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1.
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   

2.
Gietl C  Hock B 《Plant physiology》1982,70(2):483-487
Biosynthesis of malate dehydrogenase isoenzymes was studied in cotyledons of watermelons (Citrullus vulgaris Schrad., var. Stone Mountain). The glyoxysomal and mitochondrial isoenzymes are synthesized as higher molecular weight precursors which can be immunoprecipitated by mono-specific antibodies from the products of in vitro translation in reticulocyte lysates programed with cotyledonary mRNA and with the same size from enzyme extracts of pulse-labeled cotyledons. During translocation from the cytosol into the organelles, processing takes place. An 8 kilodalton extra sequence is cleaved from the glyoxysomal precursor and a 3.3 kilodalton extra sequence from the mitochondrial precursor producing the native subunits of 33 and 38 kilodaltons, respectively. The data support a post-translational translocation of the organelle-destined malate dehydrogenase isoenzymes. The in vitro translation of the cytosolic malate dehydrogenase I yields a product which has the same molecular weight as the subunit of the native isoenzyme (39.5 kilodaltons).  相似文献   

3.
Christine Gietl  Bertold Hock 《Planta》1984,162(3):261-267
Glyoxysomal malate dehydrogenase (gMDH; EC 1.1.1.37) is synthesized by a reticulocyte system in the presence of watermelon mRNA (Citrullus vulgaris Schrad., var. Kleckey's Sweet No 6) as a cytosolic, higher-molecular-weight precursor (41 kdalton). We now show that this precursor is posttranslationally sequestered by a crude glyoxysomal fraction or by glyoxysomes purified on a PercollR gradient to a proteolytically protected form (60 min proteinase-K treatment at 4° C) with the size of the gMDH subunit (33 kdalton). In the presence of buffer instead of organelles a complete degradation of the precursor is obtained. The in-vitro organelle import, however, depends upon the presence of proteases such as proteinase K or trypsin. After short proteolytic treatments (e.g. 10 min proteinase K at 4° C), the correct processing of the MDH precursor is obtained even in the absence of organelles. This product, however, is not sequestered in vitro to a protease-resistant form by glyoxysomes. The possibility is discussed that under in-vivo conditions pre-gMDH is processed on the outside of the glyoxysomal membrane and transferred immediately after processing into the organelle presumably as a gMDH monomer followed by refolding and dimerization.Abbreviations gMDH glyoxysomal malate dehydrogenase - PMSF phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride - SDS sodium dodecyl sulfate - TPCK-trypsin trypsin treated with l-1-tosylamide-2-phenylethyl chloromethyl ketone Dedicated to Professor Dr. Hubert Ziegler on the occasion of his 60th birthday  相似文献   

4.
Gietl C 《Plant physiology》1992,100(2):557-559
Malate dehydrogenase isoenzymes catalyzing the oxidation of malate to oxaloacetate are highly active enzymes in mitochondria, in peroxisomes, in chloroplasts, and in the cytosol. Determination of the primary structure of the isoenzymes has disclosed that they are encoded in different nuclear genes. All three organelle-targeted malate dehydrogenases are synthesized with an amino terminal extension that is cleaved off in connection with the import of the enzyme precursor into the organelle. The sequence of the 27 amino acids of the mitochondrial transit peptide is unrelated to the 37-residue glyoxysomal transit peptide, which in turn is entirely different in sequence from the 57-residue chloroplastic transit peptide. With the exception of malate dehydrogenase and 3-ketoacyl thiolase, peroxisomal enzymes are synthesized without transit peptides and are frequently translocated into the organelle with a peroxisomal targeting signal consisting of a conserved tripeptide at the carboxy terminus of the protein. Based on the observation that this tripeptide (Ala-His-Leu) occurs in the transit peptides of glyoxysomal malate dehydrogenase and peroxisomal 3-ketoacyl thiolase, the possible significance of amino terminal transit peptides for peroxisome import is discussed.  相似文献   

