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1.
Previous work suggested that the aspartic proteinase from Hordeum vulgare (HvAP) would be a vacuolar protein in plant cells. Based on N-terminal sequencing we show that the in vitro-translated protein was translocated into the lumen of microsomal membranes, causing a concomitant removal of 25 amino acid residues from the protein. Vacuoles were purified from barley leaf protoplasts and were shown to contain all of the aspartic proteinase activity found in the protoplasts. This vacuolar localization of HvAP was confirmed with immunocytochemical electron microscopy using antibodies to HvAP in both barley leaf and root cells. In an attempt to discern a function for this protease, we investigated the ability of HvAP to process the C-terminal proregion of barley lectin (BL) in vitro. Prolectin (proBL), expressed in bacteria, was processed rapidly when HvAP was added. Using several means, we were able to determine that 13 amino acid residues at the C terminus of proBL were cleaved off, whereas the N terminus stayed intact during this incubation. Immunohistochemical electron microscopy showed that HvAP and BL are co-localized in the root cells of developing embryos and germinating seedlings. Thus, we propose that the vacuolar HvAP participates in processing the C terminus of BL.  相似文献   

2.
SJ Swanson  PC Bethke    RL Jones 《The Plant cell》1998,10(5):685-698
Light microscopy was used to study the structure and function of vacuoles in living protoplasts of barley (Hordeum vulgare cv Himalaya) aleurone. Light microscopy showed that aleurone protoplasts contain two distinct types of vacuole: the protein storage vacuole and a lysosome-like organelle, which we have called the secondary vacuole. Fluorescence microscopy using pH-sensitive fluorescent probes and a fluorogenic substrate for cysteine proteases showed that both protein storage vacuoles and secondary vacuoles are acidic, lytic organelles. Ratio imaging showed that the pH of secondary vacuoles was lower in aleurone protoplasts incubated in gibberellic acid than in those incubated in abscisic acid. Uptake of fluorescent probes into intact, isolated protein storage vacuoles and secondary vacuoles required ATP and occurred via at least two types of vanadate-sensitive, ATP-dependent tonoplast transporters. One transporter catalyzed the accumulation of glutathione-conjugated probes, and another transported probes not conjugated to glutathione.  相似文献   

3.
High pressure freezing and freeze substitution (HPF-FS) were used to prepare barley ( Hordeum vulgare L. cv Himalaya) aleurone protoplasts for transmission electron microscopy (TEM). We show that HPF-FS is superior to conventional chemical fixation and dehydration techniques for the preservation of cellular fine structure and antigenicity of proteins in barley aleurone protoplasts. HPF-FS extracted fewer proteins from the cytosol and organelles of aleurone protoplasts and maintained the details of cellular structure. The cortical cytoskeleton, made up of microtubules, was observed for the first time by TEM in barley aleurone protoplasts prepared by HPF-FS. Organelles such as protein storage vacuoles retained their proteinaceous contents, and other cellular organelles (including the Golgi apparatus, the nucleus and mitochondria) were also well preserved in protoplasts fixed by HPF-FS. Antibodies to the vacuolar enzyme nuclease I, the tonoplast aquaporin α-TIP and the glyoxysomal enzyme malate synthase showed that the antigenicity of organellar enzymes and membrane proteins was preserved in cells prepared by HPF-FS. We conclude that HPF-FS is superior to chemical fixation for the preparation of plant protoplasts for TEM and is the method of choice for the preservation of aleurone protoplasts for structural and immunochemical studies.  相似文献   

