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1.
Summary After the functional transition of glyoxysomes to leaf peroxisomes during the greening of pumpkin cotyledons, the reverse microbody transition of leaf peroxisomes to glyoxysomes occurs during senescence. Immunocytochemical labeling with protein A-gold was performed to analyze the reverse microbody transition using antibodies against a leaf-peroxisomal enzyme, glycolate oxidase, and against two glyoxysomal enzymes, namely, malate synthase and isocitrate lyase. The intensity of labeling for glycolate oxidase decreased in the microbodies during senescence whereas in the case of malate synthase and isocitrate lyase intensities increased strikingly. Double labeling experiments with protein A-gold particles of different sizes showed that the leaf-peroxisomal enzymes and the glyoxysomal enzymes coexist in the microbodies of senescing pumpkin cotyledons, indicating that leaf peroxisomes are directly transformed to glyoxysomes during senescence.  相似文献   

2.
A Kato  M Hayashi  M Kondo    M Nishimura 《The Plant cell》1996,8(9):1601-1611
Glyoxysomal citrate synthase in pumpkin is synthesized as a precursor that has a cleavable presequence at its N-terminal end. To investigate the role of the presequence in the transport of the protein to the microbodies, we generated transgenic Arabidopsis plants that expressed beta-glucuronidase with the N-terminal presequence of the precursor to the glyoxysomal citrate synthase of pumpkin. Immunogold labeling and cell fractionation studies showed that the chimeric protein was transported into microbodies and subsequently was processed. The chimeric protein was transported to functionally different microbodies, such as glyoxysomes, leaf peroxisomes, and unspecialized microbodies. These observations indicated that the transport of glyoxysomal citrate synthase is mediated by its N-terminal presequence and that the transport system is functional in all plant microbodies. Site-directed mutagenesis of the conserved amino acids in the presequence caused abnormal targeting and inhibition of processing of the chimeric protein, suggesting that the conserved amino acids in the presequence are required for recognition of the target or processing.  相似文献   

3.
A cDNA clone for 3-ketoacyl-CoA thiolase (EC 2.3.1.16) was isolated from a gt11 cDNA library constructed from the poly(A)+ RNA of etiolated pumpkin cotyledons. The cDNA insert contained 1682 nucleotides and encoded 461 amino acid residues. A study of the expression in vitro of the cDNA and analysis of the amino-terminal sequence of the protein indicated that pumpkin thiolase is synthesized as a precursor which has a cleavable amino-terminal presequence of 33 amino acids. The amino-terminal presequence was highly homologous to typical amino-terminal signals that target proteins to microbodies. Immunoblot analysis showed that the amount of thiolase increased markedly during germination but decreased dramatically during the light-inducible transition of microbodies from glyoxysomes to leaf peroxisomes. By contrast, the amount of mRNA increased temporarily during the early stage of germination. In senescing cotyledons, the levels of the thiolase mRNA and protein increased again with the reverse transition of microbodies from leaf peroxisomes to glyoxysomes, but the pattern of accumulation of the protein was slightly different from that of malate synthase. These results indicate that expression of the thiolase is regulated in a similar manner to that of other glyoxysomal enzymes, such as malate synthase and citrate synthase, during seed germination and post-germination growth. By contrast, during senescence, expression of the thiolase is regulated in a different manner from that of other glyoxysomal enzymes.  相似文献   

4.
5.
6.
The functional transition of glyoxysomes to leaf peroxisomes occurs during greening of germinating pumpkin cotyledons (Cucurbita sp. Amakuri Nankin). The immunocytochemical protein A-gold method was employed in the analysis of the transition using glyoxysomal specific citrate synthase immunoglobulin G and leaf peroxisomal specific glycolate oxidase immunoglobulin G. The labeling density of citrate synthase was decreased in the microbodies during the greening, whereas that of glycolate oxidase was dramatically increased. Double labeling experiments using different sizes of protein A-gold particles show that both the glyoxysomal and the leaf peroxisomal enzymes coexist in the microbody of the transitional stage indicating that glyoxysomes are directly transformed to leaf peroxisomes during greening.  相似文献   

