforms of endo-beta-mannanase are expressed sequentially in different parts of the endosperm, initially in the micropylar endosperm cap covering the radicle tip and subsequently in the remaining lateral endosperm surrounding the rest of the embryo. We have isolated a cDNA from imbibed tomato seeds (LeMAN2) that shares 77% deduced amino acid sequence similarity with a post-germinative tomato mannanase (LeMAN1). When expressed in Escherichia coli, the protein encoded by LeMAN2 cDNA was recognized by anti-mannanase antibody and exhibited endo-beta-mannanase activity, confirming the identity of the gene. LeMAN2 was expressed exclusively in the endosperm cap tissue of tomato seeds prior to radicle emergence, whereas LeMAN1 was expressed only in the lateral endosperm after radicle emergence. LeMAN2 mRNA accumulation and mannanase activity were induced by gibberellin in gibberellin-deficient gib-1 mutant seeds but were not inhibited by abscisic acid in wild-type seeds. Distinct mannanases are involved in germination and post-germinative growth, with LeMAN2 being associated with endosperm cap weakening prior to radicle emergence, whereas LeMAN1 mobilizes galactomannan reserves in the lateral endosperm.  相似文献   

5.
Muskmelon (Cucumis melo L.) embryos are enclosed in an envelopeof tissue consisting of a layer of endosperm and a multi-cell-layeredperisperm that the radicle must penetrate for germination tooccur. The force and energy required to penetrate the perispermenvelope tissue were measured using an Instron universal testingmachine at a crosshead speed of 5 mm min–1 after 0, 10,15, 22, 23, and 25 h of imbibition at 25C. The cellular structureof perisperm envelope tissue surrounding the radicle was observedafter 10, 15, 20, 25, and 48 h of imbibition using scanningelectron microscopy. The force required to puncture 5-mm-long,micropylar seed pieces declined steadily from 1.65 N in driedseeds to 0.65 N after 21 h of imbibition. The penetration energydeclined from 3.0 N mm in dry seeds to 1.1 N mm at 21 h afterthe start of imbibition when the first seeds germinated. Theforce and energy required to penetrate germinated seed pieceswere 0.55 N and 0.9 N mm, respectively, so the net punctureforce and energy needed to rupture the micropylar region ofthe perisperm envelope was roughly 0.10 N and 0.2 N mm at radicleemergence, respectively. Instron measurements of penetrationforce and energy decreased dramatically at crosshead speedsless than the 5 mm min–1. Crosshead speeds greater than5 mm min–1 may overestimate the pressure needed to ruptureperisperm and endosperm tissues. Intracellular cracks were firstobserved in SEM images 15 h after the start of imbibition, andafter 20 h cracking was apparent throughout the micropylar regionof the perisperm envelope. The perisperm envelope ruptured inone of two ways, coincident with radicle emergence. In approximately85% of muskmelon seeds, a large crack formed in the perispermenvelope adjacent to the radicle, while in roughly 15 % a circulararea of the perisperm envelope detached during radicle emergence.In dead seeds, the penetration force remained constant from10–24 h after the start of imbibition, and there wereno visible signs of tissue degradation. Cellular degradationand weakening of the perisperm envelope tissue precedes radicleemergence in muskmelon seeds. Key words: Seed, Instron, turgor, cell wall, electron microscopy, Cucumis melo  相似文献   

6.
Completion of germination (radicle emergence) by gibberellin (GA)-deficient (gib-1) mutant tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum Mill.) seeds is dependent upon exogenous GA, because weakening of the endosperm tissue enclosing the radicle tip requires GA. To investigate genes that may be involved in endosperm weakening or embryo growth, differential cDNA display was used to identify mRNAs differentially expressed in gib-1 seeds imbibed in the presence or absence of GA(4+7). Among these was a GA-responsive mRNA encoding the 16-kD hydrophobic subunit c of the V(0) membrane sector of vacuolar H(+)-translocating ATPases (V-ATPase), which we termed LVA-P1. LVA-P1 mRNA expression in gib-1 seeds was dependent on GA and was particularly abundant in the micropylar region prior to radicle emergence. Both GA dependence and tissue localization of LVA-P1 mRNA expression were confirmed directly in individual gib-1 seeds using tissue printing. LVA-P1 mRNA was also expressed in wild-type seeds during development and germination, independent of exogenous GA. Specific antisera detected protein subunits A and B of the cytoplasmic V(1) sector of the V-ATPase holoenzyme complex in gib-1 seeds only in the presence of GA, and expression was localized to the micropylar region. The results suggest that V-ATPase plays a role in GA-regulated germination of tomato seeds.  相似文献   

