首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 31 毫秒
1.
Phytocyanins (PCs) are ancient blue copper-binding proteins in plants that bind to single type I copper atoms and function as electron transporters. PCs play an important role in plant development and stress resistance. Many PCs are considered to be chimeric arabinogalactan proteins (AGPs). Previously, 38, 62, and 84 PC genes were identified in Arabidopsis thaliana, Oryza sativa, and Brassica rapa, respectively. In this study, we identified 30 putative PC genes in the orchid Phalaenopsis equestris through comprehensive bioinformatics analysis. Based on phylogeny and motif constitution, the P. equestris phytocyanins (PePCs) were divided into five subclasses: 10 early nodulin-like proteins, 10 uclacyanin-like proteins, five stellacyanin-like proteins, four plantacyanin-like proteins, and one unknown protein. Structural and glycosylation predictions suggested that 16 PePCs were glycosylphosphatidylinositol-anchored proteins localized to the plasma membrane, 22 PePCs contain N-glycosylation sites, and 14 are chimeric AGPs. Phylogenetic analysis indicated that each subfamily was derived from a common ancestor before the divergence of monocot and dicot lineages and that the expansion of the PC subfamilies occurred after the divergence of orchids and Arabidopsis. The number of exons in PC genes was conserved. Expression analysis in four tissues revealed that nine PC genes were highly expressed in flowers, stems, and roots, suggesting that these genes play important roles in growth and development in P. equestris. The results of this study lay the foundation for further analysis of the functions of this gene family in plants.  相似文献   

2.
3.
You C  Dai X  Li X  Wang L  Chen G  Xiao J  Wu C 《Plant molecular biology》2010,74(6):617-629
Leucine-rich repeat proteins constitute a large gene family and play important roles in plant growth and development. Among them, Arabidopsis PIRL is a plant-specific class of intracellular Ras-group-related leucine-rich repeat proteins. In this study, we identified eight homologues of PIRLs in rice and designated them as OsIRL proteins. We described the gene structures, chromosome localizations, protein motifs, and phylogenetic relationships of the OsIRL gene family. The expression profiles of OsIRL genes were analyzed throughout the entire rice life cycle, along with light and three hormone stress conditions, using quantitative RT-PCR and microarray data. All OsIRL genes were expressed in at least one experimental stage and exhibited divergent expression patterns, with several genes showing preferential expression at specific stages. OsIRL4 and OsIRL5 showed higher expression levels under light compared to dark. OsIRL4 and OsIRL7 exhibited significant differential expression in response to hormone treatments. Six T-DNA or Tos17 insertion lines for five individual OsIRL genes were identified and examined morphologically. The comprehensive expression profile elucidated in this investigation together with the characterized insertion lines will provide a solid foundation for in-depth dissection of OsIRL functions.  相似文献   

4.
Ma H  Zhao H  Liu Z  Zhao J 《PloS one》2011,6(10):e25184

Background

Phytocyanins (PCs) are plant-specific blue copper proteins involved in electron transport, and a large number of known PCs are considered to be chimeric arabinogalactan proteins (AGPs). To date there has not been a genome-wide overview of the OsPC gene family. Therefore, as the first step and a useful strategy to elucidate the functions of OsPCs, there is an urgent need for a thorough genome-wide analysis of this gene family.

Methodology/Principal Findings

In this study, a total of 62 OsPC genes were identified through a comprehensive bioinformatics analysis of the rice (Oryza sativa L.) genome. Based on phylogeny and motif constitution, the family of OsPCs was classified into three subclasses: uclacyanin-like proteins (OsUCLs), stellacyanin-like proteins (OsSCLs) and early nodulin-like proteins (OsENODLs). Structure and glycosylation prediction indicated that 46 OsPCs were glycosylphosphatigylinositol-anchored proteins and 38 OsPCs were chimeric AGPs. Gene duplication analysis revealed that chromosomal segment and tandem duplications contributed almost equally to the expansion of this gene family, and duplication events were mostly happened in the OsUCL subfamily. The expression profiles of OsPC genes were analyzed at different stages of vegetative and reproductive development and under abiotic stresses. It revealed that a large number of OsPC genes were abundantly expressed in the various stages of development. Moreover, 17 genes were regulated under the treatments of abiotic stresses.