5.
C. Gietl  B. Hock 《Planta》1986,167(1):87-93
A heterologous in-vitro system is described for the import of the precursor to glyoxysomal malate dehydrogenase from watermelon (Citrullus vulgaris Schrad., cv. Kleckey's Sweet No. 6) cotyledons into glyoxysomes from castor-bean (Ricinus communis L.) endosperm. The 41-kDa precursor is posttranslationally sequestered and correctly processed to the mature 33-kDa subunit by a crude glyoxysomal fraction or by glyoxysomes purified on a sucrose gradient. The import and the cleavage of the extrasequence is not inhibited by metal chelators such as 1,10-phenanthroline and ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid. Uncouplers (carbonylcyanide m-chlorophenylhydrazone), ionophores (valinomycin), or inhibitors of oxidative phosphorylation (oligomycin) and ATP-ADP translocation (carboxyatractyloside) do not interfere, thus indicating the independence of the process of import by the organelle from the energization of the glyoxysomal membrane.Abbreviations CCCP carbonylcyanide m-chlorophenylhydrazone - EDTA ethylenediaminetetraacctic acid - gMDH glyoxysomal malate dehydrogenase - PMSF phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride  相似文献   

6.
Mitochondrial and glyoxysomal malate dehydrogenase (mMDH; gMDH; L-malate: NAD+ oxidoreductase; EC 1.1.1.37) of watermelon (Citrullus vulgaris) cotyledons are synthesized with N-terminal cleavable presequences which are shown to specify sorting of the two proteins. The two presequences differ in length (27 or 37 amino acids) and primary structure. Precursor proteins of the two isoenzymes with site-directed mutations in their presequences and hybrid precursor proteins with reciprocally exchanged presequences were analyzed for proper import using two approaches, namely in vitro using isolated watermelon organelles or in vivo after synthesis in the heterologous host, Hansenula polymorpha. The mitochondrial presequence is essential and sufficient to target the mature glyoxysomal isoenzyme into mitochondria (Gietl et al., 1994). As to the function of the mitochondrial presequence a substitution of ?3R (considered important for one step precursor cleavage in yeast and mammals) with ?3L permitted import into mitochondria but cleavage of the transit peptide and conversion into active mature enzyme was impeded. Substitution of ?13R?12S (in a sequence reminiscent of the octapeptide motif serving as a substrate for the mammalian and yeast intermediate peptidase) into ?13L12F permitted mitochondrial import and processing like the wild type transit peptide. Purified rat mitochondrial processing protease, which can effect single step cleavage of mitochondrial protein precursors, cleaves in vitro translated watermelon mMDH precursor into its mature form. The glyoxysomal presequence is essential and sufficient to target the mature mitochondrial isoenzyme into peroxisomes of Hansenula polymorpha, but these peroxisomes lack a processing enzyme to cleave the presequence (Gietl et al., 1994). We here show that isolated watermelon organelles also import the hybrid proteins in vitro and process the glyoxysomal presequence. Site directed mutations within the conserved RI-X5-HL-motif impede efficiency of import and cleavage by watermelon organelles.  相似文献   