7.
beta-1,3-Glucanase (EC 3.2.1.39) and chitinase (EC 3.2.1.14) mRNAs, proteins, and enzyme activities were expressed specifically in the micropylar tissues of imbibed tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum Mill.) seeds prior to radicle emergence. RNA hybridization and immunoblotting demonstrated that both enzymes were class I basic isoforms. beta-1,3-Glucanase was expressed exclusively in the endosperm cap tissue, whereas chitinase localized to both endosperm cap and radicle tip tissues. beta-1,3-Glucanase and chitinase appeared in the micropylar tissues of gibberellin-deficient gib-1 tomato seeds only when supplied with gibberellin. Accumulation of beta-1,3-glucanase mRNA, protein and enzyme activity was reduced by 100 microM abscisic acid, which delayed or prevented radicle emergence but not endosperm cap weakening. In contrast, expression of chitinase mRNA, protein, and enzyme activity was not affected by abscisic acid. Neither of these enzymes significantly hydrolyzed isolated tomato endosperm cap cell walls. Although both beta-1,3-glucanase and chitinase were expressed in tomato endosperm cap tissue prior to radicle emergence, we found no evidence that they were directly involved in cell wall modification or tissue weakening. Possible functions of these hydrolases during tomato seed germination are discussed.  相似文献   

8.
9.
The endosperm tissue enclosing the radicle tip (endosperm cap) governs radicle emergence in tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum Mill.) seeds. Weakening of the endosperm cap has been attributed to hydrolysis of its mannan-rich cell walls by endo-[beta]-D-mannanase. To test this hypothesis, we measured mannanase activity in tomato endosperm caps from seeds allowed to imbibe under conditions of varying germination rates. Over a range of suboptimal temperatures, mannanase activity prior to radicle emergence increased in accordance with accumulated thermal time. Reduced water potential delayed or prevented radicle emergence but enhanced mannanase activity in the endosperm caps. Abscisic acid did not prevent the initial increase in mannanase activity, although radicle emergence was markedly delayed. Sugar composition and percent mannose (Man) content of endosperm cap cell walls did not change prior to radicle emergence under any condition. Man, glucose, and other sugars were released into the incubation solution by endosperm caps isolated from intact seeds during imbibition. Pregerminative release of Man was suppressed and the release of glucose was enhanced when seeds were incubated in osmoticum or abscisic acid; the opposite occurred in the presence of gibberellin. Thus, whereas sugar release patterns were sensitive to environmental and hormonal factors affecting germination, neither assayable endo-[beta]-D-mannanase activity nor changes in cell wall sugar composition of endosperm caps correlated well with tomato seed germination rates under all conditions.  相似文献   

10.
BACKGROUND AND AIMS: Seeds of carob, Chinese senna, date and fenugreek are hard due to thickened endosperm cell walls containing mannan polymers. How the radicle is able penetrate these thickened walls to complete seed germination is not clearly understood. The objective of this study was to determine if radicle emergence is related to the production of endo-beta-mannanase to weaken the mannan-rich cell walls of the surrounding endosperm region, and/or if the endosperm structure itself is such that it is weaker in the region through which the radicle must penetrate. METHODS: Activity of endo-beta-mannanase in the endosperm and embryo was measured using a gel assay during and following germination, and the structure of the endosperm in juxtaposition to the radicle, and surrounding the cotyledons was determined using fixation, sectioning and light microscopy. KEY RESULTS: The activity of endo-beta-mannanase, the major enzyme responsible for galactomannan cell wall weakening increased in activity only after emergence of the radicle from the seed. Thickened cell walls were present in the lateral endosperm in the hard-seeded species studied, but there was little to no thickening in the micropylar endosperm except in date seeds. In this species, a ring of thin cells was visible in the micropylar endosperm and surrounding an operculum which was pushed open by the expanding radicle to complete germination. CONCLUSIONS: The micropylar endosperm presents a lower physical constraint to the completion of germination than the lateral endosperm, and hence its structure is predisposed to permit radicle protrusion.  相似文献   