Conclusions/Significance

The genome-wide identification and expression analysis of OsPC genes should facilitate research in this gene family and give new insights toward elucidating their functions in higher plants.  相似文献   

5.
Tissue‐specific overexpression of useful genes, which we can design according to their cause‐and‐effect relationships, often gives valuable gain‐of‐function phenotypes. To develop genetic tools in woody biomass engineering, we produced a collection of Arabidopsis lines that possess chimeric genes of a promoter of an early xylem differentiation stage‐specific gene, Arabidopsis Tracheary Element Differentiation‐related 4 (AtTED4) and late xylem development‐associated genes, many of which are uncharacterized. The AtTED4 promoter directed the expected expression of transgenes in developing vascular tissues from young to mature stage. Of T2 lines examined, 42%, 49% and 9% were judged as lines with the nonrepeat type insertion, the simple repeat type insertion and the other repeat type insertion of transgenes. In 174 T3 lines, overexpression lines were confirmed for 37 genes, whereas only cosuppression lines were produced for eight genes. The AtTED4 promoter activity was high enough to overexpress a wide range of genes over wild‐type expression levels, even though the wild‐type expression is much higher than AtTED4 expression for several genes. As a typical example, we investigated phenotypes of pAtTED4::At5g60490 plants, in which both overexpression and cosuppression lines were included. Overexpression but not cosuppression lines showed accelerated xylem development, suggesting the positive role of At5g60490 in xylem development. Taken together, this study provides valuable results about behaviours of various genes expressed under an early xylem‐specific promoter and about usefulness of their lines as genetic tools in woody biomass engineering.  相似文献   