4.
Resting seeds of several plant species, including barley grains, have been reported to contain aspartic proteinase (EC 3.4.23) activity. Here, the expression of the Hordeum vulgare L. aspartic proteinase (HvAP) was studied in developing and germinating grains by activity measurements as well as by immunocytochemical and in-situ hybridization techniques. Southern blotting suggests the presence of one to two HvAP-encoding genes in the barley genome, while Northern analysis reveals a single 2.1-kb mRNA in grains and vegetative tissues. Western blotting with antibodies to HvAP shows the same subunit structure in different grain parts. In developing grains, HvAP is produced in the embryo, aleurone layer, testa and pericarp, but in the starchy endosperm HvAP is present only in the crushed and depleted area adjacent to the scutellum. During seed maturation, HvAP-encoding mRNA remains in the aleurone layer and in the embryo, but the enzyme disappears from the aleurone cells. The enzyme, however, remains in the degenerating tissues of the testa and pericarp as well as in resting embryo and scutellum. During the first three days of germination, the enzyme reappears in the aleurone layer cells but is not secreted into the starchy endosperm. The HvAP is also expressed in the flowers, stem, leaves, and roots of barley. The wide localization of HvAP in diverse tissues suggests that it may have several functions appropriate to the needs of different tissues.Abbreviations DAA days after anthesis - DTT dithiothreitol - HvAP Hordeum vulgare aspartic proteinase Both authors have contributed equally to this workWe thank Mart Saarma, Pia Runeberg-Roos, Alan Schulman and Yrjö Helariutta for helpful discussions during the study, Tiina Arna and Sari Makkonen for their help in proteinase activity experiments as well as Jaana Korhonen (Department of Pathology, University of Helsinki), Salla Marttila and Ilkka Porali (Department of Biology, University of Jyväskylä, Jyväskylä, Finland) for their advice on microscopical techniques. We also thank Liisa Pyhälä and Leena Liesirova for the production of the antibodies to HvAP at the National Public Health Institute, Helsinki. This study was supported by grants from the Ministry of Agriculture and Forestry and the Academy of Finland.  相似文献   

5.
Gene expression in the aleurone and endosperm is highly regulated during both seed development and germination. Studies of alpha-amylase expression in the aleurone of barley (Hordeum vulgare) have generated the current paradigm for hormonal control of gene expression in germinating cereal grain. Gene expression studies in both the aleurone and endosperm tissues of maize (Zea mays) seed have been hampered because of a lack of an efficient transformation system. We report here the rapid isolation of protoplasts from maize aleurone and endosperm tissue, their transformation using polyethylene glycol or electroporation, and the regulation of gene expression in these cells. Adh1 promoter activity was reduced relative to the 35S promoter in aleurone and endosperm protoplasts compared to Black Mexican Sweet suspension cells in which it was nearly as strong as the 35S promoter. Intron-mediated stimulation of expression was substantially higher in transformed aleurone or endosperm protoplasts than in cell-suspension culture protoplasts, and the data suggest that the effect of an intron may be affected by cell type. To examine cytoplasmic regulation, the 5' and 3' untranslated regions from a barley alpha-amylase were fused to the firefly luciferase-coding region, and their effect on translation and mRNA stability was examined following the delivery of in vitro synthesized mRNA to aleurone and endosperm protoplasts. The alpha-amylase untranslated regions regulated translational efficiency in a tissue-specific manner, increasing translation in aleurone or endosperm protoplasts but not in maize or carrot cell-suspension protoplasts, in animal cells, or in in vitro translation lysates.  相似文献   

6.
Summary Protoplasts isolated from the aleurone have been used extensively in molecular studies focusing on hormone-mediated regulation of gene expression in barley seed. To extend the use of aleurone protoplasts to other species, we have determined the conditions necessary for the isolation of protoplasts from rice aleurone layers of germinated seed. Many of the common cell wall degrading enzymes used in making protoplasts were tested for their ability to release protoplasts from rice aleurone layers. Cellulysin was found to be the most effective. Transformation of these aleurone protoplasts was accomplished using polyethylene glycol and DNA constructs containing the firefly luciferase reporter gene under the control of two different promoters were tested. Luciferase expression was 24-fold greater when the reporter gene was under the control of the CaMV 35S promoter than when the promoter from the alcohol dehydrogenase 1 gene was used. With the isolation and transformation of aleurone protoplasts from rice, it is now possible to investigate molecular events occurring in this tissue during germination.  相似文献   