11.
Chen F  Bradford KJ 《Plant physiology》2000,124(3):1265-1274
Expansins are extracellular proteins that facilitate cell wall extension, possibly by disrupting hydrogen bonding between hemicellulosic wall components and cellulose microfibrils. In addition, some expansins are expressed in non-growing tissues such as ripening fruits, where they may contribute to cell wall disassembly associated with tissue softening. We have identified at least three expansin genes that are expressed in tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum Mill.) seeds during germination. Among these, LeEXP4 mRNA is specifically localized to the micropylar endosperm cap region, suggesting that the protein might contribute to tissue weakening that is required for radicle emergence. In gibberellin (GA)-deficient (gib-1) mutant seeds, which germinate only in the presence of exogenous GA, GA induces the expression of LeEXP4 within 12 hours of imbibition. When gib-1 seeds were imbibed in GA solution combined with 100 microM abscisic acid, the expression of LeEXP4 was not reduced, although radicle emergence was inhibited. In wild-type seeds, LeEXP4 mRNA accumulation was blocked by far-red light and decreased by low water potential but was not affected by abscisic acid. The presence of LeEXP4 mRNA during seed germination parallels endosperm cap weakening determined by puncture force analysis. We hypothesize that LeEXP4 is involved in the regulation of seed germination by contributing to cell wall disassembly associated with endosperm cap weakening.  相似文献   

12.
Development of galactomannan hydrolyzing activity was followed in seeds of tomato [ Lycopersicon esculentum (L.) Mill. cv. Toyonishiki] during priming and germination. The activity developed in seeds that were being primed in polyethylene glycol (-0.8 MPa). The activity was detected exclusively in the endosperm portion just adjacent to the radicle tip. Part of the activity remained active after desiccation of the primed seeds. After transfer to water, the activity in the primed seeds immediately began to increase, while in unprimed seeds the beginning of the increase in activity was delayed by about 1 day. In scanning electron microscopy, the inner surface of the cell walls of the micropylar endosperm portion appeared eroded in primed seeds that had been imbibed in water for 16 h (before germination), but not in unprimed seeds imbibed for the same period. These results support the hypothesis that galactomannan hydrolyzing enzyme, which is believed to be responsible for breakdown of tomato endosperm cell walls and hence for the weakening of mechanical restraint against radicle growth, may be involved in the improved germination of primed tomato seeds.  相似文献   

13.
beta-Mannosidase and endo-beta-mannanase are involved in the mobilization of the mannan-containing cell walls of the tomato seed endosperm. The activities of both enzymes increase in a similar temporal manner in the micropylar and lateral endosperm during and following germination. This increase in enzyme activities in the micropylar endosperm is not markedly reduced in seeds imbibed in abscisic acid although, in the lateral endosperm, endo-beta-mannanase activity is more suppressed by this inhibitor than is the activity of beta-mannosidase. Gibberellin-deficient (gib-1) mutants of tomato do not germinate unless imbibed in gibberellin; low beta-mannosidase activity, and no endo-beta-mannanase activity is present in seeds imbibed in water, but both enzymes increase strongly in activity in the seeds imbibed in the growth regulator. For production of full activity of both beta-mannosidase and endo-beta-mannanase in the endosperm, this tissue must be in contact with the embryo for at least the first 6 h of imbibition, which is indicative of a stimulus diffusing from the embryo to the endosperm during this time. These results suggest some correlation between the activities of beta-mannosidase and endo-beta-mannanase, particularly in the micropylar endosperm, in populations of tomato seeds imbibed in water, abscisic acid and gibberellin. However, when individual micropylar endosperm parts are used to examine the effect of the growth regulators and of imbibition in water on the production of the two enzymes, it is apparent that within these individual seed parts there may be large differences in the amount of enzyme activity present. Micropylar endosperms with high endo-beta-mannanase activity do not necessarily have high beta-mannosidase activity, and vice versa, which is indicative of a lack of co-ordination of the activities of these two enzymes within individuals of a population.  相似文献   