6.
Hydroxyproline-rich glycoproteins (HRGPs) are a superfamily of plant cell wall proteins that function in diverse aspects of plant growth and development. This superfamily consists of three members: hyperglycosylated arabinogalactan proteins (AGPs), moderately glycosylated extensins (EXTs), and lightly glycosylated proline-rich proteins (PRPs). Hybrid and chimeric versions of HRGP molecules also exist. In order to “mine” genomic databases for HRGPs and to facilitate and guide research in the field, the BIO OHIO software program was developed that identifies and classifies AGPs, EXTs, PRPs, hybrid HRGPs, and chimeric HRGPs from proteins predicted from DNA sequence data. This bioinformatics program is based on searching for biased amino acid compositions and for particular protein motifs associated with known HRGPs. HRGPs identified by the program are subsequently analyzed to elucidate the following: (1) repeating amino acid sequences, (2) signal peptide and glycosylphosphatidylinositol lipid anchor addition sequences, (3) similar HRGPs via Basic Local Alignment Search Tool, (4) expression patterns of their genes, (5) other HRGPs, glycosyl transferase, prolyl 4-hydroxylase, and peroxidase genes coexpressed with their genes, and (6) gene structure and whether genetic mutants exist in their genes. The program was used to identify and classify 166 HRGPs from Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) as follows: 85 AGPs (including classical AGPs, lysine-rich AGPs, arabinogalactan peptides, fasciclin-like AGPs, plastocyanin AGPs, and other chimeric AGPs), 59 EXTs (including SP5 EXTs, SP5/SP4 EXTs, SP4 EXTs, SP4/SP3 EXTs, a SP3 EXT, “short” EXTs, leucine-rich repeat-EXTs, proline-rich extensin-like receptor kinases, and other chimeric EXTs), 18 PRPs (including PRPs and chimeric PRPs), and AGP/EXT hybrid HRGPs.The genomics era has produced vast amounts of biological data that await examination. In order to “mine” such data effectively, a bioinformatics approach can be utilized to identify genes of interest, subject them to various in silico analyses, and extract relevant biological information on them from various public databases. Examination of such data produces novel insights with respect to the genes in question and can be used to facilitate and guide further research in the field. Such is the case here, where bioinformatics tools were developed to identify, classify, and analyze members of the Hyp-rich glycoprotein (HRGP) superfamily encoded by the Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) genome.HRGPs are a superfamily of plant cell wall proteins that are subdivided into three families, arabinogalactan proteins (AGPs), extensins (EXTs), and Pro-rich proteins (PRPs), and extensively reviewed (Showalter, 1993; Kieliszewski and Lamport, 1994; Nothnagel, 1997; Cassab, 1998; José-Estanyol and Puigdomènech, 2000; Seifert and Roberts, 2007). However, it has become increasingly clear that the HRGP superfamily is perhaps better represented as a spectrum of molecules ranging from the highly glycosylated AGPs to the moderately glycosylated EXTs and finally to the lightly glycosylated PRPs. Moreover, hybrid HRGPs, composed of HRGP modules from different families, and chimeric HRGPs, composed of one or more HRGP modules within a non-HRGP protein, also can be considered part of the HRGP superfamily. Given that many HRGPs are composed of repetitive protein sequences, particularly the EXTs and PRPs, and many have low sequence similarity to one another, particularly the AGPs, BLAST searches typically identify only a few closely related family members and do not represent a particularly effective means to identify members of the HRGP superfamily in a comprehensive manner.Building upon the work of Schultz et al. (2002) that focused on the AGP family, a new bioinformatics software program, BIO OHIO, developed at Ohio University, makes it possible to search all 28,952 proteins encoded by the Arabidopsis genome and identify putative HRGP genes. Two distinct types of searches are possible with this program. First, the program can search for biased amino acid compositions in the genome-encoded protein sequences. For example, classical AGPs can be identified by their biased amino acid compositions of greater then 50% Pro (P), Ala (A), Ser (S), and Thr (T), as indicated by greater than 50% PAST. Similarly, arabinogalactan peptides (AG peptides) are identified by biased amino acid compositions of greater then 35% PAST, but the protein (i.e. peptide) must also be between 50 and 90 amino acids in length. Likewise, PRPs can be identified by a biased amino acid composition of greater then 45% PVKCYT. Second, the program can search for specific amino acid motifs that are commonly found in known HRGPs. For example, SP4 pentapeptide and SP3 tetrapeptide motifs are associated with EXTs, a fasciclin H1 motif is found in fasciclin-like AGPs (FLAs), and PPVX(K/T) (where X is any amino acid) and KKPCPP motifs are found in several known PRPs (Fowler et al., 1999). In addition to searching for HRGPs, the program can analyze proteins identified by a search. For example, the program checks for potential signal peptide sequences and glycosylphosphatidylinositol (GPI) plasma member anchor addition sequences, both of which are associated with HRGPs (Showalter, 1993, 2001; Youl et al., 1998; Sherrier et al., 1999; Svetek et al., 1999). Moreover, the program can identify repeated amino acid sequences within the sequence and has the ability to search for bias amino acid compositions within a sliding window of user-defined size, making it possible to identify HRGP domains within a protein sequence.Here, we report on the use of this bioinformatics program in identifying, classifying, and analyzing members of the HRGP superfamily (i.e. AGPs, EXTs, PRPs, hybrid HRGPs, and chimeric HRGPs) in the genetic model plant Arabidopsis. An overview of this bioinformatics approach is presented in Figure 1. In addition, public databases and programs were accessed and utilized to extract relevant biological information on these HRGPs in terms of their expression patterns, most similar sequences via BLAST analysis, available genetic mutants, and coexpressed HRGP, glycosyl transferase (GT), prolyl 4-hydroxylase (P4H), and peroxidase genes in Arabidopsis. This information provides new insight to the HRGP superfamily and can be used by researchers to facilitate and guide further research in the field. Moreover, the bioinformatics tools developed here can be readily applied to protein sequences from other species to analyze their HRGPs or, for that matter, any given protein family by altering the input parameters.Open in a separate windowFigure 1.Bioinformatics workflow diagram summarizing the identification, classification, and analysis of HRGPs (AGPs, EXTs, and PRPs) in Arabidopsis. Classical AGPs were defined as containing greater than 50% PAST coupled with the presence of AP, PA, SP, and TP repeats distributed throughout the protein, Lys-rich AGPs were a subgroup of classical AGPs that included a Lys-rich domain, and chimeric AGPs were defined as containing greater than 50% PAST coupled with the localized distribution of AP, PA, SP, and TP repeats. AG peptides were defined to be 50 to 90 amino acids in length and containing greater than 35% PAST coupled with the presence of AP, PA, SP, and TP repeats distributed throughout the peptide. FLAs were defined as having a fasciclin domain coupled with the localized distribution of AP, PA, SP, and TP repeats. Extensins were defined as containing two or more SP3 or SP4 repeats coupled with the distribution of such repeats throughout the protein; chimeric extensins were similarly identified but were distinguished from the extensins by the localized distribution of such repeats in the protein; and short extensins were defined to be less than 200 amino acids in length coupled with the extensin definition. PRPs were identified as containing greater than 45% PVKCYT or two or more KKPCPP or PVX(K/T) repeats coupled with the distribution of such repeats and/or PPV throughout the protein. Chimeric PRPs were similarly identified but were distinguished from PRPs by the localized distribution of such repeats in the protein. Hybrid HRGPs (i.e. AGP/EXT hybrids) were defined as containing two or more repeat units used to identify AGPs, extensins, or PRPs. The presence of a signal peptide was used to provide added support for the identification of an HRGP but was not used in an absolute fashion. Similarly, the presence of a GPI anchor addition sequence was used to provide added support for the identification of classical AGPs and AG peptides, which are known to contain such sequences. BLAST searches were also used to provide some support to our classification if the query sequence showed similarity to other members of an HRGP subfamily. Note that some AGPs, particularly chimeric AGPs, and PRPs were identified from an Arabidopsis database annotation search and that two chimeric extensins were identified from the primary literature as noted in the text.  相似文献   

