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1.
Complementary DNA clones encoding acidic and basic isoforms of the class III chitinase were isolated from Nicotiana tabacum. The clones share ca. 65% identity, are equally homologous to the class III chitinases from cucumber and Arabidopsis, and are members of small gene families in tobacco. An acidic class III chitinase was purified from the intercellular fluid of tobacco leaves infected with tobacco mosaic virus (TMV). Partial amino acid sequencing of the protein confirmed that it was encoded by one of the cDNA clones. The mRNAs of the class III chitinases are coordinately expressed in response to TMV infection, both in infected and uninfected tissue. The acidic and basic class III chitinases constitute previously undescribed pathogenesis-related proteins in tobacco.  相似文献   

2.
Homology between chitinases that are induced by TMV infection of tobacco   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Recently, four chitinases have been detected in tobacco mosaic virus (TMV) infected tobacco: two acidic chitinases that were identified as pathogenesis-related (PR) proteins P and Q and two basic chitinases (Legrand et al., Proc.Natl. Acad. Sci. USA, in press). Here, it was shown that P and Q are closely serologically related but not related to other known acidic tobacco PR proteins. Antisera to P and Q were used to characterize translation products of TMV-induced mRNAs that were hybrid-selected with cDNA clones described previously (Hooft van Huijsduijnen et al., EMBO J 5: 2057–2061, 1986). In this way cDNA clones corresponding to the acidic and basic chitinases were identified. The partial amino acid sequences of the acidic and basic tobacco chitinases that were represented in the clones, showed an approximately 70% homology to each other and to the sequence of a bean chitinase. Although the acidic and basic chitinases differ in apparent molecular weight, they were found to have homologous C-termini.Hybridization of cDNA probes to genomic blots indicated that the acidic and basic chitinases are each encoded by two to four genes in the amphidiploid genome of Samsun NN tobacco. A similar complexity was found for the genes encoding the tobacco PR protein that is homologous to the sweet-tasting protein thaumatin and to the bifunctional trypsin/-amylase inhibitor from maize.  相似文献   

3.
A novel chitinase gene of tobacco was isolated and characterized by DNA sequence analysis of a genomic clone and a cDNA clone. Comparative sequence analysis of both clones showed an identity of 94%. The proteins encoded by these sequences do not correspond to any of the previously characterized plant chitinases of classes I–IV and are designated as class V chitinases. Comparison of the chitinase class V peptide sequence with sequences in the Swiss Protein databank revealed significant sequence similarity with bacterial exo-chitinases from Bacillus circulans, Serratia marcescens and Streptomyces plicatus. It was demonstrated that class V chitinase gene expression is induced after treatment of tobacco with different forms of stress, like TMV-infection, ethylene treatment, wounding or ultraviolet irradiation. Two related chitinase class V proteins of 41 and 43 kDa were purified from Samsun NN tobacco leaves inoculated with tobacco mosaic virus. The proteins were purified by Chelating Superose chromatography and gel filtration. In vitro assays demonstrated that class V chitinases have endo-chitinase activity and exhibit antifungal activity toward Trichoderma viride and Alternaria radicina. In addition, it was shown that class V chitinase acts synergistically with tobacco class I β-1,3-glucanase against Fusarium solani germlings.  相似文献   