7.
The age of the stock plants was important for the barley ( Hordeum vulgare L. cv. Perth) protoplast viability. Light conditions under which the stock plants were grown also affected the viability of the protoplasts. Greenhouse-grown plants yielded much higher number of protoplasts than dark-grown plants, but protoplast viability was better when protoplasts were isolated from etiolated plants. Light supplied during protoplast culture affected protoplast viability within the first 24 h of culture. Cellulase R-10 (Onozuka) was better than Cellulysin (Calbiochem) and Cellulase + Macerozyme R-10 (Onozuka) for barley mesophyll protoplast isolation. Cellulase R-10 (Onozuka) was fractionated on a G-75 Sephadex column. The eluted fractions were tested for their ability to release barley mesophyll protoplasts and for their toxicity towards the protoplasts. Only a small part of the Cellulase R-10 was necessary for protoplast isolation from barley leaves. When the fractionated cellulase was analysed by isoelectric focusing, this part of the cellolase appeared as a single band.  相似文献   

8.
Gilroy S  Jones RL 《Plant physiology》1994,104(4):1185-1192
The response of protoplasts isolated from aleurone layers of barley (Hordeum vulgare L. cv Himalaya) to internally and externally applied hormone was analyzed to localize the site of perception of the hormonal signal. Protoplasts responded to externally applied gibberellic acid (GA3) with increased synthesis and secretion of [alpha]-amylase, transient expression of the glucuronidase reporter gene fused to the hormone-responsive elements of the [alpha]-amylase promoter, and the vacuolation typical of GA3-treated aleurone cells. When up to 250 [mu]M GA3 was microinjected into the protoplast cytoplasm, none of these responses were observed. This did not reflect damage to the protoplasts during the microinjection procedure, since microinjected protoplasts remained responsive to externally applied hormone. Nor did it reflect loss of microinjected GA3 from the protoplast, since 50% of microinjected [3H]GA20 was retained by protoplasts for at least 24 h. Externally applied abscisic acid (ABA) could reverse the stimulation of [alpha]-amylase synthesis and secretion, whereas microinjecting up to 250 [mu]M ABA was ineffective at antagonizing the stimulatory effect of GA3. These results suggest that the site of perception of GA3 and ABA in the barley aleurone protoplast is on the external face of the plasma membrane.  相似文献   

9.
A cathepsin D-like aspartic proteinase (EC 3.4.23) is abundant in ungerminated barley ( Hordeum vulgare ) seed while a 30 kDa cysteine endoproteinase (EC 3.4.22) is one of the proteinases synthesized de novo in the germinating seed. In this work, the localization of these two acid proteinases was studied at both the tissue and subcellular levels by immunomicroscopy. The results confirm that they have completely different functions. The aspartic proteinase was present in the ungerminated seed and, during germination, it appeared in all the living tissues of the grain, including the shoot and root. Contrary to previous suggestions, it was not observed in the starchy endosperm. By immunoblotting, the high molecular mass form of the enzyme (32 + 16 kDa) was found in all the living tissues, whereas the low molecular mass form (29 + 11 kDa) was not present in the shoot or root, indicating that the two enzyme forms have different physiological roles. The aspartic proteinase was localized first in the scutellar protein bodies of germinating seed, and later in the vacuoles which are formed by fusion of the protein bodies. In contrast to the aspartic proteinase, the expression of the 30 kDa cysteine proteinase began during the first germination day, and it was secreted into the starchy endosperm; first from the scutellum and later from the aleurone layer. It was not found in either shoots or roots. The 30 kDa cysteine proteinase was detected in the Golgi apparatus and in the putative secretory vesicles of the scutellar epithelium. These results suggest that the aspartic proteinase functions only in the living tissues of the grain, as opposed to the 30 kDa cysteine proteinase which is apparently one of the proteases initiating the hydrolysis of storage proteins in the starchy endosperm.  相似文献   