7.
8.
9.
Arabinogalactan proteins (AGPs) are complex, hyperglycosylated plant cell wall proteins with little known about the biological roles of their glycan moieties in sexual reproduction. Here, we report that GLCAT14A, GLCAT14B, and GLCAT14C, three enzymes responsible for the addition of glucuronic acid residues to AGPs, function in pollen development, polytubey block, and normal embryo development in Arabidopsis. Using biochemical and immunolabeling techniques, we demonstrated that the loss of function of the GLCAT14A, GLCAT14B, and GLCAT14C genes resulted in disorganization of the reticulate structure of the exine wall, abnormal development of the intine layer, and collapse of pollen grains in glcat14a/b and glcat14a/b/c mutants. Synchronous development between locules within the same anther was also lost in some glcat14a/b/c stamens. In addition, we observed excessive attraction of pollen tubes targeting glcat14a/b/c ovules, indicating that the polytubey block mechanism was compromised. Monosaccharide composition analysis revealed significant reductions in all sugars in glcat14a/b and glcat14a/b/c mutants except for arabinose and galactose, while immunolabeling showed decreased amounts of AGP sugar epitopes recognized by glcat14a/b and glcat14a/b/c mutants compared with the wild type. This work demonstrates the important roles that AG glucuronidation plays in Arabidopsis sexual reproduction and reproductive development.  相似文献   

