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1.
Hydroxyproline-rich glycoproteins (HRGPs) are important plant cell wall structural components, which are also involved in response to pathogen attack. In pearl millet, deposition and cross-linking of HRGPs in plant cell walls was shown to contribute to the formation of resistance barriers against the phytopathogenic oomycete Sclerospora graminicola. In the present study, the purification and characterization of HRGPs that accumulated in coleoptiles of pearl millet seedlings in response to S. graminicola inoculation has been carried out. Periodic acid Schiff's staining revealed that the purified protein was a glycoprotein. The protein to carbohydrate ratio was determined to be 95.5%:4.5% (w/w). Proline amounted for 20 mol% of the total amino acids as indicated by amino acid composition analysis. The isolated protein had a pI of 9.8 and was shown to be composed of subunits of 27, 17, and 14 kDa. Cross reactivity with the monoclonal antibody MAC 265 and the presence of the signature amino acid sequence, PVYK, strongly suggested to classify the purified glycoprotein as a member of the P/HRGPs class. In the presence of horseradish peroxidase and H2O2 the purified glycoprotein served as a substrate for oxidative cross-linking processes.  相似文献   

2.
The Hrgp (hydroxyproline-rich glycoprotein) gene codes in maize for one of the most abundant proteins of the cell wall. HRGPs may contribute to the structural support of the wall and they have also been involved in plant defense mechanisms. This second aspect has been tested for the Hrgp gene in maize where, in contrast with the situation in dicot species, the gene is encoded by a single-copy sequence. Hrgp mRNA accumulation is induced in maize suspension-cultured cells by elicitors, isolated either from maize pathogenic or non-pathogenic fungi. The induction of Hrgp mRNA accumulation by elicitor extracted from Fusarium moniliforme has been studied in detail. The level of induction depends on elicitor concentration and remains high until at least 24 h. Ethylene and protein phosphorylation appear to be involved in the transduction pathway of Hrgp gene activation by the F. moniliforme elicitor but not by 5 µM methyl jasmonate or 1 mM salycilic acid. Different compounds known to participate in plant stress responses such as ascorbic acid or reduced glutathione have also a positive effect on Hrgp mRNA accumulation.  相似文献   

3.
A galactose-rich, cell-wall glycoprotein from styles of Nicotiana alata   总被引:4,自引:1,他引:3  
A basic, galactose-rich style glycoprotein (GaRSGP) encoded by a previously characterized style-specific cDNA (NaPRP4) has been isolated from the styles of Nicotiana alata and structurally characterized. The glycoprotein is associated with cell walls in the transmitting tract and is composed of approximately 25% (w/w) protein and 75% (w/w) carbohydrate. The purified glycoprotein appears as a smear of between 45–120 kDa on SDS—PAGE; the deglycosylated protein backbone has an apparent molecular weight of approximately 30 kDa. The glycoprotein is rich in the amino acids lysine, proline, and hydroxyproline and in the monosaccharides galactose and arabinose. It is one of only a few proline/hydroxyproline-rich glycoproteins (P/HRGPs) to be characterized both as a cDNA-clone and protein. Glycans are attached to the protein backbone through both O - and N -glycosidic linkages with the majority of the carbohydrate being O -linked and consisting of short, highly branched chains terminating primarily in galactose residues. A carbohydrate epitope(s) is found on both GaRSGP and another style-specific glycoprotein but not on glycoproteins from other tissues. This finding provides further evidence for the existence of a style-specific carbohydrate epitope(s) which may play a role in style function.  相似文献   

4.
The insoluble extensin matrix of dicot cell walls has been studied most fruitfully by examining the salt-extractable precursors to this matrix. Multiple extensin-like hydroxyproline-rich glycoproteins (HRGPs) have been isolated, or their existence inferred, from tomato, potato, bean, soybean, melon, carrot, and other plants. We and others previously have studied a carrot extensin which we call extensin-1. Here we report on the properties of extensin-2, a second salt-extractable hydroxyproline-rich glycoprotein from carrot. Like extensin-1, extensin-2 contains large amounts of hydroxyproline, serine, histidine, and lysine. In contrast, its tyrosine content is only about one-third that of extensin-1. Arabinose and galactose are the most abundant neutral sugars in both proteins, and nearly identical buoyant densities in CsCl suggest a similar proportion of carbohydrate in each. The size of extensin-2 is about half the size of extensin-1 based on: (a) the measured lengths of shadowed molecules (about 40 versus 84 nanometers); (b) the migration of extensin-2 in acid-urea gels relative to monomers, dimers, and trimers of extensin-1; and (c) the Stokes' radii of these molecules as determined by gel filtration chromatography. Electron microscopy of shadowed extensin-2 molecules indicates that they contain kinks, which may indicate the presence of intramolecular isodityrosine cross-links, but intermolecular cross-links, either with other extensin-2 molecules or extensin-1 molecules, are observed rarely if ever.  相似文献   