10.
Methods have been developed for the isolation of aleurone protoplasts from developing caryopses of Hordeum vulgare and Triticum aestivum in order to study transient expression of introduced genes. Chimaeric gene constructs were introduced into aleurone protoplasts by polyethylene glycol (PEG). Transient expression directed by the 35S promoter from cauliflower mosaic virus (CaMV) of the reporter gene encoding chloramphenicol acetyl transferase (CAT) was detected in aleurone protoplasts from developing barley and wheat grains. Using a similar construct, CAT activity increased when the alcohol dehydrogenase intron 1 fragment from maize was ligated between the 35S promoter and the CAT coding region. The demonstration of transient expression in protoplasts from developing aleurone layers indicates that they may be useful for investigating tissue and developmental control of genes coding for cereal seed proteins.  相似文献   

11.
Programmed cell death in cereal aleurone   总被引:21,自引:0,他引:21  
Progress in understanding programmed cell death (PCD) in the cereal aleurone is described. Cereal aleurone cells are specialized endosperm cells that function to synthesize and secrete hydrolytic enzymes that break down reserves in the starchy endosperm. Unlike the cells of the starchy endosperm, aleurone cells are viable in mature grain but undergo PCD when germination is triggered or when isolated aleurone layers or protoplasts are incubated in gibberellic acid (GA). Abscisic acid (ABA) slows down the process of aleurone cell death and isolated aleurone protoplasts can be kept alive in media containing ABA for up to 6 months. Cell death in barley aleurone occurs only after cells become highly vacuolated and is manifested in an abrupt loss of plasma membrane integrity. Aleurone cell death does not follow the apoptotic pathway found in many animal cells. The hallmarks of apoptosis, including internucleosomal DNA cleavage, plasma membrane and nuclear blebbing and formation of apoptotic bodies, are not observed in dying aleurone cells. PCD in barley aleurone cells is accompanied by the accumulation of a spectrum of nuclease and protease activities and the loss of organelles as a result of cellular autolysis.  相似文献   

12.
Barley aleurone layers synthesize and secrete several proteases in response to gibberellic acid (GA3). Two major cysteine proteinases designated EP-A (37,000 M(r)) and EP-B (30,000 M(r)) have been described [Koehler and Ho (1988). Plant Physiol. 87, 95-103]. We now report the cDNA cloning of EP-B and describe the post-translational processing and hormonal regulation of both cysteine proteinases. Three cDNAs for cysteine proteinases were cloned from GA3-induced barley aleurone layers. Genomic DNA gel blot analysis indicated that these are members of a small gene family with no more than four to five different genes. The proteins encoded by two of these clones, pHVEP1 and 4, are 98% similar to each other and are isozymes of EP-B. The proteins contain large preprosequences followed by the amino acid sequence described as the mature N terminus of purified EP-B, and are antigenic to EP-B antiserum. The results of pulse-chase experiments indicated that the post-translational processing of large prosequences proceeds in a multistep fashion to produce the mature enzymes. Processing intermediates for EP-B are observed both in the aleurone layers and surrounding incubation medium, but only mature EP-A is secreted. The regulation of synthesis of EP-A, EP-B, and other aleurone cysteine proteinases was compared at the protein and mRNA levels. We conclude that barley aleurone cysteine proteinases are differentially regulated with respect to their temporal and hormonally induced expression.  相似文献   

13.
The occurrence and roles of cGMP were investigated in aleurone layers and protoplasts isolated from barley (cv Himalaya) grain. Levels of cGMP in freshly isolated barley aleurone layers ranged from 0.065 to 0.08 pmol/g fresh weight of tissue, and cGMP levels increased transiently after incubation in gibberellic acid (GA). Abscisic acid (ABA) did not increase cGMP levels in aleurone layers. LY 83583 (LY), an inhibitor of guanylyl cyclase, prevented the GA-induced increase in cGMP and inhibited GA-induced [alpha]-amylase synthesis and secretion. The inhibitory effects of LY could be overcome by membrane-permeant analogs of cGMP. LY also prevented GA-induced accumulation of [alpha]-amylase and GAMYB mRNAs. cGMP alone was not sufficient to induce the accumulation of [alpha]-amylase or GAMYB mRNA. LY had a less dramatic effect on the accumulation of mRNAs encoding the ABA-responsive gene Rab21. We conclude that cGMP plays an important role in GA, but not ABA, signaling in the barley aleurone cell.  相似文献   