7.
A cDNA clone encoding the glyoxysomal malate synthase (EC 4.1.3.2) was identified by immunoscreening of a cDNA expression library constructed from poly(A)-rich RNA of etiolated pumpkin cotyledons. Determination of the DNA sequence of the 1979-nucleotide cDNA revealed a 1698-nucleotide open reading frame that encodes a polypeptide of 64632 Da. The identification of the cDNA for malate synthase was confirmed by matching three sequences obtained by peptide-sequence analyses of fragments generated by acid treatment of the purified enzyme. Northern blot analysis revealed that the probe hybridized to a single 2.3-kb species of mRNA species from etiolated pumpkin cotyledons which was not present in green pumpkin cotyledons. In a comparison of deduced amino acid sequences, pumpkin malate synthase was found to exhibit 83% and 48% similarity to the malate synthases from rape and Escherichia coli, respectively. Based on the amino acid sequence similarity and the hydropathy profiles of these three malate synthases, the signal for targeting the enzyme to microbodies is discussed.  相似文献   

8.
Glyoxysomal malate dehydrogenase (gMDH) is an enzyme of theglyoxylate cycle that participates in degradation of storageoil. We have cloned a cDNA for gMDH from etiolated pumpkin cotyledonsthat encodes a polypep-tide consisting of 356 amino acid residues.The nucleotide and N-terminal amino acid sequences revealedthat gMDH is synthesized as a precursor with an N-terminal extrapeptide.The N-terminal presequence of 36 amino acid residues containstwo regions homologous to those of other micro-body proteins,which are also synthesized as large precursors. To investigatethe functions of the N-terminal presequence of gMDH, we generatedtransgenic Arabidopsis that expressed a chimeric protein consistingof rß-glucuroni-dase and the N-terminal region ofgMDH. Immunologi-cal and immunocytochemical studies revealedthat the chimeric protein was imported into microbodies suchas gly-oxysomes and leaf peroxisomes and was then subsequentlyprocessed. Site-directed mutagenesis studies showed that theconserved amino acids in the N-terminal presequence, Arg-10and His-17, function as recognition sites for the targetingto plant microbodies, and Cys-36 in the presequence is responsiblefor its processing. These results correspond to those from theanalyses of glyoxysomal citrate synthase (gCS), which was alsosynthesized as a large precursor, suggesting that common mechanismsthat can recognize the targeting or the processing of gMDH andgCS function in higher plant cells. (Received July 10, 1997; Accepted November 22, 1997)  相似文献   

9.
CYTOCHEMICAL LOCALIZATION OF MALATE SYNTHASE IN GLYOXYSOMES   总被引:6,自引:1,他引:5       下载免费PDF全文
Cytochemical staining techniques for microbodies (peroxisomes) are limited at present to the enzymes catalase and α-hydroxy acid oxidase, and neither technique can distinguish glyoxysomes from other microbodies. Described here is a procedure using ferricyanide for the cytochemical demonstration by light and electron microscopy of malate synthase activity in glyoxysomes of cotyledons from fat-storing cucumber and sunflower seedlings. Malate synthase, a key enzyme of the glyoxylate cycle, catalyzes the condensation of acetyl CoA with glyoxylate to form malate and release free coenzyme A. Localization of the enzyme activity is based on the reduction by free CoA of ferricyanide to ferrocyanide, and the visualization of the latter as an insoluble, electron-opaque deposit of copper ferrocyanide (Hatchett's brown). The conditions and optimal concentrations for the cytochemical reaction mixture were determined in preliminary studies using a colorimetric assay developed to measure disappearance of ferricyanide at 420 nm. Ultrastructural observation of treated tissue reveals electron-opaque material deposited uniformly throughout the matrix portion of the glyoxysomes, with little background deposition elsewhere in the cell. The reaction product is easily visualized in plastic sections by phase microscopy without poststaining. Although the method has been applied thus far only to cotyledons of fat-storing seedlings, it is anticipated that the technique will be useful in localizing and studying glyoxylate cycle activity in a variety of tissues from both plants and animals.  相似文献   

10.
The carboxy-terminal residues of several peroxisomal proteins were shown to act as a peroxisomal targetting signal. This study was conducted to test whether the C-terminus of glycolate oxidase, a key enzyme in the glycolate metabolism pathway, is functioning as a targetting signal that directs proteins into plant leaf peroxisomes. A chimeric gene coding for a fusion protein composed of the C-terminal-truncated beta-glucuronidase, a synthetic linker of four amino acids and the last six C-terminal amino acids of glycolate oxidase, was constructed. Transformation of tobacco plants with the chimeric gene resulted in expression of beta-glucuronidase enzymic activity. About 50% of the transgenic beta-glucuronidase activity was localized to the peroxisomes. The results indicate that the six C-terminal amino acid residues of glycolate oxidase act as a targetting signal that is recognized by leaf peroxisomes.  相似文献   

