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1.
Silkworm moth (bombyx) egg cysteine proteinase with maximal activity at pH 3.0 was purified by chromatography and isoelectrofocusing. On SDS-electrophoresis in polyacrylamide gel the purified enzyme showed a single band of molecular mass 50 kD. Isoelectrofocusing revealed that the bombyx egg cysteine proteinase exists in two forms with pI values of 5.95 and 6.43, respectively. The enzyme activity was sensitive to inhibition by iodoacetamide and p-chloromercuribenzoate but resistant to EDTA, pepstatin, and phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride. The cysteine proteinase hydrolyzes storage proteins of bombyx eggs but it was inactive with respect to N-benzoyl-D,L-arginine-p-nitroanilide (BAPNA). It is a cathepsin L-like enzyme.  相似文献   

2.
Altered lysosomal function in the visceral yolk sac can result in abnormal development. As proteolysis is an important function of the rodent visceral yolk sac during early and mid-gestation, we characterized the lysosomal proteolytic enzyme activity of this extraembryonic membrane and determined the effects of inhibitors of protein degradation on embryonic development. Constituent activities of cysteine and aspartic acid proteinases were measured in rat visceral yolk sac on gestation day 12, and the effects of the cysteine proteinase inhibitors leupeptin, E-64 [trans-epoxysuccinyl-l-leucylamido(4-guanido)butane] and N-ethylmaleimide and the aspartic acid proteinase inhibitor pepstatin were determined in Sprague-Dawley rat embryos cultured in vitro from gestation days 10-12. It was determined that only cysteine proteinases, primarily cathepsins B and L, are active in the mid-gestation visceral yolk sac. The cysteine proteinase inhibitors leupeptin and E-64 both produced a concentration-related decrease in embryonic growth, as measured by crown-rump length, somite number, and embryonic protein content, and a concentration-related increase in incidence of abnormalities. A characteristic pattern of abnormalities was produced which involved a decrease in neural tube volume and the formation of a subectodermal blister opposite the point of attachment of the vitelline vessels. At high concentrations, anophthalmia was also observed. The decreased neural tube volume was associated with increased osmolality of the exocoelomic fluid, the major extraembryonic fluid compartment. It is possible that the osmotic change decreased neural tube volume by causing water to move to the compartment with a higher solute concentration, out of the embryo.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

3.
The cathepsin B-like proteinase from Helicoverpa armigera (HCB) is involved in the degradation of yolk proteins during embryonic development. In order to gain insight into the substrate specificity of this proteinase, various proteins from animals and plants were tested as substrates. The specific cleavage sites of this enzyme on endopeptide bonds were assayed using bovine serum albumin (BSA) as a substrate. Results showed that BSA was degraded into several fragments, which suggests that HCB cleaves BSA at specific endopeptidyl sites. The amino acid sequences of the BSA derived peptides were determined, revealing cleavage of the bonds between residues Arg81–Glu82, Val423–Glu424 and Gly430–Lys431. This suggests that the minimum requirement for a scissile bond to be recognized by HCB is the presence of an ionic amino acid at the P1 position and the P1 position can vary. These observations suggest that HCB cleaves bonds at the N-terminal side of ionic amino acid residues giving HCB a wide range of substrates, though other factors dictating the substrate specificity of this enzyme remains to be clarified. Our results provide new evidence that HCB functions as an endopeptidase on some proteins.  相似文献   

4.
Summary Vitellin was purified from eggs of the silkworm,Bombyx mori, by a new method in which vitellin was extracted from isolated yolk granules. The purified vitellin had a molecular weight of 540,000. An antibody against purified vitellin was prepared in rabbits. It reacted with the hemolymph vitellogenin as well as with purified vitellin, but not with other proteins in the hemolymph or in the extract from yolk granules. The anti-vitellin IgG was used to immunocytochemically locate vitellin in theBombyx non-diapause egg during early developmental stages. In the egg, just after oviposition, vitellin was located in internal yolk granules and in small yolk granules of the periplasm. During the early developmental stages studied, vitellin was not metabolized uniformly throughout the egg. The vitellin of the internal yolk granules located at the posterior-dorsal part and of the small peripheral yolk granules was utilized in 16 h and 2 days, respectively, after oviposition. A thin, very vitellin-poor layer was located between the periplasm and the vitellin-rich interior in the newly laid egg. it was always in close contact with the periphery where blastoderm and germ-band cells developed.  相似文献   