7.
Many organelle enzymes coded for by nuclear genes have N-terminal sequences, which directs them into the organelle (precursor) and are removed upon import (mature). The experiments described below characterize the differences between the precursor and mature forms of watermelon glyoxysomal malate dehydrogenase. Using recombinant protein methods, the precursor (p-gMDH) and mature (gMDH) forms were purified to homogeneity using Ni2+-NTA affinity chromatography. Gel filtration and dynamic light scattering have shown both gMDH and p-gMDH to be dimers in solution with p-gMDH having a correspondingly higher molecular weight. p-gMDH also exhibited a smaller translational diffusion coefficient (D(t)) at temperatures between 4 and 32 degrees C resulting from the extra amino acids on the N-terminal. Differential scanning calorimetry described marked differences in the unfolding properties of the two proteins with p-gMDH showing additional temperature dependent transitions. In addition, some differences were found in the steady state kinetic constants and the pH dependence of the K(m) for oxaloacetate. Both the organelle-precursor and the mature form of this glyoxysomal enzyme were crystallized under identical conditions. The crystal structure of p-gMDH, the first structure of a cleavable and translocatable protein, was solved to a resolution of 2.55 A. GMDH is the first glyoxysomal MDH structure and was solved to a resolution of 2.50 A. A comparison of the two structures shows that there are few visible tertiary or quaternary structural differences between corresponding elements of p-gMDH, gMDH and other MDHs. Maps from both the mature and translocatable proteins lack significant electron density prior to G44. While no portion of the translocation sequences from either monomer in the biological dimer was visible, all of the other solution properties indicated measurable effects of the additional residues at the N-terminal.  相似文献   

8.
The matrix of glyoxysomes from endosperm of castor bean (Ricinus communis cv Hale) seedlings has been analyzed for the presence of glycosylated proteins. Glyoxysome preparations were monitored for organelle homogeneity by electron microscopy and enzyme marker activities. Glyoxysomes were essentially free of endoplasmic reticulum, mitochondria, and protein bodies. At least eight glyoxysomal matrix glycopeptides ranging in size from 39 to 160 kilodaltons were identified by their affinity for concanavalin A. The glyoxysomal glycoproteins were shown to be radioactively labeled when endosperm was allowed to incorporate glucosamine. Incorporation of glucosamine was inhibited by tunicamycin under conditions which did not inhibit protein synthesis. Hydrolysis of glyoxysomal extracts and subsequent analysis by paper chromatography showed that the labeled precursor was incorporated into the glycoprotein without prior dispersion of the label into amino acids. The present data demonstrate the occurrence of N-linked, high mannose oligosaccharides on polypeptides of the glyoxysomal matrix. This finding is discussed in relation to pathways of protein maturation and transport during glyoxysomal biogenesis.  相似文献   

9.
Excised watermelon (Citrullus vulgaris Schrad.) cotyledons were grown in the dark in the presence of 0.1 mM benzyladenine (BA). Under these conditions reserve breakdown and organelle differentiation progress very slowly. Treatment with BA accelerates, breakdown of reserves and stimulates development of organelles. Electron micrographs of cells from treated cotyledons show a larger number of plastids with a more developed inner membrane system. The levels of plastid pigments and enzymes are increased while starch content is reduced. Glyoxysomal enzyme levels are increased by BA during the first three days of development and their decline is accelerated thereafter. Also the activity of hydroxypyruvate reductase (EC 1.1.1.81.), a peroxisomal enzyme, is increased, but this increase is not followed by a decay phase. In water controls, hydroxypyruvate reductase bands together with glyoxysomal enzymes after equilibrium centrifugation in a sucrose gradient. In treated cotyledons the equilibrium position of glyoxysomal enzymes is uchanged while that of hydroxypyruvate reductase is shifted to a lower density.Abbreviations BA benzyladenine - RuDP ribulose-1,5-diphosphate - HPR hydroxypyruvate reductase  相似文献   

