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1.
Seeds possess a high intrinsic capacity for protein production that makes them a desirable bioreactor platform for the manufacture of transgenic products. One strategy to enhance foreign protein production involves exchanging the capacity to produce intrinsic proteins for the capacity to produce a high level of foreign proteins. Suppression of the alpha/alpha' subunit of beta-conglycinin storage protein synthesis in soybean has been shown previously to result in an increase in the accumulation of the glycinin storage protein, some of which is sequestered as proglycinin into de novo endoplasmic reticulum (ER)-derived protein bodies. The exchange of glycinin for conglycinin is quantitative, with the remodelled soybeans possessing a normal protein content with an altered proteome. The green fluorescent protein (GFP)-kdel reporter was transferred in a construct using the glycinin promoter and terminator to mimic glycinin gene expression. When expressed in soybean seeds, GFP-kdel accreted to form ER-derived protein bodies. The introgression of GFP-kdel into the alpha/alpha' subunit of the beta-conglycinin suppression background resulted in a fourfold enhancement of GFP-kdel accumulation to > 7% (w/w) of the total protein in soybean seeds. The resulting seeds accumulated a single population of ER membrane-bound protein bodies that contained both GFP-kdel and glycinin. Thus, the collateral proteome rebalancing that occurs with the suppression of intrinsic proteins in soybean can be exploited to produce an enhanced level of foreign proteins.  相似文献   

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Kinney AJ  Jung R  Herman EM 《The Plant cell》2001,13(5):1165-1178
The expression of the alpha and alpha' subunits of beta-conglycinin was suppressed by sequence-mediated gene silencing in transgenic soybean seed. The resulting seeds had similar total oil and protein content and ratio compared with the parent line. The decrease in beta-conglycinin protein was apparently compensated by an increased accumulation of glycinin. In addition, proglycinin, the precursor of glycinin, was detected as a prominent polypeptide band in the protein profile of the transgenic seed extract. Electron microscopic analysis and immunocytochemistry of maturing transgenic soybean seeds indicated that the process of storage protein accumulation was altered in the transgenic line. In normal soybeans, the storage proteins are deposited in pre-existing vacuoles by Golgi-derived vesicles. In contrast, in transgenic seed with reduced beta-conglycinin levels, endoplasmic reticulum (ER)-derived vesicles were observed that resembled precursor accumulating-vesicles of pumpkin seeds and the protein bodies accumulated by cereal seeds. Their ER-derived membrane of the novel vesicles did not contain the protein storage vacuole tonoplast-specific protein alpha-TIP, and the sequestered polypeptides did not contain complex glycans, indicating a preGolgi and nonvacuolar nature. Glycinin was identified as a major component of these novel protein bodies and its diversion from normal storage protein trafficking appears to be related to the proglycinin buildup in the transgenic seed. The stable accumulation of proteins in a protein body compartment instead of vacuolar accumulation of proteins may provide an alternative intracellular site to sequester proteins when soybeans are used as protein factories.  相似文献   

4.
The soybean major storage protein glycinin is encoded by five genes, which are divided into two subfamilies. Expression of A3B4 glycinin in transgenic rice seed reached about 1.5% of total seed protein, even if expressed under the control of strong endosperm-specific promoters. In contrast, expression of A1aB1b glycinin reached about 4% of total seed protein. Co-expression of the two proteins doubled accumulation levels of both A1aB1b and A3B4 glycinins. This increase can be largely accounted for by their aggregation with rice glutelins, self-assembly and inter-glycinin interactions, resulting in the enrichment of globulin and glutelin fractions and a concomitant reduction of the prolamin fraction. Immunoelectron microscopy indicated that the synthesized A1aB1b glycinin was predominantly deposited in protein body-II (PB-II) storage vacuoles, whereas A3B4 glycinin is targeted to both PB-II and endoplasmic reticulum (ER)-derived protein body-I (PB-I) storage structures. Co-expression with A1aB1b facilitated targeting of A3B4 glycinin into PB-II by sequestration with A1aB1b, resulting in an increase in the accumulation of A3B4 glycinin.  相似文献   