4.
Leaves and bulbs of garlic ( Allium sativum L.) contain a chitinase which can be separated into three different isoforms with similar molecular structure and N- terminal amino acid sequence. SDS-PAGE of the alkylated chitinase revealed two distinct polypeptides of 32 and 33 kDa. Induction studies of the chitinase in leaves of garlic plants indicated that not only treatment with ethephon or salicylate and wounding but also a temperature shock strongly increased the enzyme level.
cDNA libraries constructed from poly(A)-rich RNA isolated from young garlic shoots and bulbs were screened for chitinase clones using the cDNA clone CCH4 encoding a basic potato chitinase as a probe. Two different cDNA clones (designated CHITAS 1 and CHITAS 2)of ca 1 000 bp were isolated and their sequences analyzed. The amino acid sequences deduced from both cDNA clones were homologous though not identical to the N-terminal sequences of the mature chitinases. Although both clones encode highly homologous chitinases their sequences definitely differ in that they have different signal peptides and one of them contains a glycine-rich domain. The garlic chitinases are apparently translated from an mRNA of 1200 nucleotides which encodes a proprotein of approximately 32 or 33 kDa for CHITAS 1 and CHITAS 2, respectively. Co-translational removal of the signal peptide will result in a 30 (for CHITAS 1) or 31 kDa (for CHITAS 2) protein with an isoelectric point of 4. 94 (for CHITAS 1) or 6. 12 (for CHITAS 2). Garlic chitinases are encoded by a small gene family as shown by Southern blot analysis of genomic DNA isolated from garlic.
The garlic chitinases show a high degree of sequence homology to the previously isolated chitinases from dicotyledonous as well as monocotyledonous species, indicating that these proteins have been conserved from an evolutionary point of view.  相似文献   

5.
We studied the effect of constitutive expression of pathogenesis-related proteins (PRs) in tobacco plants on vesicular-arbuscular mycorrhiza. Tobacco lines genetically transformed to express various PRs constitutively under the control of the cauliflower mosaic virus 35S promoter of tobacco were examined. Immunoblot analysis and activity measurements demonstrated high levels of expression of the PRs in the root systems of the plants. Constitutive expression of the following acidic isoforms of tobacco PRs did not affect the time course or the final level of colonization by the vesicular-arbuscular mycorrhizal fungus Glomus mosseae: PR-1a, PR-3 (=PR-Q), PR-Q(prm1), PR-4, and PR-5. Similarly, constitutive expression of an acidic cucumber chitinase, of a basic tobacco chitinase with and without its vacuolar targeting peptide, of a basic (beta)-1,3-glucanase, and of combinations of PR-Q and PR-Q(prm1) or basic chitinase and basic (beta)-1,3-glucanase did not affect colonization by the mycorrhizal fungus. A delay of colonization by G. mosseae was observed in tobacco plants constitutively expressing the acidic isoform of tobacco PR-2, a protein with (beta)-1,3-glucanase activity.  相似文献   

6.
Various chitinases have been identified in plants and categorized into several groups based on the analysis of their sequences and domains. We have isolated a tobacco gene that encodes a predicted polypeptide consisting of a 20-amino acid N-terminal signal peptide, followed by a 245-amino acid chitinolytic domain. Although the predicted mature protein is basic and shows greater sequence identity to basic class I chitinases (75%) than to acidic class II chitinases (67%), it lacks the N-terminal cysteine-rich domain and the C-terminal vacuolar targeting signal that is diagnostic for class I chitinases. Therefore, this gene appears to encode a novel, basic, class II chitinase, which we have designated NtChia2;B1. Accumulation of Chia2;B1 mRNA was induced in leaves in association with the local-lesion response to tobacco mosaic virus (TMV) infection, and in response to treatment with salicylic acid, but was only slightly induced by treatment with ethephon. Little or no Chia2;B1 mRNA was detected in roots, flowers, and cell-suspension cultures, in which class I chitinase mRNAs accumulate to high concentrations. Sequence comparisons of Chia2;B1 with known tobacco class I and class II chitinase genes suggest that Chia2;B1 might encode an ancestral prototype of the present-day class I and class II isoforms. Possible mechanisms for chitinase gene evolution are discussed.  相似文献   