10.
R. -A. Walk  B. Hock 《Planta》1977,136(3):211-220
Molecular properties of the glyoxysomal and mitochondrial isoenzyme of malate dehydrogenase (EC 1.1.1.37; L-malate: NAD+ oxidoreductase) from watermelon cotyledons (Citrullus vulgaris Schrad.) were investigated, using completely purified enzyme preparations. The apparent molecular weights of the glyoxysomal and mitochondrial isoenzymes were found to be 67,000 and 74,000 respectively. Aggregation at high enzyme concentrations was observed with the glyoxysomal but not with the mitochondrial isoenzyme. Using sodium dodecyl sulfate electrophoresis each isoenzyme was found to be composed of two polypeptide chains of identical size (33,500 and 37,000, respectively). The isoenzymes differed in their isoelectric points (gMDH: 8,92, mMDH: 5.39), rate of heat inactivation (gMDH: 1/2 at 40°C=3.0 min; mMDH: stable at 40°C; 1/2 at 60°C=4.5 min), adsorption to dextran gels at low ionic strenght, stability against alkaline conditions and their pH optima for oxaloacetate reduction (gMDH: pH 6.6, mMDH: pH 7.5). Very similar pH optima, however, were observed for L-malate oxidation (pH 9.3–9.5). The results indicate that the glyoxysomal and mitochondrial MDH of watermelon cotyledons are distinct proteins of different structural composition.Abbreviations EDTA ethylene diamine tetraacetic acid - gMDH and mMDH glyoxysomal and mitochondrial malate dehydrogenase, respectively  相似文献   

11.
DnaJ proteins are located in various compartments of the eukaryotic cell. As previously shown, peroxisomes and glyoxysomes possess a membrane-anchored form of DnaJ protein located on the cytosolic face. Hints as to how the membrane-bound co-chaperone interacts with cytosolic soluble chaperones were obtained by examining the affinity between the DnaJ protein and various potential partners of the Hsp70 family. Two genes encoding cytosolic Hsp70 isoforms were isolated and characterized from cucumber cotyledons. In addition, cDNAs encoding Hsp70 forms attributed to the cytosol, plastids and the lumen of the endoplasmic reticulum were prepared. His-tagged DnaJ proteins and glutathione S-transferase-Hsp70 fusion proteins were constructed. Using these tools, it was demonstrated that the soluble His-tagged form of DnaJ protein exclusively binds the cytosolic isoform 1 of Hsp70. This interaction was further analyzed by characterizing the interaction between the glyoxysome-bound form of the DnaJ protein and various isoforms of Hsp70. Specific binding to the glyoxysomal surface was only observed in the case of cytosolic isoform 1 of Hsp70. This interaction was strictly dependent on the presence of ADP. Glyoxysomes did not bind other cytosolic or plastidic isoforms or the BiP-related form of Hsp70. Analyzing the enzymatic properties of cytosolic Hsp70s, we showed that the ATPase-modulating activity of DnaJ was highest when isoform 1 was assayed. Collectively, the data indicate that the partner of the DnaJ protein anchored at the glyoxysomal membrane is the cytosolic isoform 1 of Hsp70. In addition to the chaperones located at the surface of glyoxysomes, two isoforms of Hsp70 and one soluble form of DnaJ protein were detected in the glyoxysomal matrix.  相似文献   

12.
The development of glyoxysomal marker enzyme activities and concomitant ultrastructural evidence for the ontogeny of glyoxysomes has been studied in cotyledons of dark-grown watermelon seedlings (Citrullus vulgaris Schrad., var. Florida Giant). Catalase (CAT, EC 1.11.1.6) was stained in glyoxysomal structures with the 3,3-diaminobenzidine procedure. Serial sections and high-voltage electron microscopy were used to analyze the three-dimensional structure of the glyoxysomal population. With early germination CAT was localized in three distinct cell structures: spherical microbodies already present in freshly imbibed cotyledons; in appendices on lipid bodies; and in small membrane vesicles between the lipid bodies. Due to their ribosome-binding capacity, both appendices and small vesicles were identified as derivatives of the endoplasmic reticulum (ER). In the following period, glyoxysome formation and lipid body degradation were found to be inseparable processes. The small CAT-containing vesicles attach to a lipid body on a restricted area. Both lipid body appendices and attached cisternae enlarge around and between tightly packed lipid bodies and eventually become pleomorphic glyoxysomes with lipid bodies entrapped into cavities. The close contact between lipid body and glyoxysomes is maintained until the lipid body is digested and the glyoxysomal cavity becomes filled with cytoplasm. During the entire period of increase in glyoxysomal enzyme activities, no evidence was obtained for destruction of glyoxysomes, but small CAT-containing vesicles were observed from day 2 through day 6 after imbibition, indicating a continuous de novo formation of glyoxysomes. This study does not substantiate the hypothesis that glyoxysomes bud directly from the ER. Rather, ER-derivatives, e.g., lipid body appendices or cisternae attached to lipid bodies are interpreted as being glyoxysomal precursors that grow in close contact with lipid bodies both in volume and surface membrane area.Abbreviations CAT catalase - DAB 3,3 diaminobenzidine tetrahydrochloride - ER endoplasmic reticulum - GOX glycolate oxidase - HPR hydroxypyruvate reductase - HVEM high-voltage electron microscopy - ICL isocitrate lyase - MS malate synthase - RER rough endoplasmic reticulum In the figures bars represent 0.1 m (if not stated otherwise)  相似文献   