5.
In crude extracts of eggs of the soft tick Ornithodoros moubata, maximum degradation of vitellin is at pH 3-3.5, whereas no proteolysis is detected at neutral or weakly acidic pHs. Acidic proteolysis is maintained at high level throughout embryonic development, and rapidly decreases in the larva, during the high phase of yolk degradation. Proteinase, acid phosphatase, and N-acetylglucosaminidase are localized within the yolk spheres; these can be considered as lysosomal-like organelles containing both substrate (vitellin) and the degradative machinery. Proteolytic activity has been essentially attributed to a cathepsin L-like enzyme through substrate specificity and inhibitors. The molecular weight is 37,000 to 39,000 as shown using gelatin-containing SDS-PAGE activity gels. At neutral pH the enzyme binds to vitellin, as demonstrated by gel filtration and PAGE under nondenaturing conditions. Acid proteinase activity at pH 5-6 is undetectable both with proteins and synthetic substrates, but is strongly increased after preincubation at pH 3-4. Activation at low pH could be important in the regulation of yolk degradation.  相似文献   

6.
A cysteine, cathepsin B-like proteinase activity has been found in Drosophila embryos. It appears associated with yolk granules and its activity during embryogenesis correlates well with the degradation of these organelles. In mature oocytes, the enzyme is found in an inactive form which may be activated by limited proteolysis by a serine proteinase also present in oocytes. In early embryos, when solubilized in vitro, the cathepsin B-like proteinase is found in a form of high molecular mass (approx 1000 kDa). This decreases with development down to about 39 kDa, likely the mass of the free proteinase. The heavy form apparently results from the tight association with a yolk protein complex. The proteinase has been found in vitro to degrade readily the yolk polypeptides. The proteinase activity increases during early embryogenesis in parallel with the decrease in molecular weight of the heavy form, and decreases to low values in late embryos. We have also found that ammonium chloride can inhibit in vivo the degradation of yolk and, in parallel, the developmental inactivation of the proteinase. The results altogether suggest that the cathepsin B-like proteinase is implicated in yolk degradation in Drosophila.  相似文献   

7.
The acid hydrolases of Drosophila are of maternal origin and appear subjected to differentiated control during embryogenesis. The enzymes are found associated with yolk granules. This association decreases during embryogenesis, in parallel with yolk degradation. As suggested before (Medina et al. Arch. Biochem. Biophys., 263 , 355–363) the acid proteinase seems to be involved in the degradation of the yolk protein. The developmental profile of activity of the proteinase fits rather well with its involvement in the degradation of yolk granules. We have isolated intermediates of degradation of these subcellular structures. The intermediates have acid hydrolase activity and decrease in buoyant density during embryogenesis, in parallel with yolk degradation. The electron microscopic analysis has revealed that they are morphologically heterogenuous. A population of yolk granules appears to store mitochondria in their interior. The mitochondrial marker cytochrome oxidase is detected in density gradients associated with the intermediates of degradation, also supporting the storage of mitochondria in yolk granules in early development. The fact that the acid hydrolases are of maternal origin suggests that they have a role during embryogenesis. We propose that acid hydrolase(s) are involved in yolk degradation.  相似文献   

8.
The present study was designed to investigate the process of acidification of yolk granules during embryogenesis. In oocytes of mature Bombyx mori silkmoth, yolk proteins and a cysteine protease (pro-form BCP) were found in yolk granules. BCP was localized in small sized yolk granules (SYG, 3-6 microm in diameter) and yolk proteins in large sized granules (LYG, 6-11 microm in diameter), which might result in a spatial separation of protease and its substrates to avoid unnecessary hydrolysis. The granules were isolated on Percoll density gradient centrifugation. Although separation of LYG and SYG was incomplete, the granules sedimented in different fractions when using unfertilized egg extract, in which LYG was recovered from heavier fractions and BCP from lighter fractions. Acid phosphatase, as well as other lysosomal marker enzymes tested, was recovered from LYG-containing fractions. When extracts were prepared from developing eggs (day 3), some BCP-containing granules co-sedimented with LYG. The inactive pro-form BCP was activated in vivo, in parallel with yolk protein degradation, and as demonstrated previously in vitro under acidic conditions (). These results suggest that acidification occurs in yolk granules during embryogenesis. This was also confirmed using acridine orange fluorescent dye. In early development, most yolk granules were neutral, but became acidic during embryonic development. SYG were progressively recovered in heavier density fractions, displaying acidic interior. In this fraction, BCP-containing granules seem to be associated with larger granules (6-11 microm in size). In addition, SYG (BCP containing granules) were likely to be acidified earlier than LYG. Our results suggest that acidification initiates yolk degradation through activation of pro-form BCP.  相似文献   