11.
cDNA cloning and differential gene expression of three catalases in pumpkin   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
Three cDNA clones (cat1, cat2, cat3) for catalase (EC 1.11.1.6) were isolated from a cDNA library of pumpkin (Cucurbita sp.) cotyledons. In northern blotting using the cDNA-specific probe, the cat1 mRNA levels were high in seeds and early seedlings of pumpkin. The expression pattern of cat1 was similar to that of malate synthase, a characteristic enzyme of glyoxysomes. These data suggest that cat1 might encode a catalase associated with glyoxysomal functions. Furthermore, immunocytochemical analysis using cat1-specific anti-peptide antibody directly showed that cat1 encoding catalase is located in glyoxysomes. The cat2 mRNA was present at high levels in green cotyledons, mature leaf, stem and green hypocotyl of light-grown pumpkin plant, and correlated with chlorophyll content in the tissues. The tissue-specific expression of cat2 had a strong resemblance to that of glycolate oxidase, a characteristic enzyme of leaf peroxisomes. During germination of pumpkin seeds, cat2 mRNA levels increased in response to light, although the increase in cat2 mRNA by light was less than that of glycolate oxidase. cat3 mRNA was abundant in green cotyledons, etiolated cotyledons, green hypocotyl and root, but not in young leaf. cat3 mRNA expression was not dependent on light, but was constitutive in mature tissues. Interestingly, cat1 mRNA levels increased during senescence of pumpkin cotyledons, whereas cat2 and cat3 mRNAs disappeared during senescence, suggesting that cat1 encoding catalase may be involved in the senescence process. Thus, in pumpkin, three catalase genes are differentially regulated and may exhibit different functions.  相似文献   

12.
As a step to study the mechanism of the microbody transition (glyoxysomes to leaf peroxisomes) in pumpkin (Cucurbita sp. Amakuri Nankin) cotyledons, catalase was purified from glyoxysomes. The molecular weight of the purified catalase was determined to be 230,000 to 250,000 daltons. The enzyme was judged to consist of four identical pieces of the monomeric subunit with molecular weight of 55,000 daltons. Absorption spectrum of the catalase molecule gave two major peaks at 280 and 405 nanometers, showing that the pumpkin enzyme contains heme. The ratio of absorption at 405 and 280 nanometers was 1.0, the value being lower than that obtained for catalase from other plant sources. These results indicate that the pumpkin glyoxysomal catalase contains the higher content of heme in comparison with other plant catalase.

The immunochemical resemblance between glyoxysomal and leaf peroxisomal catalase was examined by using the antiserum specific against the purified enzyme preparation from pumpkin glyoxysomes. Ouchterlony double diffusion and immunoelectrophoretic analysis demonstrated that catalase from both types of microbodies cross-reacted completely whereas the immunotitration analysis showed that the specific activity of the glyoxysomal catalase was 2.5-fold higher than that of leaf peroxisomal catalase. Single radial immunodiffusion analysis showed that the specific activity of catalase decreased during the greening of pumpkin cotyledons.

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13.
In order to clarify the peroxisomal membrane proteins (PMPs), we characterized one of the major PMPs, PMP38. The deduced amino acid sequence for its cDNA in Arabidopsis thaliana contained polypeptides with 331 amino acids and had high similarity with those of Homo sapiens PMP34 and Candida boidinii PMP47 known as homologues of mitochondrial ATP/ADP carrier protein. We expected PMP38 to be localized on peroxisomal membranes, because it had the membrane peroxisomal targeting signal. Cell fractionation and immunocytochemical analysis using pumpkin cotyledons revealed that PMP38 is localized on peroxisomal membranes as an integral membrane protein. The amount of PMP38 in pumpkin cotyledons increased and reached the maximum protein level after 6 d in the dark but decreased thereafter. Illumination of the seedlings caused a significant decrease in the amount of the protein. These results clearly showed that the membrane protein PMP38 in glyoxysomes changes dramatically during the transformation of glyoxysomes to leaf peroxisomes, as do the other glyoxysomal enzymes, especially enzymes of the fatty acid beta-oxidation cycle, that are localized in the matrix of glyoxysomes.  相似文献   