7.
Two chitinases were purified from Rhizopus oligosporus, a filamentous fungus belonging to the class Zygomycetes, and designated chitinase I and chitinase II. Their N-terminal amino acid sequences were determined, and two synthetic oligonucleotide probes corresponding to these amino acid sequences were synthesized. Southern blot analyses of the total genomic DNA from R. oligosporus with these oligonucleotides as probes indicated that one of the two genes encoding these two chitinases was contained in a 2.9-kb EcoRI fragment and in a 3.6-kb HindIII fragment and that the other one was contained in a 2.9-kb EcoRI fragment and in a 11.5-kb HindIII fragment. Two DNA fragments were isolated from the phage bank of R. oligosporus genomic DNA with the synthetic oligonucleotides as probes. The restriction enzyme analyses of these fragments coincided with the Southern blot analyses described above and the amino acid sequences deduced from their nucleotide sequences contained those identical to the determined N-terminal amino acid sequences of the purified chitinases, indicating that each of these fragments contained a gene encoding chitinase (designated chi 1 and chi 2, encoding chitinase I and II, respectively). The deduced amino acid sequences of these two genes had domain structures similar to that of the published sequence of chitinase of Saccharomyces cerevisiae, except that they had an additional C-terminal domain. Furthermore, there were significant differences between the molecular weights experimentally determined with the two purified enzymes and those deduced from the nucleotide sequences for both genes. Analysis of the N- and C-terminal amino acid sequences of both chitinases and comparison of them with the amino acid sequences deduced from the nucleotide sequences revealed posttranslational processing not only at the N-terminal signal sequences but also at the C-terminal domains. It is concluded that these chitinases are synthesized with pre- and prosequences in addition to the mature enzyme sequences and that the prosequences are located at the C terminal.  相似文献   

8.
Infection of Samsun NN tobacco with tobacco mosaic virus (TMV) was found to induce the synthesis of mRNA encoding a basic protein with a 67% amino acid sequence homology to the known acidic pathogenesis-related (PR) proteins 1a, 1b and 1c. By Southern blot hybridization it was shown that the tobacco genome contains at least eight genes for acidic PR-1 proteins and a similar number of genes encoding the basic homologues. Clones corresponding to three of the genes for acidic PR-1 proteins were isolated from a genomic library of Samsun NN tobacco. The nucleotide sequence of these genes and their flanking sequences were determined. One clone was found to correspond to the PR-1a gene; the two other clones do not correspond to known TMV-induced PR-1 mRNA's and may represent silent genes. Compared to the PR-1a gene, these genes contain an insertion or deletion in the putative promoter region and mutations affecting the PR-1 reading frame.  相似文献   

9.
10.
Various chitinases have been identified in plants and categorized into several groups based on the analysis of their sequences and domains. We have isolated a tobacco gene that encodes a predicted polypeptide consisting of a 20-amino acid N-terminal signal peptide, followed by a 245-amino acid chitinolytic domain. Although the predicted mature protein is basic and shows greater sequence identity to basic class I chitinases (75%) than to acidic class II chitinases (67%), it lacks the N-terminal cysteine-rich domain and the C-terminal vacuolar targeting signal that is diagnostic for class I chitinases. Therefore, this gene appears to encode a novel, basic, class II chitinase, which we have designated NtChia2;B1. Accumulation of Chia2;B1 mRNA was induced in leaves in association with the local-lesion response to tobacco mosaic virus (TMV) infection, and in response to treatment with salicylic acid, but was only slightly induced by treatment with ethephon. Little or no Chia2;B1 mRNA was detected in roots, flowers, and cell-suspension cultures, in which class I chitinase mRNAs accumulate to high concentrations. Sequence comparisons of Chia2;B1 with known tobacco class I and class II chitinase genes suggest that Chia2;B1 might encode an ancestral prototype of the present-day class I and class II isoforms. Possible mechanisms for chitinase gene evolution are discussed. Received: 25 May 1998 / Accepted: 29 June 1998  相似文献   