14.
Summary A procedure has been developed to isolate protoplasts from mature aleurone layers of the malting variety Alexis and four other barley genotypes. It combines induction of endogenous cell wall degrading enzymes together with use of Onuzuka cellulase R 10 and driselase and results in better yields for two varieties than can be obtained with the huskless variety Himalaya. The viability of the freshly isolated protoplasts is greater than 90% and in spite of the presence of gibberellic acid during isolation procedures, most of the protoplasts are at an early developmental stage, as judged by ultrastructure. Gibberellic acid-induced changes in protoplast structure resemble those reported for Himalaya protoplasts. The protoplasts secrete both -amylase (EC 3.2.1.1) and (1-3, 1-4)--glucanase (EC 3.2.1.73) into the surrounding medium. Transfection studies using a low pI -amylase promoter to direct chloramphenicol acetyltransferase expression in aleurone protoplasts from Alexis and Himalaya revealed significant differences in their hormone responsiveness. In the absence of hormones, low levels of expression of the reporter enzyme were obtained in Alexis protoplasts, while high levels were characteristic for Himalaya protoplasts. An 8-fold increase in the expression of the reporter gene was induced by supplying the transfected Alexis protoplasts with gibberellin A3, whereas expression in Himalaya protoplasts remained unchanged. When Himalaya protoplasts were isolated from aleurone layers that had not been incubated with GA3 during the initial stages of protoplasting (the classical procedure), the hormone response of the promoter was 2.5-fold. It is thus possible to optimize the aleurone protoplast isolation procedure for different barley genotypes and mutants of interest in studies of transgenic gene expression and hormone induced secretion of proteins from this unique secretory plant tissue.Abbreviations ABA abscisic acid - APIM aleurone protoplast isolation medium - CAT chloramphenicol acetyltransferase - EDTA ethylenediamine tetraacetic acid - ER endoplasmic reticulum - GA3 gibberellin A3 - IgG immunoglobulin G - MES 2-(N-morpholino)-ethanesulfonic acid - PAGE polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis - PEG polyethylene glycol - pI isoelectric point - PIPES piperazine N,N-bis-(diethanesulfonic acid) - SDS sodium dodecyl sulfate  相似文献   

15.
16.
Zeins, the prolamin storage proteins found in maize (Zea mays), accumulate in accretions called protein bodies inside the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) of starchy endosperm cells. We found that genes encoding zeins, α-globulin, and legumin-1 are transcribed not only in the starchy endosperm but also in aleurone cells. Unlike the starchy endosperm, aleurone cells accumulate these storage proteins inside protein storage vacuoles (PSVs) instead of the ER. Aleurone PSVs contain zein-rich protein inclusions, a matrix, and a large system of intravacuolar membranes. After being assembled in the ER, zeins are delivered to the aleurone PSVs in atypical prevacuolar compartments that seem to arise at least partially by autophagy and consist of multilayered membranes and engulfed cytoplasmic material. The zein-containing prevacuolar compartments are neither surrounded by a double membrane nor decorated by AUTOPHAGY RELATED8 protein, suggesting that they are not typical autophagosomes. The PSV matrix contains glycoproteins that are trafficked through a Golgi-multivesicular body (MVB) pathway. MVBs likely fuse with the multilayered, autophagic compartments before merging with the PSV. The presence of similar PSVs also containing prolamins and large systems of intravacuolar membranes in wheat (Triticum aestivum) and barley (Hordeum vulgare) starchy endosperm suggests that this trafficking mechanism may be common among cereals.  相似文献   