9.
The pH versus proteinase activity curve (casein or hemoglobin plus urea substrate) for homogenates of unfertilized Lytechinus eggs reveals two regions of maximum activity: one between pH 3.5 and 4.3, and another of far greater magnitude from pH 8.0 to 11.0. The two classes of proteinases can be separated on a sucrose density gradient. Both the acid and alkaline proteinases in homogenates prepared in isotonic monovalent salt solutions are remarkably stable at pH 7.4 and 0°C. Using synthetic peptide substrates, an enzyme with the specific esterase activity of chymotrypsin was demonstrated; this enzyme accounts for the major part of the proteinase activity at alkaline pH. In addition, an enzyme with specific esterase activity of trypsin was shown to be present, but of low activity. The proteinase activity at acid pH is largely due to an enzyme resembling cathepsin D. The data also suggest the presence of cathepsin B and cathepsin IV (or catheptic carboxypeptidase). When eggs are homogenized in isotonic NaCl plus KCl at pH 7.4, 0.02 M tris buffer at 0°C, all of the alkaline proteinase, and 85–90% of the acid proteinase activity is sedimented at 10,000 g. The presence of any proteinase activity in the supernatant phase represents an artifact of the preparative procedures used. The granules which possess the proteinase activity are contained entirely in the yolk fractions; and the acid proteinase is contained in a population of granules which sediment more readily than those which contain the alkaline proteinase. The acid proteinase resembles the lysosomal acid hydrolases in that it is readily released from the particulates; in contrast, the alkaline proteinase is bound relatively firmly. In contradistinction to reports in the literature, no changes in proteinase activity nor intracellular distribution could be detected following fertilization.  相似文献   

10.
Cathepsin B-like proteinase from Helicoverpa armigera (HCB) was proposed as being involved in the degradation of yolk proteins during embryonic development. Recombinant HCB was expressed as a fusion protein with GST in Escherichia coli BL21 on the basis of its cDNA and purified to homogeneity. The fusion protein was cleaved with thrombin to generate a soluble protease with a mass of 37 kDa. A polyclonal antiserum against this recombinant protein, raised in the rabbit, recognized three isoforms of HCB in an ovary homogenate of this insect. Expression of this enzyme during embryonic development was studied using immunoblotting, immunohistochemistry and activity assay. It was found that HCB was expressed during embryonic development and that its proteolytic activity was detected from embryonic developmental eggs. The fact that HCB activity is observed in ovaries and developing eggs suggested that the enzyme had already been activated before embryonic development. Immunohistochemistry indicated that the enzyme was located in follicular cells, the sphere of yolk granules, and the fat bodies of female adult. These lines of evidence suggested strongly that HCB takes part in the degradation of yolk proteins during the development of embryo.  相似文献   

11.
Eggs of the silkworm, Bombyx mori, contain a high level of a proteinase which is most active in acidic pH region. The proteinase was purified from an extract of eggs by a six-step procedure which included conventional chromatographic fractionations. The molecular mass of the proteinase was estimated to be 350 kDa by gel filtration and 47 kDa by electrophoresis on sodium dodecyl sulfate/polyacrylamide gels, suggesting an octameric structure. The amino acid composition was found to resemble that of mammalian lysosomal cysteine proteinases, in particular cathepsin L. The NH2-terminal 10-residue sequence is Val-Gln-Phe-Phe-Asp-Leu-Val-Lys-Glu-Glu-. The enzyme appears to be a member of the class of cysteine proteinases since it was strongly inhibited by sulfhydryl-reactive compounds and N-[N-(1,3-trans-carboxyoxiran-2-carbonyl)-L-leucyl]-agmatine (E-64). The enzyme hydrolyzed various protein substrates, such as hemoglobin, vitellogenin, vitellin, and lipophorin, with maximal activity around pH 3-3.5. The specificity of the cleavage sites in the oxidized B chain of insulin was rather well defined and there was high affinity for hydrophobic residues at the P2 and P3 positions. The cysteine proteinase is thought to be involved in protein degradation during embryonic development of silkworm eggs.  相似文献   