14.
Wu CT  Bradford KJ 《Plant physiology》2003,133(1):263-273
Class I chitinase (Chi9) and beta-1,3-glucanase (GluB) genes are expressed in the micropylar endosperm cap of tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum) seeds just before radicle emergence through this tissue to complete germination. In gibberellin (GA)-deficient mutant (gib-1) seeds, expression of Chi9 and GluB mRNA and protein is dependent upon GA. However, as expression occurs relatively late in the germination process, we investigated whether the genes are induced indirectly in response to tissue wounding associated with endosperm cap weakening and radicle protrusion. Wounding and methyl jasmonate (MeJA) induced Chi9 expression, whereas ethylene, abscisic acid, sodium salicylate, fusicoccin, or beta-aminobutyric acid were without effect. Chi9 expression occurred only in the micropylar tissues when seeds were exposed to MeJA or were wounded at the chalazal end of the seed. Expression of Chi9, but not GluB, mRNA was reduced in germinating seeds of the jasmonate-deficient defenseless1 tomato mutant and could be restored by MeJA treatment. Chi9 expression during germination may be associated with "wounding" from cell wall hydrolysis and weakening in the endosperm cap leading to radicle protrusion, and jasmonate is involved in the signaling pathway for this response. Among these treatments and chemicals (other than GA), only MeJA and wounding induced a low level of GluB expression in gib-1 seeds. However, MeJA, wounding, and particularly ethylene induced both genes in leaves, whereas GA induced only Chi9 in leaves. Although normally expressed simultaneously during tomato seed germination, Chi9 and GluB genes are regulated distinctly and tissue specifically by hormones and wounding.  相似文献   

15.
Endo-[beta]-mannanase is hypothesized to be a rate-limiting enzyme in endosperm weakening, which is a prerequisite for radicle emergence from tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum Mill.) seeds. Using a sensitive, single-seed assay, we have measured mannanase activity diffusing from excised tomato endosperm caps following treatments that alter the rate or percentage of radicle emergence. Most striking was the 100- to more than 10,000-fold range of mannanase activity detected among individual seeds of highly inbred tomato lines, which would not be detected in pooled samples. In some cases a threshold-type relationship between mannanase activity and radicle emergence was observed. However, when radicle emergence was delayed or prevented by osmoticum or abscisic acid, the initial increase in mannanase activity was unaffected or even enhanced. Partially dormant seed lots displayed a bimodal distribution of activity, with low activity apparently associated with dormant seeds in the population. Gibberellin- and abscisic acid-deficient mutant seeds exhibited a wide range of mannanase activity, consistent with their variation in hormonal sensitivity. Although the presence of mannanase activity in the endosperm cap is consistently associated with radicle emergence, it is not the sole or limiting factor under all conditions.  相似文献   

16.
Xyloglucan endotransglycosylases (XETs) modify xyloglucans, major components of primary cell walls in dicots. A cDNA encoding an XET (LeXET4) was isolated from a germinating tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum Mill.) seed cDNA library. DNA gel blot analysis showed that LeXET4 is a single-copy gene in the tomato genome. LeXET4 mRNA was strongly expressed in germinating seeds, was much less abundant in stems, and was not detected in roots, leaves or flower tissues. During germination, LeXET4 mRNA was detected in seeds within 12 h of imbibition with maximum mRNA abundance at 24 h. Tissue prints showed that LeXET4 mRNA was localized exclusively to the endosperm cap region. Expression of LeXET4 was dependent on exogenous gibberellin (GA) in GA-deficient (gib-1 mutant) tomato seeds, while abscisic acid, a seed germination inhibitor, had no effect on LeXET4 mRNA expression in wild-type seeds. LeXET4 mRNA disappeared after radicle emergence, even though degradation of the lateral endosperm cell walls continued. The temporal, spatial and hormonal regulation pattern of LeXET4 gene expression suggests that XET has a role in endosperm cap weakening, a key process regulating tomato seed germination.  相似文献   