5.
The composition of seed storage proteins is regulated by sulfur and nitrogen supplies. Under conditions of a low sulfur-to-nitrogen ratio, accumulation of the β-subunit of β-conglycinin, a sulfur-poor seed storage protein of soybean (Glycine max [L.] Merr.), is elevated, whereas that of glycinin, a sulfur-rich storage protein, is reduced. Using transgenic Arabidopsis thaliana [L.] Heynh., it was found that the promoter from the gene encoding the β-subunit of β-conglycinin up-regulates gene expression under sulfur deficiency and down-regulates gene expression under nitrogen deficiency. To obtain an insight into the metabolic control of this regulation, the concentrations of metabolites related to the sulfur assimilation pathway were determined. Among the metabolites, O-acetyl-l-serine (OAS), one of the precursors of cysteine biosynthesis, accumulated to higher levels under low-sulfur and high-nitrogen conditions in siliques of transgenic A. thaliana. The pattern of OAS accumulation in response to various levels of sulfur and nitrogen was similar to that of gene expression driven by the β-subunit promoter. Elevated levels of OAS accumulation were also observed in soybean cotyledons cultured under sulfur deficiency. Moreover, OAS applied to in-vitro cultures of immature soybean cotyledons under normal sulfate conditions resulted in a high accumulation of the β-subunit mRNA and protein, whereas the accumulation of glycinin was reduced. These changes were very similar to the responses observed under conditions of sulfur deficiency. Our results suggest that the level of free OAS mediates sulfur- and nitrogen-regulation of soybean seed storage-protein composition. Received: 6 February 1999 / Accepted: 16 March 1999  相似文献   

6.
Wang G  Sun X  Wang G  Wang F  Gao Q  Sun X  Tang Y  Chang C  Lai J  Zhu L  Xu Z  Song R 《Genetics》2011,189(4):1281-1295
In maize, a series of seed mutants with starchy endosperm could increase the lysine content by decreased amount of zeins, the main storage proteins in endosperm. Cloning and characterization of these mutants could reveal regulatory mechanisms for zeins accumulation in maize endosperm. Opaque7 (o7) is a classic maize starchy endosperm mutant with large effects on zeins accumulation and high lysine content. In this study, the O7 gene was cloned by map-based cloning and confirmed by transgenic functional complementation and RNAi. The o7-ref allele has a 12-bp in-frame deletion. The four-amino-acid deletion caused low accumulation of o7 protein in vivo. The O7 gene encodes an acyl-activating enzyme with high similarity to AAE3. The opaque phenotype of the o7 mutant was produced by the reduction of protein body size and number caused by a decrease in the α-zeins concentrations. Analysis of amino acids and metabolites suggested that the O7 gene might affect amino acid biosynthesis by affecting α-ketoglutaric acid and oxaloacetic acid. Transgenic rice seeds containing RNAi constructs targeting the rice ortholog of maize O7 also produced lower amounts of seed proteins and displayed an opaque endosperm phenotype, indicating a conserved biological function of O7 in cereal crops. The cloning of O7 revealed a novel regulatory mechanism for storage protein synthesis and highlighted an effective target for the genetic manipulation of storage protein contents in cereal seeds.  相似文献   

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Soybean ( Glycine max [L.] Merr.) seeds are rich in protein, most of which is contributed by the major storage proteins glycinin (11S globulin) and beta-conglycinin (7S globulin). Null mutations for each of the subunits of these storage proteins were integrated by crossbreeding to yield a soybean line that lacks both glycinin and beta-conglycinin components. In spite of the absence of these two major storage proteins, the mutant line grew and reproduced normally, and the nitrogen content of its dry seed was similar to that for wild-type cultivars. However, protein bodies appeared underdeveloped in the cotyledons of the integrated mutant line. Furthermore, whereas free amino acids contribute only 0.3-0.8% of the seed nitrogen content of wild-type varieties, they constituted 4.5-8.2% of the seed nitrogen content in the integrated mutant line, with arginine (Arg) being especially enriched in the mutant seeds. Seeds of the integrated mutant line thus appeared to compensate for the reduced nitrogen content in the form of glycinin and beta-conglycinin by accumulating free amino acids as well as by increasing the expression of certain other seed proteins. These results indicate that soybean seeds are able to store nitrogen mostly in the form of either proteins or free amino acids.  相似文献   