14.
The microbody transition observed in the cotyledons of somefatty seedlings involves the conversion of glyoxysomes to leafperoxisomes. To clarify the molecular mechanisms underlyingthe microbody transition, we established a method for the preparationof highly purified microbodies. SDS-PAGE and immunoblot analysisof isolated microbodies from pumpkin cotyledons at various stagesshowed that glyoxysomal enzymes are replaced by leaf-peroxisomalenzymes during the microbody transition. Two proteins in glyoxysomalmembranes, with molecular masses of 31 kDa and 28 kDa, werenot solubilized from the membranes with 0.2 M KCl, an indicationthat these proteins are bound tightly with glyoxysomal membranes.Their polyclonal antibodies were raised against the respectivepurified protein. Immunoblot analysis of subcellular fractionsand immunogold analysis confirmed that these proteins were specificallylocalized on glyoxysomal membranes. Analysis of these membraneproteins during development revealed that the amounts of thesemembrane proteins decreased during the microbody transitionand that the large one was retained in leaf peroxisomes, whereasthe small one could not be found in leaf peroxisomes after completionof the microbody transition. The results clearly showed thatmembrane proteins in glyoxysomes change dramatically duringthe microbody transition, as do the enzymes in the matrix. 1Present address: School of Agriculture, Nagoya University Chikusa,Nagoya, 464-01 Japan.  相似文献   

15.
C Gietl  B Wimmer  J Adamec    F Kalousek 《Plant physiology》1997,113(3):863-871
A plant cysteine endopeptidase with a molecular mass of 35 kD was purified from microbodies of germinating castor bean (Ricinus communis) endosperm by virtue of its capacity to specifically process the glyoxysomal malate dehydrogenase precursor protein to the mature subunit in vitro. Processing of the glyoxysomal malate dehydrogenase precursor occurs sequentially in three steps, the first intermediate resulting from cleavage after arginine-13 within the presequence and the second from cleavage after arginine-33. The endopeptidase is unable to remove the presequences of prethiolases from rape (Brassica napus) glyoxysomes and rat peroxisomes at the expected cleavage site. Protein sequence analysis of N-terminal and internal peptides revealed high identity to the mature papain-type cysteine endopeptidases from cotyledons of germinating mung bean (Vigna mungo) and French bean (Phaseolus vulgaris) seeds. These endopeptidases are synthesized with an extended pre-/prosequence at the N terminus and have been considered to be processed in the endoplasmic reticulum and targeted to protein-storing vacuoles.  相似文献   

16.
Four glyoxysomal enzymes, malate synthase, malate dehydrogenase,3-hydroxyacyl-CoA dehydrogenase and citrate synthase, were purifiedfrom glyoxysomes of germinating pumpkin cotyledons. Molecularweights of their subunits were as follows: malate synthase,60,000; malate dehydrogenase, 33,000; 3-hydroxyacyl-CoA dehydrogenase,72,000 and citrate synthase, 45,000. Malate synthase and 3-hydroxyacyl-CoAdehydrogenase activities were exclusively localized in glyoxysomes,whereas malate dehydrogenase and citrate synthase activitieswere found in both glyoxysomes and mitochondria. Monospecificantibodies against malate dehydrogenase and citrate synthaseinhibited their activities present in glyoxysomes but in mitochondria.Immunocytochemical analysis using the protein A-gold techniquecombined with Lowicryl K4M embedding showed that the antigenicsites for these enzymes were found exclusively in glyoxysomes.These data indicates that malate dehydrogenase and citrate synthasepresent in glyoxysomes are immunologically different from thosein mitochondria, respectively. 1 This is paper No. 9 in the series "Analytical Studies on MicrobodyTransition". 3 Present address: Meiji Institute of Health Science, Naruta,Odawara, Kanagawa 250, Japan. 5 Present address: Department of Biology, Faculty of Science,Kobe University, Rokkoudai, Nada, Kobe 657, Japan. (Received December 23, 1987; Accepted January 27, 1988)  相似文献   