13.
In several reports cathepsin D has been implicated in apoptosis. In some systems the effects of agents considered to be mediated by cathepsin D were inhibited in the presence of pepstatin A, an inhibitor of the enzyme. In other studies the effect of a mutant cathepsin D deprived of activity was indistinguishable from that of the normal enzyme. Here we show that in human fibroblasts and in HeLa cells apoptosis can be induced by microinjecting into cytosol either mature cathepsin D or its inactive precursor procathepsin D. The microinjected precursor remains in the uncleaved form. These results confirm that the proapoptotic effect of cathepsin D in the cytosol is independent of its catalytic activity and suggest that the interaction of cathepsin D with the downstream effector does not involve the active site of the enzyme, since in the proenzyme the active site is masked by the prosequence.  相似文献   

14.
1. Immunoblot analyses were carried out to determine the relative distributions of delta-aminolevulinate synthase (ALA synthase) in mitochondrial and cytosol fractions prepared from embryos at different times after injections with allylisopropylacetamide (AIA). 2. The results indicated that the molecular mass of mature ALA synthase (Mr 65,000) increased with time in mitochondria. 3. At no time was the precursor form (Mr 75,000) of the enzyme detected either in mitochondria or in the cytosol. 4. In primary cultures of hepatocytes, where the increased production of ALA synthase had been induced with AIA, addition of delta-aminolevulinic acid (ALA) and Fe2(SO4)3 into the culture medium completely blocked the processing of the precursor form of the enzyme. 5. On the other hand, the addition of ALA together with deferoxamine mesylate into the medium had no detectable effect on the maturation of ALA synthase in the hepatocytes. 6. The results indicated: first, that upon induction of porphyria the pools of pre-ALA synthase in liver are relatively low in chick embryos when compared with those in other organisms; and second, that increased heme production by the hepatocytes caused the inhibition of processing of the precursor form of ALA synthase.  相似文献   

15.
Kunce  Christine M.  Trelease  Richard N.  Doman  Diane C. 《Planta》1984,161(2):156-164
Morphometric procedures were used with light and electron microscopy to examine glyoxysome number, volume, shape and distribution as well as mesophyll cell volume, in cotyledons of mature (50 d postanthesis), imbibed (5h) and germinated (24 and 37 h) cotton (Gossypium hirsutum L.) seeds. Additionally, activities of five glyoxysomal marker enzymes in cotyledon extracts were assayed at each of the above ages. Cell volume was determined from photomicrographs of Epon-embedded sections by the point-counting procedure. Analysis of variance showed that cell volume was not different among the tissue segments studied. Glyoxysomes were cytochemically stained for catalase (EC 1.11.1.6) activity with the 3,3-diaminobenzidine-tetrahydrochloride procedure. Analyses involving both phase and electron microscopy, and two separate sterologic calculations for determining the number of glyoxysomes per cell, indicate that glyoxysomes are numerous in mature seeds, persist through desiccation and imbibition, then increase dramatically in volume (seven fold) but not number (a maximum of 1.5-fold), when enzyme activities increase two to six times (depending on the enzyme). During the entire period of increase in glyoxysomal enzyme activities, no ultrastructural evidence was found for glyoxysome formation or destruction. Our data, in contrast to some proposals in the literature, indicate that cottonseed glyoxysomes form during seed maturation, then develop following seed imbibition into pleomorphic organelles by posttranslational accumulation of proteins from the cytosol and transfer of membrane components probably from the endoplasmic reticulum.Abbreviations DAB 3,3-diaminobenzidine tetrahydrochloride - DPA days postanthesis - ER endoplasmic reticulum  相似文献   