10.
Global analysis of gene expression profiles in most-glycinin-deficient cultivar Tousan205, was performed by DNA microarray analysis. It was confirmed that Tousan205 lacks mRNA expression of three glycinin subunit precursor genes, G1 (A1aB1x), G2 (A2B1a), and G5 (A3B4), and lacks G4 (A5A4B3) protein. Most glycinin subunits were deficient in mature seeds of Tousan205. We compared the gene expression of Tousan205 with those of parent cultivar, Tamahomare, which was used for crossbreeding of Tousan205. As a result, Tousan205 exhibited higher expression of some seed maturation proteins, and stress-related genes such as glutathione S-transferase and ascorbate peroxidase. This result indicates the possibility that the decrease of main storage protein, glycinin causes stress in soybean.  相似文献   

11.
Soybeans are an important legume crop that contain 2 major storage proteins, β-conglycinin and glycinin, which account about 70- 80% of total seed proteins. These abundant proteins hinder the isolation and characterization of several low abundant proteins in soybean seeds. Several protein extraction methodologies were developed in our laboratory to decrease these abundant storage proteins in seed extracts and to also decrease the amount of ribulose-1, 5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (RuBisCO), which is normally very abundant in leaf extracts. One of the extraction methodologies used 40% isopropanol and was more effective in depleting soybean storage proteins and enhancing low abundant seed proteins than similar methods using 10-80% isopropanol. Extractions performed with 40% isopropanol decreased the amount of storage proteins and revealed 107 low abundant proteins when using the combined approaches of two-dimensional polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (2D-PAGE) and Mass Spectrometry (MS). The separation of proteins was achieved by iso-electric focusing (IEF) and 2D-PAGE. The proteins were analyzed with MS techniques to provide amino acid sequence. The proteins were identified by comparing their amino acid sequences with those in different databases including NCBI-non redundant, UniprotKB and MSDB databases. In this investigation, previously published results on low abundant soybean seed proteins were used to create an online database (SoyProLow) to provide a data repository that can be used as a reference to identify and characterize low abundance proteins. This database is freely accessible to individuals using similar techniques and can be for the subsequent genetic manipulation to produce value added soybean traits. An intuitive user interface based on dynamic HTML enables users to browse the network and the profiles of the low abundant proteins.

Availability

http://bioinformatics.towson.edu/Soybean_low_abundance_proteins_2D_Gel_DB/Gel1.aspx  相似文献   

12.
Two Arabidopsis thaliana genes have been shown to function in vacuolar sorting of seed storage proteins: a vacuolar sorting receptor, VSR1/ATELP1, and a retromer component, MAIGO1 (MAG1)/VPS29. Here, we show an efficient and simple method for isolating vacuolar sorting mutants of Arabidopsis. The method was based on two findings in this study. First, VSR1 functioned as a sorting receptor for beta-conglycinin by recognizing the vacuolar targeting signal. Second, when green fluorescent protein (GFP) fusion with the signal (GFP-CT24) was expressed in vsr1, mag1/vps29, and wild-type seeds, both vsr1and mag1/vps29 gave strongly fluorescent seeds but the wild type did not, suggesting that a defect in vacuolar sorting provided fluorescent seeds by the secretion of GFP-CT24 out of the cells. We mutagenized transformant seeds expressing GFP-CT24. From approximately 3,000,000 lines of M2 seeds, we obtained >100 fluorescent seeds and designated them green fluorescent seed (gfs) mutants. We report 10 gfs mutants, all of which caused missorting of storage proteins. We mapped gfs1 to VSR1, gfs2 to KAM2/GRV2, gfs10 to the At4g35870 gene encoding a novel membrane protein, and the others to different loci. This method should provide valuable insights into the complex molecular mechanisms underlying vacuolar sorting of storage proteins.  相似文献   