12.
The degradation of yolk granules during the development of Artemia was studied. The results obtained suggest that lysosomes are involved in the process. In homogenates of embryos and larvae at different stages of development, the distribution of 2 lysosomal markers, acid phosphatase and cathepsin B, was studied by sucrose isopycnic gradient centrifugation. Three peaks of enzyme activity of densities > 1.3 and around 1.25 and 1.18 were observed. As revealed by electron microscope analysis, the 3 peaks were found to be associated with increasingly degraded yolk structures which stained for acid phosphatase. The process can be mimicked in vitro by incubating isolated yolk granules and lysosomes. The enzyme activity levels of the 3 peaks observed during development presented an oscillatory pattern, suggesting that degradation of yolk is cyclic. Five cycles of degradation were observed during the initial 60 hr of development.  相似文献   

13.
M. Osanai  P. S. Chen 《Amino acids》1993,5(3):341-350
Summary The spermatophore of the silkmoth,Bombyx mori, is a reactor with a specific energy-yielding system for sperm maturation, the arginine degradation cascade. On mating, the highly viscous secretions from various glands in the male reproductive tract, which contain many enzymes and their substrates, are transferred to the female bursa (b.) copulatrix to form the spermatophore. In the spermatophore, transferred arginine-rich proteins are digested by initiatorin, an Arg-C endopeptidase of serine-protease type, and a carboxypeptidase. The produced free arginine is then hydrolyzed to urea and ornithine by arginase. Ornithine is metabolized to glutamate, follwed by forming alanine and 2-oxoglutarate. The latter, as a member of TCA-cycle, is a preferred respiratory substrate for spermatozoa and accelerates the post-testicular sperm maturation.In contrast toBombyx mori, Drosophila melanogaster produces only eupyrene spermatozoa and does not form the spermatophore. The sperm of this dipteran insect acquire motility in the v. seminalis of males. As reported forDrosophila, a high glutamate-pyruvate aminotransferase activity was found in the spermatophore as well as the v. seminalis of the silkmoth. The value in the latter organ reaches 58.3% of the whole male reproductive tract that participates in transfer of the seminal fluid.In the male reproductive system ofDrosophila, the concentration of arginine is low, whereas those of urea and ammonia are high. The accessory gland secretion contains much phosphoserine. Theses substances are transferred to female uterus with spermatozoa during mating. Most amino acids increase distinctly at 30 min after the termination of mating (ATM) and then decline, suggesting active degradation of transferred proteins in the uterus. As found inBombyx, urea increases at the post-mating period, while ornithine shows a rather low concentration. Ornithine must be converted to glutamate. In this connection, it is notable that alanine rises markedly at 30 min following mating. As in the silkmoth, the energy metabolism of the fruit fly spermatozoa involves also arginine, ornithine, urea, and proline. These findings suggest that the occurrence of the arginine degradation cascade or related metabolic pathway in this insect.Abbreviations ATM after the termination of mating - Arg-C arginine-carbon - b. bursa - d. ductus - g. glandula - GPA l-glutamate-pyruvate aminotransferase - NADH2 reduced nicotinamide-adenine dinucleotide - TCA tricarbonic acid - v. vesicula  相似文献   

14.
Families of papain- and legumain-like cysteine proteinases (CPR) were found in Vicia seeds. cDNAs and antibodies were used to follow organ specificity and the developmental course of CPR-specific mRNAs and polypeptides. Four papain-like cysteine proteinases (CPR1, CPR2, proteinase A and CPR4) from vetch seeds (Vicia sativa L.) were analysed. CPR2 and its mRNA were already found in dry embryonic axes. CPR1 was only detected there during early germination. Both CPR1 and CPR2 strongly increased later during germination. In cotyledons, both CPR1 and CPR2 were only observed one to two days later than in the axis. Proteinase A was not found in axes. In cotyledons it could only be detected several days after seeds had germinated. CPR4 mRNA and polypeptide were already present in embryonic axes and cotyledons during seed maturation and decreased in both organs during germination. Purified CPR1, CPR2 and proteinase A exhibited partially different patterns of globulin degradation products in vitro. Although the cDNA-deduced amino acid sequence of the precursor of proteinase A has an N-terminal signal peptide, the enzyme was not found in vacuoles whereas the other papain-like CPRs showed vacuolar localization. Four different legumain-like cysteine proteinases (VsPB2, proteinase B, VnPB1 and VnPB2) of Vicia species were analysed. Proteinase B and VnPB1 mRNAs were detected in cotyledons and seedling organs after seeds had germinated. Proteinase B degraded globulins isolated from mature vetch seeds in vitro. VsPB2 and proteinase B are localized to protein bodies of maturing seeds and seedlings, respectively, of V. sativa. Like VsPB2 from V. sativa, also VnPB2 of V. narbonensis corresponds to vacuolar processing enzymes (VPE). Based on these results different functions in molecular maturation and mobilization of storage proteins could be attributed to the various members of the CPR families.  相似文献   