5.
Zhu F  Isaacs NW  Hecht L  Tranter GE  Barron LD 《Chirality》2006,18(2):103-115
On account of its sensitivity to chirality, Raman optical activity (ROA), which may be measured as a small difference in the intensity of vibrational Raman scattering from chiral molecules in right- and left-circularly polarized incident light, or as the intensity of a small circularly polarized component in the scattered light, is a powerful probe of the structure of biomolecules. Protein ROA spectra provide information on secondary and tertiary structures of polypeptide backbones, backbone hydration and side-chain conformations, and on structural elements present in unfolded states. Carbohydrate ROA spectra provide information on the central features of carbohydrate stereochemistry, especially that of the glycosidic link. Glycoprotein ROA spectra provide information on both the polypeptide and carbohydrate components. This article describes the ROA technique and presents and discusses the ROA spectra of a selection of proteins, carbohydrates, and a glycoprotein. The many structure-sensitive bands in protein ROA spectra are favorable for applying pattern recognition techniques, illustrated here using nonlinear mapping, to determine structural relationships between different proteins.  相似文献   

6.
A glycoprotein extract prepared from the plasma membranes of L1210 cells was passed over columns of Sepharose 4B to which either heat-aggregated human IgG or F(ab′)2 fragments had been coupled. The intact IgG column bound 35.7% of the applied counts, whereas the F(ab′)2 columns bound 2.8%. The bound glycoproteins were eluted with citrate buffer (pH 3.2) and analyzed by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Three peaks with apparent molecular weights of 65,000, 45,000, and 28,000 daltons were identified and purified by electroelution from polyacrylamide gels. The isolated proteins were able to bind to the same subclasses of mouse IgG myeloma proteins as the intact L1210 cells, indicating that these molecules are related to L1210 surface Fc receptors. Amino acid analyses of the 3 proteins were markedly similar suggesting that the observed molecular heterogeneity might be due to carbohydrate differences. Neuraminidase digestion of the isolated proteins resulted in mobility shifts on polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis which were consistent with the interpretation that either the isolated proteins have considerably different sialic acid contents, or that removal of the sialic acid results in disaggregation of an Fc receptor molecule.  相似文献   

7.
Plasma membrane proteins and glycoproteins have been isolated from Chinese hamster cells of the spontaneously transformed DC-3F parental cell line and the DC-3F/AD X line with a high level of acquired resistance to actinomycin D. Plasma membrane preparations from both cell lines band at 1.16 g/ml after isopycnic centrifugation. We present evidence to indicate differences in the leucylpeptide backbones of the antibiotic-sensitive cells and the drug-resistant DC-3F/AD X cells. In addition, there are differences in the plasma membrane glycopeptides of the two cell lines as revealed by sodium dodecyl gel electrophoresis. Drug-resistant cells synthesize a surface glycopeptide which is much larger than the major one present on the drug-sensitive cells. Both of these cell lines are devoid of 5′-nucleotidase and alkaline phosphatase activities. The role of plasma membrane protein differences in drug-resistant cells is discussed.  相似文献   

8.
We have isolated and characterized an antigen from normal human brain called p80, so called because it migrated with an Mr of 80 kDa on SDS PAGE. The Mr of 80 kDa consists of a protein of about 55-60 kDa and carbohydrate (20-25 kDa). The carbohydrate is almost entirely of the N-linked type, although a small amount of O-linked carbohydrate was detected. Cross-reactivity with monoclonal antibodies A3D8 and A1G3 showed that p80 could therefore be considered an isoform of the CD44 adhesion molecules. In addition, specific binding to hyaluronate which was not competed for by proteoglycan demonstrated that it involved different sites than the proteoglycan binding sites. We also observed that fucoidan and dextran sulphate increased the binding by 200-250% while chondroitin sulphate C also increased the binding but to a lesser extent. Heparin, heparan sulphate and chondroitin sulphates A and B did not have such an effect. The binding of p80 to hyaluronate was pH dependent with a maximum at pH 6.4. We concluded that p80 was an astrocyte specific adhesion molecule.  相似文献   

9.
This paper reports the isolation of cDNAs encoding the protein backbone of two arabinogalactan-proteins (AGPs), one from pear cell suspension cultures (AGP Pc 2) and the other from suspension cultures of Nicotiana alata (AGP Na 2). The proteins encoded by these cDNAs are quite different from the 'classical' AGP backbones described previously for AGPs isolated from pear suspension cultures and extracts of N. alata styles. The cDNA for AGP Pc 2 encodes a 294 amino acid protein, of which a relatively short stretch (35 amino acids) is Hyp/Pro rich; this stretch is flanked by sequences which are dominated by Asn residues. Asn residues are not a feature of the 'classical' AGP backbones in which Hyp/Pro, Ser, Ala and Thr account for most of the amino acids. The cDNA for AGP Na 2 encodes a 437 amino acid protein, which contains two distinct domains: one rich in Hyp/Pro, Ser, Ala, Thr and the other rich in Asn, Tyr and Ser. The composition and sequence of the Pro-rich domain resembles that of the 'classical' AGP backbone. The Asn-rich domains of the two cDNAs described have no sequence similarity; in both cases they are predicted to be processed to give a mature backbone with a composition similar to that of the 'classical' AGPs. The study shows that different AGPs can differ in the amino acid sequence in the protein backbone, as well as the composition and sequence of the arabinogalactan side-chains. It also shows that differential expression of genes encoding AGP protein backbones, as well as differential glycosylation, can contribute to the tissue specificity of AGPs.  相似文献   