13.
Expression of soybean glycinin subunit precursor cDNAs in Escherichia coli   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
As the cDNAs encoding A1aB1b and A2B1a subunit precursors of the glycinin A2 subfamily contain a unique NcoI site sequence, (A)CCATGG, occurring at their translation initiation sites, plasmids were constructed to direct the synthesis of those precursor proteins by inserting NcoI/PstI fragments derived from those cDNA clones into the NcoI/PstI-pKK233-2 expression vector in Escherichia coli MV1190, respectively. The resultant plasmids directed the expression of 57-kDa protein components that have molecular masses in agreement with those of the in vitro translation products directed by glycinin A2 subfamily mRNAs, by the addition of isopropyl beta-D-thiogalactoside. These proteins, which comprised as much as 1% of the total bacterial protein, are immunoprecipitable with rabbit antibodies specific for glycinin subunits. This procedure makes glycinin subunits available as a model for studying structure-function relationships in seed proteins using site-directed mutagenesis. This is the first expression of glycinin-like storage protein in E. coli.  相似文献   

14.
The initial biochemical characterization of the soybean sucrose-binding protein, GmSBP, within our lab and others produced several incongruous characteristics that required a re-characterization of GmSBP via sequence homology, cell biology, immunolocalization, and semi-quantitative analysis. The GmSBP proteins share amino acid sequence homology as well as putative structural homology with globulin-like seed storage proteins. A comparison to the major soybean seed storage proteins, glycinin and -conglycinin established several storage protein-like characteristics for GmSBP. All three proteins were present in a prevacuolar compartment and protein storage vacuole. All three proteins increased in expression during seed development and are remobilized during germination. Quantitatively, the relative concentrations of GmSBP, -conglycinin (/ subunits), and glycinin (acidic subunits) indicated that GmSBP contributes 19-fold less to the stored nitrogen. The quantitative differences between GmSBP and glycinin may be attributed to the unconserved order and spacing of cis-acting regulatory elements present within the promoter regions. Ultimately, GmSBP is transported to the mature protein storage vacuole. The biological function of GmSBP within the protein storage vacuole remains uncertain, but its localization is a remnant of its evolutionary link to a globulin-like or vicilin-like ancestor that gave rise to the 7S family of storage proteins.  相似文献   

15.
During germination and early growth of the seedling, storage proteins are degraded by proteases. Currently, limited information is available on the degradation of storage proteins in the soybean during germination. In this study, a combined two-dimensional gel electrophoresis and mass spectrometry approach was utilized to determine the proteome profile of soybean seeds (Glycine max L.; Eunhakong). Comparative analysis showed that the temporal profiles of protein expression are dramatically changed during the seed germination and seedling growth. More than 80% of the proteins identified were subunits of glycinin and β-conglycinin, two major storage proteins. Most subunits of these proteins were degraded almost completely at a different rate by 120h, and the degradation products were accumulated or degraded further. Interestingly, the acidic subunits of glycinin were rapidly degraded, but no obvious change in the basic chains. Of the five acidic subunits, the degradation of G2 subunit was not apparently affected by at least 96h but the levels decreased rapidly after that, while no newly appearing intermediate was detected upon the degradation of G4 subunit. On the other hand, the degradation of β-conglycinin during storage protein mobilization appeared to be similar to that of glycinin but at a faster rate. Both α and α' subunits of β-conglycinin largely disappeared by 96h, while the β subunits degraded at the slowest rate. These results suggest that mobilization of subunits of the storage proteins is differentially regulated for seed germination and seedling growth. The present proteomic analysis will facilitate future studies addressing the complex biochemical events taking place during soybean seed germination.  相似文献   

16.
In order to investigate the role of the plant hormones gibberellin (GA) and abscisic acid (ABA) in seed development and germination the GA biosynthetic inhibitor, Uniconazol, was used to isolate mutants with abnormal germination profiles. In one of these mutants, the ability to germinate on Uniconazol is due to a mutation in the ABI3 gene. However, unlike the previously reported abi3 mutant, this line displays an array of seed-specific developmental defects. The accumulation of seed reserve proteins is dramatically reduced due to reduced levels of the storage protein mRNA. The embryos remain green throughout development and are desiccation intolerant. However, immature seeds are completely non-dormant and grow normally. These results suggest the ABI3 gene is essential for the synthesis of seed storage proteins and for the protection of the embryo during desiccation.  相似文献   