17.
X Gao  J L Marrison  M R Pool  R M Leech    A Baker 《Plant physiology》1996,112(4):1457-1464
To understand and manipulate plant peroxisomal protein targeting, it is important to establish the universality or otherwise of targeting signals. Contradictory results have been published concerning the nature and location of the glyoxysomal/peroxisomal targeting signal of isocitrate lyase (ICL). L.J. Olsen, W.F. Ettinger, B. Damsz, K. Matsudaira, A. Webb, and J.J. Harada ([1993] Plant Cell 5: 941-952) concluded that the last 5 amino acids (AKSRM) of Brassica napus ICL were sufficient and the last 37 amino acids were necessary for targeting to Arabidopsis leaf peroxisomes. In contrast, R. Behari and A. Baker ([1993]) J Biol Chem 268: 7315-7322) could find no requirement for the almost identical carboxy-terminal sequence AKARM for import of Ricinus communis ICL into isolated sunflower cotyledon glyoxysomes. To resolve this discrepancy, the import characteristics of a mutant R. communis ICL lacking the last 19 amino acids of the carboxy terminus was studied. ICL delta 19 was able to be imported by isolated sunflower glyoxysomes and by tobacco leaf peroxisomes when expressed transgenically. These results demonstrate that the in vitro import system faithfully reflects targeting in vivo, and that the source of the organelles (Arabidopsis versus sunflower, leaf peroxisomes versus seed glyoxysomes) is not responsible for observed differences between B. napus and R. communis ICL. The R. communis enzyme would therefore appear to possess an additional glyoxysome/peroxisome targeting signal that is lacking in the B. napus protein.  相似文献   

18.
Summary Sunflower, cucumber, and tomato cotyledons, which contain microbodies in both the early lipid-degrading and the later photosynthetic stages of post-germinative growth, were processed for electron microscopy according to conventional procedures and examined 1, 4 and 7 days after germination. Homogenates of sunflower cotyledons were assayed for enzymes characteristic of glyoxysomes and leaf peroxisomes (both of which are defined morphologically as microbodies) at stages corresponding to the fixations for electron microscopy. The particulate nature of these enzymes was demonstrated by differential and equilibrium density centrifugation, making it possible to relate them to the microbodies seen in situ.One day after germination, the microbodies are present as small organelles among large numbers of protein and lipid storage bodies; the cell homogenate contains catalase but no detectable isocitrate lyase (characteristic of glyoxysomes) or glycolic acid oxidase (characteristic of leaf peroxisomes). 4 days after germination, numerous microbodies (glyoxysomes) are in extensive and frequent contact with lipid bodies. The microbodies often have cytoplasmic invaginations. At this stage the cells are rapidly converting lipids to carbohydrates, and the homogenate has high isocitrate lyase activity. 7 days after germination, microbodies (peroxisomes) are appressed to chloroplasts and frequently squeezed between them in the green photosynthetic cells. The homogenate at this stage has substantial glycolic acid oxidase activity but a reduced level of isocitrate lyase. It is yet to be determined whether the peroxisomes present at day 7 are derived from preexisting glyoxysomes or arise as a separate population of organelles.  相似文献   

19.
Thiolase is part of the fatty acid oxidation machinery which in plants is located within glyoxysomes or peroxisomes. In cucumber cotyledons, proteolytic modification of thiolase takes place during the transfer of the cytosolic precursor into glyoxysomes prior to the intraorganellar assembly of the mature enzyme. This was shown by size comparison of the in vitro synthesized precursor and the 45 kDa subunit of the homodimeric glyoxysomal form. We isolated a full-length cDNA clone encoding the 48 539 Da precursor of thiolase. This plant protein displayed 40% and 47% identity with the precursor of fungal peroxisomal thiolase and human peroxisomal thiolase, respectively. Compared to bacterial thiolases, the precursor of the plant enzyme was distinguished by an N-terminal extension of 34 amino acid residues. This putative targeting sequence of cucumber thiolase shows similarities with the cleavable presequences of rat peroxisomal thiolase and plant peroxisomal malate dehydrogenase.  相似文献   

20.
To investigate the roles of peroxisomal membrane proteins in the reversible conversion of glyoxysomes to leaf peroxisomes, we characterized several membrane proteins of glyoxysomes. One of them was identified as an ascorbate peroxidase (pAPX) that is localized on glyoxysomal membranes. Its cDNA was isolated by immunoscreening. The deduced amino acid sequence encoded by the cDNA insert does not have a peroxisomal targeting signal (PTS), suggesting that pAPX is imported by one or more PTS-independent pathways. Subcellular fractionation of 3- and 5-d-old cotyledons of pumpkin revealed that pAPX was localized not only in the glyoxysomal fraction, but also in the ER fraction. A magnesium shift experiment showed that the density of pAPX in the ER fraction did not increase in the presence of Mg(2+), indicating that pAPX is not localized in the rough ER. Immunocytochemical analysis using a transgenic Arabidopsis which expressed pumpkin pAPX showed that pAPX was localized on peroxisomal membranes, and also on a unknown membranous structure in green cotyledons. The overall results suggested that pAPX is transported to glyoxysomal membranes via this unknown membranous structure.  相似文献   

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