15.
We have determined that a nodule-specific cDNA clone (GmCysP1), obtained from a soybean root nodule-specific EST pool, encodes cysteine proteinase. Its amino acid sequence homology, as well as the conservation of typical motifs and amino acid residues involved in active site formation, shows that GmCysP1 can be classified as a legumain (C13) family cysteine proteinase, belonging to clan CD. Moreover, based on its expression patterns,GmCysP1 is a nodule-specific cysteine proteinase gene that is possibly associated with nodule development or senescence. Our genomic Southern analysis also suggests thatGmCysP1 is a member of a multigene family. Therefore, we propose that GmCysP1 is the first to be identified as a nodule-specific and senescence-related cysteine proteinase that belongs to the legumain family from soybean.  相似文献   

16.
Extraembryonal degradation of yolk protein is necessary to provide the avian embryo with required free amino acids during early embryogenesis. Screening of proteolytic activity in different compartments of quail eggs revealed an increasing activity in the yolk sac membrane during the first week of embryogenesis. In this tissue, the occurrence of cathepsin B, a lysosomal cysteine proteinase, and cathepsin D, a lysosomal aspartic proteinase, has been described recently (Gerhartz et al., Comp Biochem Physiol, 118B:159-166, 1997). Determination of cathepsin B-like and cathepsin D-like proteolytic activity in the yolk sac membrane indicated a significant correlation between growth of the yolk sac membrane and proteolytic activity, shown by an almost constant specific activity. Both proteinases could be localized in the endodermal cells, which are in direct contact to the yolk. The concentration of proteinases in the endodermal cells appears to be almost unaltered in the investigated early stage of quail development, whereas the amount of endodermal cells increases rapidly, seen by a complicated folding of the yolk sac membrane. In the same cells quail cystatin, a potent inhibitor of quail cathepsin B (Ki 0.6 nM), has been localized at day 8 of embryonic development. Approximately at this stage of development, the quail embryo stops metabolizing yolk. In conclusion, it is strongly indicated that the amount of available free amino acids, produced by proteolytic degradation and supporting embryonic growth, is regulated by the growth of the yolk sac membrane.  相似文献   

17.
Despite being the main insect pest on soybean crops in the Americas, very few studies have approached the general biology of the lepidopteran Anticarsia gemmatalis and there is a paucity of studies with embryo formation and yolk mobilization in this species. In the present work, we identified an acid phosphatase activity in the eggs of A. gemmatalis (agAP) that we further characterized by means of biochemistry and cell biology experiments. By testing several candidate substrates, this enzyme proved chiefly active with phosphotyrosine; in vitro assays suggested a link between agAP activity and dephosphorylation of egg yolk phosphotyrosine. We also detected strong activity with endogenous and exogenous short chain polyphosphates (PolyP), which are polymers of phosphate residues involved in a number of physiological processes. Both agAP activity and PolyP were shown to initially concentrate in small vesicles clearly distinct from typically larger yolk granules, suggesting subcellular compartmentalization. As PolyP has been implicated in inhibition of yolk proteases, we performed in vitro enzymatic assays with a cysteine protease to test whether it would be inhibited by PolyP. This cysteine protease is prominent in Anticarsia egg homogenates. Accordingly, short chain PolyP was a potent inhibitor of cysteine protease. We thereby suggest that PolyP hydrolysis by agAP is a triggering mechanism of yolk mobilization in A. gemmatalis.  相似文献   