17.
The barley aleurone layer is a terminally differentiated secretory tissue whose activity is hormonally controlled. The plant hormone gibberellic acid (GA) stimulates the secretion of hydrolytic enzymes and triggers the onset of programmed cell death (PCD). Abscisic acid (ABA) antagonizes the effects of GA and inhibits enzyme secretion and PCD. Reactive oxygen species (ROS) are key players in many types of PCD, and data presented here implicate ROS in hormonally regulated death of barley aleurone cells. Incubation of aleurone layers or protoplasts in H(2)O(2)-containing media results in death of GA-treated but not ABA-treated aleurone cells. Cells that are programmed to die are therefore less able to withstand ROS than cells that are programmed to remain alive. Illumination of barley aleurone protoplasts with blue or UV-A light results in a rapid increase in intracellular H(2)O(2) production. GA-treated protoplasts die rapidly in response to this increase in intracellular H(2)O(2) production, but ABA-treated protoplasts do not die. The rate of light-induced death could be slowed by antioxidants, and incubating protoplasts in the dark with the antioxidant butylated hydroxy toluene reduces the rate of hormonally induced death. Taken together, these data demonstrate that GA-treated aleurone protoplasts are less able than ABA-treated protoplasts to tolerate internally generated or exogenously applied H(2)O(2), and strongly suggest that ROS are components of the hormonally regulated cell death pathway in barley aleurone cells.  相似文献   

18.
Barley aleurone cells undergo programmed cell death (PCD) when exposed to gibberellic acid (GA), but incubation in abscisic acid (ABA) prevent PCD. We tested the hypothesis that PCD in aleurone cells occurs by apoptosis, and show that the hallmark of apoptosis, namely DNA cleavage into 180 bp fragments, plasma membrane blebbing, and the formation of apoptotic bodies do not occur when aleurone cells die. We show that endogenous barley aleurone nucleases and nucleases present in enzymes used for protoplast preparation degrade aleurone DNA and that DNA degradation by these nucleases is rapid and can result in the formation of 180 bp DNA ladders. Methods are described that prevent DNA degradation during isolation from aleurone layers or protoplasts. Barley aleurone cells contain three nucleases whose activities are regulated by GA and ABA. CA induction and ABA repression of nuclease activities correlate with PCD in aleurone cells. Cells incubated in ABA remain alive and do not degrade their DNA, but living aleurone cells treated with GA accumulate nucleases and hydrolyze their nuclear DNA. We propose that barley nucleases play a role in DNA cleavage during aleurone PCD.  相似文献   

19.
Protein storage vacuoles (PSVs) within barley ( Hordeum vulgare ) aleurone cells contain abundant K, Ca, Mg and P reserves. These minerals are transported from the PSV and are used to support growth of the embryo. In this study, the regulation of transport through slow-vacuolar (SV) ion channels in the tonoplast of barley aleurone PSVs was examined using the patch—clamp technique. Okadaic acid (OA), an inhibitor of protein phosphatase types 1 and 2A, reduced whole-vacuole SV currents by 60%. This inhibition by OA was overcome by exogenous calcineurin. Adding ATP (200 µM) to the bath solution as a substrate for kinase activity decreased SV channel activity by 70%. This reduction in activity was prevented by the kinase inhibitor H-7. From these data, it is concluded that protein phosphorylation can inhibit SV channel activity, and that both the protein kinase and protein phosphatase involved in this regulation are present at the PSV tonoplast. Whole-vacuolar SV currents were significantly higher when 2 mM ATP was used to bathe PSVs than with 200 µM ATP. Calmodulin-like domain protein kinase (CDPK) at either ATP concentration increased SV channel activity by ∼ 150%, implying that protein phosphorylation can also stimulate SV channel activity. When PSVs were treated with the ATP analog AMP-PNP, SV channel activity was not reduced. Hence, ATP hydrolysis is not essential for sustained SV channel activity. A model in which SV channel activity is regulated by protein phosphorylation at two sites is presented.  相似文献   

20.
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