16.
The synthesis and processing of cereal lectins was followed in vivo. The initial translation products of lectin genes are higher molecular weight (28 K) precursors, which are post-translationally processed in a single step into authentic lectin polypeptides (23 K). The conversion of precursor into mature product is a rather slow process (the precursor has a half life of 36 min) and is apparently not a prerequisite for biological activity since the precursor exhibits sugar binding activity. Because of the striking resemblances between the processing of cereal lectins and vectorial processing of cytoplasmatically made chloroplast, mitochondrial and glyoxysomal proteins, vectorial processing of cereal lectins might be a means of transporting these proteins through a membrane into an extra-cytoplasmic compartment.  相似文献   

17.
Biosynthesis of isocitrate lyase, a tetrameric enzyme of the glyoxysomal matrix, was studied in Neurospora crassa, in which the formation of glyoxysomes was induced by a substitution of sucrose medium by acetate medium. 1. Translation of Neurospora mRNA in reticulocyte lysates yields a product which has the same apparent molecular weight as the subunit of the functional enzyme. Using N-formyl[35S]methionyl-tRNAfMet as a label, the translation product shows the same apparent size which indicates that the amino terminus has no additional "signal'-type sequence. 2. Read-out systems employing free and membrane-bound polysomes show that only free ribosomes are active in the synthesis of isocitrate lyase. 3. Isocitrate lyase synthesized in reticulocyte lysate is released into the supernatant and is soluble in a monomeric form. It interacts with Triton X-100 to form mixed micells in contrast to the functional tetrameric form. 4. Transfer of isocitrate lyase synthesized in vitro into isolated glyoxysomes is suggested by results of experiments in which supernatants from reticulocyte lysates are incubated with a particle fraction isolated from acetate-grown cells. No transfer occurs when particles from non-induced cells are employed. Resistance to added proteinase is used as a criterion for transmembrane transfer. The data support a post-translational transfer mechanism for isocitrate lyase. They suggest that isocitrate lyase passes through a cytosolic precursor pool as a monomer and is transferred into glyoxysomes.  相似文献   