18.
In the eggs of the cockroach Blattella germanica, vitellin (Vt) utilization is initiated 4 days postovulation by the proteolytic processing of its three subunits. These reactions yield a specific set of peptides that are consumed by the developing embryo. A yolk proteinase activity, believed central to this processing event, has been investigated. First expressed at day 3 postovulation, just prior to Vt's processing, its specific activity with synthetic substrates increased four-fold to 18-fold through day 6. In addition, a mixing experiment showed that these proteinases(s) can also process Vt's large subunits in vitro. A relationship between Vt processing and proteinase specific activity was also noted with two B. germanica translocation heterozygotes, which displayed differences in the extent of Vt processing. One group of eggs (group A) failed to process any Vt subunit. A second group (B) processed the Mr 102,000 subunit but not the Mr 95,000. A third group (C) processed their Vt normally. Proteinase specific activities in the yolk of translocant's eggs at day 6 mirrored the extent of processing, being highest in group C eggs and effectively absent from the yolk of group A eggs. Eggs defective in Vt processing also contained arrested embryos. It is concluded that the yolk proteinase activity described here participates in Vt processing at day 4 postovulation. Microscopic examination of yolk obtained from eggs of wild type females showed that, as processing began in vivo (day 4), the yolk granules also underwent an abrupt decrease in size from diameters of 15–30 μm to 3–10 μm. Yolk granules of those translocant's eggs that were defective in Vt processing did not undergo this size decrease, suggesting that granule reorganization and Vt proteolysis may be linked functionally.  相似文献   

19.
In electrophoretic analyses, extracts of Xenopus laevis neurulae exhibited activities digesting yolk proteins maximally at pH4.8. These activities were completely inhibited by a mixture of pepstatin A and Z-Phe-Phe-CHN2, thus being identifiable as cathepsin D and cysteine proteinase. The electrophoretic profiles of yolk proteins cleaved by embryonic extracts changed at gastrula stages; the profile before stage 13 was the same as that given by cathepsin D treatment and the profile at stage 13 was a combination of the profile given by cathepsin D treatment and that given by cysteine proteinase treatment. Quantitative measurement of enzyme activities showed that the cathepsin D activity that was preserved from the beginning of development increased from stages 13 to 25 and decreased thereafter, whereas the cysteine proteinase activity appeared at stage 13, gradually increased until stage 35 and strongly increased thereafter. Immunoblot analyses showed that the 43 kDa form of cathepsin D was processed to its 36 kDa form, presumably by cysteine proteinase. This change can explain the increase of cathepsin D activity at stage 13 and thereafter. Immunofluorescent staining with the antibody against cysteine proteinase occurred in mesodermal and ectodermal cells other than neural ones at stages 13–24, and in the endodermal cells at stages 24–36. Faint staining in the neural ectoderm persisted from stages 18 to 36. Immunoelectron microscope observation showed that what stained was the superficial layer of yolk platelets. All these results indicate that cysteine proteinase plays a key role in the initiation of yolk digestion during embryonic development.  相似文献   

20.
The barley cysteine proteinase B (EPB) is the main protease responsible for the degradation of endosperm storage proteins providing nitrogenous nutrients to support the growth of young seedlings. The expression of this enzyme is induced in the germinating seeds by the phytohormone, gibberellin, and suppressed by another phytohormone, abscisic acid. In situ hybridization experiments indicate that EPB is expressed in the scutellar epithelium within 24 h of seed germination, but the aleurone tissue surrounding the starchy endosperm eventually becomes the main tissue expressing this enzyme. The EPB gene family of barley consists of two very similar genes, EPB1 and EPB2, both of which have been mapped to chromosome 3. The sequences of EPB1 and EPB2 match with the two previously published cDNA clones indicating that both genes are expressed. Interestingly, neither of these genes contain any introns, a rare phenomenon in which all members of a small gene family are active intronless genes. Sequence comparison indicates that the barley EPB family can be classified as cathepsin L-like endopeptidases and is most closely related to two legume cysteine proteinases (Phaseolus vulgaris EP-C1 and Vigna mungo SHEP) which are also involved in seed storage protein degradation. The promoters of EPB1 and EPB2 have been linked to the coding sequence of a reporter gene, GUS, encoding -glucuronidase, and introduced into barley aleurone cells using the particle bombardment method. Transient expression studies indicate that EPB promoters are sufficient to confer the hormonal regulation of these genes.  相似文献   

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