10.
Arabinogalactan proteins (AGPs) are important proteoglycans regulating somatic embryogenesis in diverse plant species. Embryogenic cells of somatic embryos are covered by special extracellular cell wall layer called extracellular surface matrix network (ECMSN) at their early developmental stages. Here we show that highly embryogenic cell line AC78 of hybrid fir (Abies alba × Abies cephalonica) differs from very low-embryogenic cell line AC77 in the abundance, subcellular localization and deposition of subset of secreted AGPs. A specific AGP epitope containing Gal residues and reacting to Gal4 antibody is secreted and deposited into ECMSN, which covers the surface of the embryogenic cells showing high embryogenic and regeneration capacity in the cell line AC78. On the other hand, this Gal4 AGP epitope was not secreted and/or found on the surface of meristematic cells showing low embryogenic and regeneration capacity in the cell line AC77, as well as on the surface of non-embryogenic suspensor cells and callus cells in both cell lines AC77 and AC78. As a positive control, we have used another AGP epitope LM2 (containing glucuronic acid) showing no significant differences in these two Abies hybrid lines. This study defines specific AGPs containing β-(1→6)-galactotetraosyl group as a first molecular component of ECMSN covering embryogenic cells in gymnosperms. Electronic supplementary material The online version of this article (doi:) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.  相似文献   

11.
Napin is a 2S storage protein found in the seeds of oilseed rape (Brassica napus L.) and related species. Using protein structural prediction programs we have identified a region in the napin protein sequence which forms a `hydrophilic loop' composed of amino acid residues located at the protein surface. Targeting this region, we have constructed two napin chimeric genes containing the coding sequence for the peptide hormone leucine-enkephalin as a topological marker. One version has a single enkephalin sequence of 11 amino acids including linkers and the second contains a tandem repeat of this peptide comprising 22 amino acids, inserted into the napin large subunit. The inserted peptide sequences alter the balance of hydrophilic to hydrophobic amino acids and introduce flexibility into this region of the polypeptide chain. The chimeric genes have been expressed in tobacco plants under the control of the seed-specific napA gene promoter. Analyses indicate that the engineered napin proteins are expressed, transported, post-translationally modified and deposited inside the protein bodies of the transgenic seeds demonstrating that the altered napin proteins behave in a similar fashion to the authentic napin protein. Detailed immunolocalisation studies indicate that the insertion of the peptide sequences has a significant effect on the distribution of the napin proteins within the tobacco seed protein bodies.  相似文献   

12.
13.
The leucine-rich repeat class of receptor-like kinase (LRR-RLKs) encoding genes represents the largest family of putative receptor genes in the Arabidopsis thaliana genome. However, very little is known about the range of biological process that they control. We present in this paper the functional characterization of RLK7 that has all the structural features of a receptor-like kinase of the plant-specific LRR type. To this end, we identified and characterized three independent T-DNA insertion mutants, constructed lines carrying truncated versions of this putative receptor, one lacking the cytoplasmic kinase domain (RLK7Δkin) and the other one lacking 14 LRR repeats (RLK7ΔLRR) and generated RLK7 overexpressing lines. We thus provide evidences that RLK7 is involved in the control of germination speed and the tolerance to oxidant stress. First, consistent with the expression kinetics of the RLK7 gene in the seeds, we found that all three mutants showed a delay in germination, whereas the overexpressors, RLK7Δkin and RLK7ΔLRR lines displayed a phenotype of more precocious germination. Second, a non-hypothesis driven proteomic approach revealed that in the seedlings of the three T-DNA insertion lines, four enzymes directly or indirectly involved in reactive oxygen species detoxification, were significantly less abundant. Consistent with this finding, the three mutants were less tolerant than the wild type to a hydrogen peroxide treatment, whereas the overexpressors, RLK7Δkin and RLK7ΔLRR lines presented the opposite phenotype.  相似文献   