18.
Summary Ornithine transcarbamylase (ornithine carbamoyltransferase, EC 2.1.3.3), the second enzyme of urea synthesis, is localized in the matrix of liver mitochondria of ureotelic animals. The enzyme is encoded by a nuclear gene, synthesized outside the mitochondria, and must then be transported into the organelle. The rat liver enzyme is initially synthesized on membrane-free polysomes in the form of a larger precursor with an amino-terminal extension of 3 400–4 000 daltons. In rat liver slices and isolated rat hepatocytes, the pulse-labeled precursor is first released into the cytosol and is then transported with a half life of 1 2 min into the mitochondria where it is proteolytically processed to the mature form of the enzyme. The precursor synthesized in vitro exists in a highly aggregated form and has a conformation different from that of the mature enzyme. The precursor has an isoelectric point (pI = 7.9) higher than that of the mature enzyme (pI = 7.2).The precursor synthesized in vitro can be taken up and processed to the mature enzyme by isolated rat liver mitochondria. The mitochondrial transport and processing system requires membrane potential and a high integrity of the mitochondria. The transport and processing activities are conserved between mammals and birds or amphibians and is presumably common to more than one precursor. Potassium ion, magnesium ion, and probably a cytosolic protein(s), in addition to the transcarbamylase precursor and the mitochondria, are required for the maximal transport and processing of the precursor.A mitochondrial matrix protease which converts the precursor to a product intermediate in size between the precursor and the mature subunit has been highly purified. The protease has an estimated molecular weight of 108 000 and an optimal pH of 7.5–8.0, and appears to be a metal protease. The protease does not cleave several of the protein and peptide substrates tested. The role of this protease in the precursor processing remains to be elucidated.Rats subjected to different levels of protein intake and to fasting show significant changes in the level of enzyme protein and activity of ornithine transcarbamylase. The dietary-dependent changes in the enzyme level are due mainly to an altered level of functional mRNA for the enzyme. In contrast, during fasting, the increase in the enzyme level is associated with a decreased level of translatable mRNA forthe enzyme.Pathological aspects of ornithine transcarbamylase including the enzyme deficiency and reduced activities of the enzyme in Reye's syndrome are also described. A possibility that impaired transport of the enzyme precursor into the mitochondria leads to a reduced enzyme activity, is proposed.Abbreviation pOTC precursor of ornithine transcarbamylase  相似文献   

19.
Peroxisomal enzyme activities in attached senescing leaves   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
Recently it has been demonstrated that detached leaves show glyoxysomal enzyme activities when incubated in darkness for several days. In this report glyoxylate-cycle enzymes have been detected in leaves of rice (Oryza sativa L.) and wheat (Triticum durum L.) from either naturally senescing or dark-treated plants. Isolated peroxisomes of rice and wheat show isocitrate lyase (EC 4.1.3.1), malate synthase (EC 4.1.3.2) and -oxidation activities. Leaf peroxisomes from dark-induced senescing leaves show glyoxylic-acid-cycle enzyme activities two to four times higher than naturally senescing leaves. The glyoxysomal activities detected in leaf peroxisomes during natural foliar senescence may represent a reverse transition of the peroxisomes into glyoxysomes.This work was supported by CNR Italy, special grant RAISA, subproject 2, paper no. 26.  相似文献   

20.
Glyoxysomal citrate synthase (gCS) was purified from crude extracts of watermelon (Citrullus vulgaris Schrad.) cotyledons, yielding a homogenous protein with a subunit MW of 48 kDa. The enzyme was selectively inhibited by 5,5-dithiobis-(2-nitrobenzoic acid), allowing quantification in the presence of the mitochondrial isoenzyme (mCS). Differences were also observed with respect to inhibition by ATP (k i=2.6 mmol · l-1 for gCS, k i=0.33 mmol · l-1 for mCS). The antibodies prepared against gCS did not cross-react with mCS. The immunocytochemical localization of gCS by the indirect protein A-gold procedure was restricted to the glyoxysomal membrane or the peripheral matrix of glyoxysomes. Other compartments, e.g. the endoplasmic reticulum, were not labeled. Xenopus oocytes were used for the translation of watermelon polyadenylated RNA (poly(A)+RNA). A translation product with a MW of 51 kDa was immunoprecipitated by the anti-gCS antibodies. It was absent in controls without poly(A)+RNA or with preimmune serum. A similar translation product was also immunoprecipitated after cell-free synthesis of watermelon poly(A)+RNA in a reticulocyte system, in contrast to the in-vivo labeled gCS (48 kDa). It was concluded that gCS is synthesized as a higher-molecular-weight precursor.Abbreviations DTNB 5,5-dithiobis-(2-nitrobenzoic acid) - gCS glyoxysomal citrate synthase - gMDH glyoxysomal malate dehydrogenase - k i inhibitor constant - mCS mitochondrial citrate synthase - OAA oxaloacetate - poly(A)+RNA polyadenylated RNA - SDS-PAGE sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis  相似文献   

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