17.
The possibility of an association between changes in cell walls of the micropylar portion of the endosperm and the induction of germination was explored in seeds of Datura ferox and Datura stramonium. The structure of the inner surface of the endosperm was studied by scanning electron microscopy and the composition of cell wall polysaccharides analyzed by gas chromatography and gas chromatography-mass spectrometry. Both scanning electron microscope images and chemical analysis showed changes in the micropylar portion of the endosperm in induced seeds before radicle protrusion. The inner surface of the endosperm appeared eroded, and in some areas, wall material seemed to be missing. The content of the main component of the cell wall polysaccharides, containing predominantly 4-linked mannose, decreased well before the emergence of the radicle through the endosperm. We propose that the degradation of a mannan type polysaccharide is an important factor in the reduction in mechanical strength of the endosperm, thus facilitating germination.  相似文献   

18.
Completion of germination (radicle emergence) by gibberellin (GA)-deficient (gib-1) mutant tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum Mill.) seeds is dependent upon exogenous GA, because weakening of the endosperm tissue enclosing the radicle tip requires GA. To investigate genes that may be involved in endosperm weakening or embryo growth, differential cDNA display was used to identify mRNAs differentially expressed in gib-1 seeds imbibed in the presence or absence of GA4+7. Among these was a GA-responsive mRNA encoding the 16-kD hydrophobic subunit c of the V0 membrane sector of vacuolar H+-translocating ATPases (V-ATPase), which we termed LVA-P1. LVA-P1 mRNA expression in gib-1 seeds was dependent on GA and was particularly abundant in the micropylar region prior to radicle emergence. Both GA dependence and tissue localization of LVA-P1 mRNA expression were confirmed directly in individual gib-1 seeds using tissue printing. LVA-P1 mRNA was also expressed in wild-type seeds during development and germination, independent of exogenous GA. Specific antisera detected protein subunits A and B of the cytoplasmic V1 sector of the V-ATPase holoenzyme complex in gib-1 seeds only in the presence of GA, and expression was localized to the micropylar region. The results suggest that V-ATPase plays a role in GA-regulated germination of tomato seeds.  相似文献   

19.
Completion of germination (radicle emergence) is an all-or-none developmental event for an individual seed. Variation in germination timing among seeds in a population therefore reflects variation among seeds in the rates or extents of physiological or biochemical processes prior to radicle emergence. For tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum Mill.) seeds, correlative evidence suggests that endo-[beta]-mannanase activity weakens the endosperm cap tissue opposite the radicle tip to permit radicle emergence. To test whether endo-[beta]-mannanase activity is causally related to germination rates, we have developed a sensitive assay suitable for use with individual radicle tips or endosperm caps. We show that endo-[beta]-mannanase activity varies at least 100-fold and often more than 1000-fold among individual inbred tomato seeds prior to radicle emergence. Other sources of variation (tissue size and experimental error) were evaluated and cannot account for this range of activity. Endo-[beta]-mannanase activity was generally 10-fold greater in leachates from endosperm caps than from radicle tips. Release of reducing sugars from individual endosperm caps also varied over a considerable (9-fold) range. These extreme biochemical differences among individual tomato seeds prior to radicle emergence indicate that results obtained from bulk samples could be misleading if it is assumed that all seeds exhibit the "average" behavior.  相似文献   

20.
The micropylar region of endosperm in a seed, which is adjacent to the radicle tip, is called the 'endosperm cap', and is specifically activated before radicle emergence. This activation of the endosperm cap is a widespread phenomenon among species and is a prerequisite for the completion of germination. To understand the mechanisms of endosperm cap-specific gene expression in tomato seeds, GeneChip analysis was performed. The major groups of endosperm cap-enriched genes were pathogenesis-, cell wall-, and hormone-associated genes. The promoter regions of endosperm cap-enriched genes contained DNA motifs recognized by ethylene response factors (ERFs). The tomato ERF1 (TERF1) and its experimentally verified targets were enriched in the endosperm cap, suggesting an involvement of the ethylene response cascade in this process. The known endosperm cap enzyme endo-β-mannanase is induced by gibberellin (GA), which is thought to be the major hormone inducing endosperm cap-specific genes. The mechanism of endo-β-mannanase induction by GA was also investigated using isolated, embryoless seeds. Results suggested that GA might act indirectly on the endosperm cap. We propose that endosperm cap activation is caused by the ethylene response of this tissue, as a consequence of mechanosensing of the increase in embryonic growth potential by GA action.  相似文献   

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