14.
Two monoclonal antibodies (ZUM 15 and ZUM 18) directed against carrot (Daucus carota L.) seed arabinogalactan proteins (AGPs) were used to isolate specific AGP fractions. For both carrot and tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum Mill.) seed AGPs analyzed by crossedelectrophoresis, the ZUM 15 and ZUM 18 AGP fractions showed one identical peak. However, the Rf values for the two species were different: 0.82 for carrot seed AGPs and 0.52 for tomato seed AGPs. When the fractionated AGPs (carrot or tomato) were added to carrot cell lines they had a dramatic effect on the culture. One AGP fraction (ZUM 15 AGPs) was able to induce vacuolation of embryogenic cells. Those cells failed to produce embryos. The other AGP fraction (ZUM 18 AGPs) increased the percentage of embryognic cells from about 40% up to 80% within one week and this subsequently resulted in the formation of more embryos on hormone-free medium. This activity was higher than that of unfractionated carrot seed AGPs, while the optimum concentration was 50-fold lower. Since both ZUM 18 AGPs (carrot or tomato) yielded identical responses it can be concluded that neither the Rf value nor the source are essential for biological activity. The dose-response curve of ZUM 18 AGPs showed a sharp optimum. When the AGPs that also bound to the antibody ZUM 15 were removed, the dose-response curve of the remaining AGPs (containing only the ZUM 18 epitope, not the ZUM 15 epitope) resembled a saturation curve. Regardless of its concentration, the fraction in which AGP molecules contained both epitopes showed no appreciable embryogenesis-promoting activity. The biological activity of AGPs was therefore determined by the presence of embryogenesis-enhancing and-inhibiting epitopes. The inhibiting and enhancing epitopes can be located on separate molecules or one single AGP molecule.  相似文献   

15.
16.
17.
Phytocyanins (PCs) are a plant-specific family of small copper-containing electron transfer proteins. PCs may bind with a single copper atom to function as electron transporters in various biological systems, such as copper trafficking and plant photosynthesis. Evidence indicates that PCs may also be involved in plant developmental processes and stress responses. Many PCs possess arabinogalactan protein-like regions and are therefore termed chimeric arabinogalactan proteins (CAGPs). Previously, 38 and 62 PC genes have been identified in Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) and rice (Oryza sativa), respectively. The recent release of the Chinese cabbage genome (B. rapa ssp. Pekinensis line Chiifu-401-42) enabled us to perform a genome-wide identification and analysis. In this study we identified 84 putative PC genes in the B. rapa genome. All of the Brassica rapa phytocyanins (BrPCs) described here could be divided, based on motif constitution, into the following three main subclasses: 52 early nodulin-like proteins (ENODLs), 16 uclacyanin-like proteins (UCLs), and 11 stellacyanin-like proteins (SCLs). A structural analysis predicted that 71 BrPCs contained N-terminal secretion signals and 45 BrPCs may be glycosylphosphatidylinositol-anchored to the plasma membrane. Glycosylation prediction revealed that 48 BrPCs were CAGPs with putative arabinogalactan glycomodules, and 57 BrPCs had N-glycosylation sites. Additionally, gene duplication analysis demonstrated that almost all of the duplicated BrPC genes shared the same conserved collinear blocks and that segmental duplications play an important role in the diversification of this gene family. Surprisingly, all BrUCL genes were duplicated except for BrUCL16. Expression analyses indicated that BrENODL22/27 and BrSCL8/9 were highly expressed in reproductive organs; BrUCL6/16 was strongly expressed in roots and even more strongly expressed in stems. The genome-wide identification, classification and expression analysis of BrPCs will provide a fundamental basis for the evolution and modification of the gene family after a polyploidy event and enable the functional study of PC genes in a polyploid crop species.  相似文献   

18.
19.
20.
A total of 88 new Arabidopsis lines with trichome variation were recovered by screening 49,200 single‐seed descent T3 lines from the SK activation‐tagged population and from a new 20,000‐line T‐DNA insertion population (called pAG). Trichome variant lines were classified into 12 distinct phenotype categories. Single or multiple T‐DNA insertion sites were identified for 89% of these mutant lines. Alleles of the well‐known trichome genes TRY, GL2 and TTG1 were recovered with atypical phenotype variation not reported previously. Moreover, atypical gene expression profiles were documented for two additional mutants specifying TRY and GL2 disruptions. In remaining mutants, ten lines were disrupted in genes coding for proteins not implicated in trichome development, five were disrupted in hypothetical proteins and 11 were disrupted in proteins with unknown function. The collection represents new opportunities for the plant biology community to define trichome development more precisely and to refine the function of individual trichome genes.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号