11.
12.
Complementary DNA clones encoding acidic and basic isoforms of tomato chitinases were isolated fromCladosporium fulvum-infected leaves. The clones were sequenced and found to encode the 30 kDa basic intracellular and the 26 and 27 kDa acidic extracellular tomato chitinases previously purified (M.H.A.J. Joostenet al., in preparation). A fourth truncated cDNA which appears to encode an extracellular chitinase with 82% amino acid similarity to the 30 kDa intracellular chitinase was also isolated. Characterization of the clones revealed that the 30 kDa basic intracellular protein is a class I chitinase and that the 26 and 27 kDa acidic extracellular proteins which have 85% peptide sequence similarity are class II chitinases. The characterized cDNA clones represent four from a family of at least six tomato chitinases. Southern blot analysis indicated that, with the exception of the 30 kDa basic intracellular chitinase, the tomato chitinases are encoded by one or two genes. Northern blot analysis showed that the mRNA encoding the 26 kDa acidic extracellular chitinase is induced more rapidly during an incompatibleC. fulvum-tomato interaction than during a compatible interaction. This difference in timing of mRNA induction was not observed for the 30 kDa basic intracellular chitinase.  相似文献   

13.
The complete amino acid sequence of acidic chitinase from yam (Dioscorea japonica) aerial tubers was determined. The protein is composed of a single polypeptide chain of 250 amino acid residues and has a calculated molecular mass of 27,890 Da. There is an NH2-terminal domain, a hinge region, and a main structure, typical for class I chitinases (Shinshi, H., Neuhaus, J.-M., Ryals, J., and Meins, F., Jr. (1990) Plant Mol. Biol. 14, 357-368). We have obtained the first evidence for an acidic class I chitinase. Comparison with sequences of other class I chitinases revealed approximately 40% sequence similarity, a value lower than that for other class I chitinases (70-80%). We assume that there is a local conformational change in the molecule; cysteine residues that probably form disulfide bonds are completely conserved, with the exception of Cys-178. The difference in structure between this chitinase and other basic class I chitinases suggests that acidic and basic isoforms should be grouped into subclasses; this protein is an ethylene- or a pathogen-independent chitinase produced by a gene that is inherent in the tuber.  相似文献   

14.
To characterize the acidic endochitinase EP3, able to rescue somatic embryos of the carrot cell linets11, the enzyme was purified from the medium of wild-type suspension cultures. Peptide sequences, deduced amino acid sequences of corresponding PCR-generated cDNA clones, serological relation and biochemical properties showed that there were at least five closely related chitinases, four of which could be identified as class IV EP3 chitinases with an apparent size of 30 kDa. Two other proteins were identified as a serologically related class I acidic chitinase (DcChitI) of 34 kDa, and a serologically unrelated 29 kDa class II acidic chitinase (DcChitII), respectively. Additional cDNA sequences, Western and Southern analysis showed the presence of a least two, but possibly more, highly homologous class IV EP3 genes in the carrot genome. Two class IV EP3 chitinases were tested and found to be able to increase the number ofts11 globular embryos formed under non-permissive conditions. One of the class IV EP3 chitinases as well as the class I chitinase DcChitI promoted the transition from globular to heart-stagets11 embryos. The class II endochitinase and a heterologous class IV chitinase from sugar-beet were not active onts11. This suggests that there are differences in the specificity of chitinases in terms of their effect on plant somatic embryos.  相似文献   

15.
Characterization of two antifungal endochitinases from barley grain   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
A basic chitinase (chitinase T, EC 3.2.1.14, molecular mass 33 kDa, pI 9.8) was isolated and compared with a previously described chitinase (chitinase C, molecular mass 28 kDa, pI 9.7). The two chitinases were isolated in homogeneous form from barley ( Hordeum vulgare L.) Bomi mutant 1508 grains either by two cation exchange steps or by one affinity step followed by cation exchange. Both chitinases are endochitinases with specific activities of 168 and 54 nkat (mg protein)−1 for chitinase T and chitinase C, respectively. Both inhibit the growth of Trichoderma viride efficiently. The lysozyme activity of both chitinases is 104 times lower than that of hen egg-white lysozyme as measured by lysis of cell walls of Micrococcus lysodeikticus . The amino acid composition and two partial amino acid sequences of chitinase T were determined. A 23 residue sequence of the N-terminal domain of chitinase T, which was not present in chitinase C, showed 73% identity with domain B of wheat germ lectin and 65% identity with the N-terminal domain of an endochitinase from bean leaves (deduced from cDNA). A 9 amino acid sequence of a cyanogen bromide fragment of chitinase T was identical with a cDNA deduced sequence of a barley aleurone endochitinase but differed in one residue from chitinase C. Generally, the two grain chitinases have physico-chemical and enzymatic properties similar to the plant leaf chitinases characterized. Both chitinases are localized in the aleurone layer and starchy endosperm of developing and germinating grain, but not in the embryo. The appearance of chitinases T and C at a late state of grain development suggests a role for these enzymes as a defense against fungi in the quiescent and germinating grain.  相似文献   