17.
Large amounts of the major storage proteins, β-conglycinin and glycinin, in soybean (Glycine max) seeds hinder the isolation and characterization of less abundant seed proteins. We investigated whether isopropanol extraction could facilitate resolution of the low abundant proteins, different from the main storage protein fractions, in one-dimensional polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (1D-PAGE) and two-dimensional polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (2D-PAGE). 1D-PAGE of proteins extracted by different concentrations (10%, 20%, 30%, 40%, 50%, 60%, 70% and 80%) of isopropanol showed that greater than 30% isopropanol was suitable for preferential enrichment of low abundant proteins. Analysis of 2D-PAGE showed that proteins which were less abundant or absent by the conventional extraction procedure were clearly seen in the 40% isopropanol extracts. Increasing isopropanol concentration above 40% resulted in a decrease in the number of less abundant protein spots. We have identified a total of 107 protein spots using matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization time of flight mass spectrophotometry (MALDI-TOF-MS) and liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS). Our results suggest that extraction of soybean seed powder with 40% isopropanol enriches lower abundance proteins and is a suitable method for 2D-PAGE separation and identification. This methodology could potentially allow the extraction and characterization of low abundant proteins of other legume seeds containing highly abundant storage proteins.  相似文献   

18.
Role of posttranslational cleavage in glycinin assembly.   总被引:8,自引:1,他引:7       下载免费PDF全文
Glycinin, like other 11S seed storage proteins, undergoes a complex series of posttranslational events between the time proglycinin precursors are synthesized in endoplasmic reticulum and the mature glycinin subunits are deposited in vacuolar protein bodies. According to the current understanding of this process, proglycinin subunits aggregate into trimers in endoplasmic reticulum, and then the trimers move to the vacuolar protein bodies where a protease cleaves them into acidic and basic polypeptide chains. Stable glycinin hexamers, rather than trimers, are isolated from mature seeds. We used a re-assembly assay in this study to demonstrate that proteolytic cleavage of the proglycinin subunits is required for in vitro assembly of glycinin oligomers beyond the trimer stage. The possibility that the cleavage is a regulatory step and that it triggers the deposition of 11S seed storage proteins as insoluble aggregates in vivo is considered.  相似文献   

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Identification of anonymous proteins from two-dimensional (2-D) gels by peptide mass fingerprinting is one area of proteomics that can greatly benefit from a simple, automated workflow to minimize sample contamination and facilitate high-throughput sample processing. In this investigation we outline a workflow employing robotic automation at each step subsequent to 2-D gel electrophoresis. As proof-of-concept, 96 protein spots from a 2-D gel were analyzed using this approach. Whole protein (1 mg) from mature, dry soybean (Glycine max [L.] Merr.) cv. Jefferson seed was resolved by high resolution 2-D gel electrophoresis. Approximately 150 proteins were observed after staining with Coomassie Blue. The rather low number of detected proteins was due to the fact that the dynamic range of protein expression was greater than 100-fold. The most abundant proteins were seed storage proteins which in total represented over 60% of soybean seed protein. Using peptide mass fingerprinting 44 protein spots were identified. Identification of soybean proteins was greatly aided by the use of annotated, contiguous Expressed Sequence Tag (EST) databases which are available for public access (UniGene, ftp.ncbi.nih.gov/repository/UniGene/). Searches were orders of magnitude faster when compared to searches of unannotated EST databases and resulted in a higher frequency of valid, high-scoring matches. Some abundant, non seed storage proteins identified in this investigation include an isoelectric series of sucrose binding proteins, alcohol dehydrogenase and seed maturation proteins. This survey of anonymous seed proteins will serve as the basis for future comparative analysis of seed-filling in soybean as well as comparisons with other soybean varieties.  相似文献   

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