16.
The amino acid sequences of peptides generated by trypsin and chymotrypsin digestions of the acidic PR4 chitinase from bean were determined. Oligonucleotide primers derived from this sequence were used to synthesize a PR4 chitinase-specific probe by PCR-amplification. This probe allowed the isolation of cDNA clones encoding PR4 chitinase that have been sequenced. This acidic and extracellular chitinase shows some homology to the basic isoform from the same plant, and differs from other known acidic chitinases by the presence of an amino-terminal cysteine-rich domain. Southern blot analysis of bean genomic DNA revealed that PR4 chitinase is encoded by a single gene.  相似文献   

17.
18.
Degenerate PCR primers corresponding to conserved domains of fungal chitinases were designed, and PCR was performed on genomic DNA of the entomogenous fungus Verticillium lecanii (Zimmermann) Viegas. Two distinct PCR fragments, chf1 and chf2, were isolated and used to identify two DNA contigs. Analyses of these two contigs revealed that we had obtained the full-length DNA sequence including the promoter, 5' untranslated region, open reading frame (ORF), and 3' untranslated regions for two distinct chitinase-like genes. These two genomic DNA sequences exhibited 51% identity at the amino acid (aa) level and were designed as acidic (chi1) and basic (chi2) chitinase-like genes. The isolated cDNA for chi1 gene is 1110 bp with a predicted protein of 370 aa and molecular mass of 40.93 kDa, and its ORF was uninterrupted in its corresponding genomic DNA sequence. The cDNA for the chi2 gene is 1269 bp, a predicted ORF of 423 aa and molecular mass of 45.95 kDa. In contrast, the ORF was interrupted by three introns in its corresponding genomic DNA. The basic chitinase gene (chi2) was successfully expressed in the Pichia pastoris system; optimum enzymatic activity was observed at 22 degrees C and at pH 7.5. CHI1 and CHI2 were clustered into two different phylogenetic groups according to their sequence alignments with 28 other fungal chitinases. A chitin-binding domain, comprising two sub-domains that exhibit similarities at the aa level to chitin binding domains in bacteria, was identified in 30 fungal chitinase sequences examined.  相似文献   

19.
Infection of the tobacco cultivar Samsun NN by tobacco mosaic virus (TMV) results in a hypersensitive response. During this defense reaction several host encoded proteins, known as pathogenesis-related proteins (PR-proteins), are induced. Poly(A)+ RNA from TMV infected tobacco plants was used to construct a cDNA library. Thirty two cDNA clones were isolated and after digestion with different restriction endonucleases, twenty clones were found to code for PR-1a, six clones for PR-1b, and four clones for PR-1c. Two independent cDNA clones of each class were further characterized by DNA sequence analysis. All clones analyzed contained the 138 amino acid coding regions of their respective mature proteins, but only partial sequences of the signal peptides. Minor differences between the nucleotide sequences for clones belonging to the same class were detected. Comparison of the amino acid sequence for PR-1a deduced from its nucleotide sequence with published data obtained by Edman degradation of the protein showed four differences. Analysis of the 3' ends of the cDNA clones indicates that various alternate poly(dA) addition sites are used. Southern blot analysis using these cDNAs as probes suggests the presence of multiple PR-protein genes in the genomes of tobacco and tomato plants.  相似文献   

20.
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