10.
Enhanced deposition and cross-linking of hydroxyproline-rich glycoproteins (HRGPs) in the plant cell wall is acknowledged to contribute to the formation of a resistant barrier against pathogen infection. We have isolated, from suspension-cultured potato (Solanum tuberosum L. cv. Desiree) cells, two forms of soluble HRGP, a cross-linked and a monomeric form; the latter can be converted to the cross-linked form by incubation with tomato extensin peroxidase and H2O2. The monomeric form was purified by Sephacryl S-200 gel-filtration, reverse-phase high-performance liquid chromatography and Mono-S cation-exchange chromatography into two isoforms (A, a minor form; B, a major form). The properties of the B isoform were further investigated. A quantitative enzyme-linked immuno-sorbent assay of the B isoform, using tomato extensin antiserum, showed a titration curve at a high antibody-dilution range comparable to that of purified tomato extensin monomer (M.D. Brownleader and P.M. Dey, 1993, Planta 191: 457–469). The amino acid and carbohydrate compositions were similar to those of tomato extensin, but did not match well with the other two HRGPs from potato, potato lectin and potato bacterial agglutinin. These observations demonstrate the similarities of the B isoform to extensin. The homogeneity of the B isoform was demonstrated by its ability to be fully cross-linked in vitro, leaving no residual protein, into a high-molecular-weight form by the action of extensin peroxidase. The trifluoroacetic acid-deglycosylated sample migrated as a single protein band on sodium dodecyl sulphate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE). Moreover, SDS-PAGE and matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionisation-time of flight mass spectrometry indicated a molecular weight of approximately 67 kDa. Circular-dichroism spectroscopy demonstrated that the molecule possesses an extended polyproline II helix conformation with no evidence of α- helix or β- sheet secondary structure. In conclusion, we refer to this HRGP as potato extensin. As proposed for other extensins, potato extensin is likely to play a role in cell wall architecture and plant disease resistance. Received: 25 November 1996 / Accepted 13 January 1997  相似文献   

11.
Jürgen Voigt 《Planta》1988,173(3):373-384
Cell-wall glycoproteins of the unicellular green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardii have been purified from LiCl extracts of intact cells by gel exclusion chromatography and preparative sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Antibodies were raised against several polypeptide components isolated from the LiCl extracts. All these antibodies specifically reacted with the cell surface of formaldehyde-fixed cells. They showed cross-reactivity with the different antigens and were also reactive against some other polypeptides present in the LiCl extracts of intact wild-type cells as shown by double-diffusion assays and immunoblot analyses. These antigens were largely missing in LiCl extracts from the cell-wall-deficient mutant CW-15. The pattern of immunologically related cell-wall polypeptides of C. reinhardii varied during the vegetative cell cycle and was found to be also dependent on the growth conditions. Dot-immunobinding assays on chemically modified cell-wall glycoproteins demonstrated differences between the various antibodies with respect to their specificities. Differences were observed especially with respect to their reactivities against chemically deglycosylated cell-wall polypeptides. Chemical deglycosylation generally reduced the binding of the different antibodies indicating that all these antibodies recognize carbohydrate side chains. Only two of these antibody preparations, raised against cell-wall glycoproteins of relative molecular mass 35 and 150 kilodaltons, were found to be strongly reactive against deglycosylated cell-wall polypeptides. When these antibodies were saturated with cell-wall-derived glycopeptides in order to abolish the binding to carbohydrate side chains, they still recognized the same cell-wall polypeptides as did the untreated antibodies. These findings indicate that the cross-reactivity of the different cell-wall polypeptides with the antibodies is not exclusively the consequence of similar glycosylation patterns but is also the result of the presence of similar structures within the non-glycosylated stretches of the polypeptide backbones. Cell walls isolated from growing tobacco pollen tubes contained a single polypeptide component which showed crossreactivity with the antibodies to the cell-wall glycoproteins of C. reinhardii.Abbreviations BSA bovine serum albumin - IgG immunoglobulin G - kDa kilodalton - Mr relative molecular mass - PBS phosphate-buffered saline - SDS-PAGE sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis - Tris 2-amino-2-(hydroxymethyl)-1,3-propanediol  相似文献   

12.
13.
The accumulation of hydroxyproline-rich glycoproteins (HRGPs) in cell walls of dicotyledonous plants is thought to be involved in the defense response to pathogens. An antiserum raised against deglycosylated HRGPs from melon was used for studying the subcellular localization of these glycoproteins in susceptible and resistant tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum Mill.) root tissues infected by Fusarium oxysporum f.sp. radicis-lycopersici. A time-course of HRGP accumulation revealed that these glycoproteins increased earlier and to a higher extent in resistant than in susceptible cultivars. In the compatible interaction, increase in HRGPs was largely correlated with pathogen invasion and appeared to occur as a result of wall damage. In the incompatible interaction, HRGPs accumulated in the walls of uninvaded cells, thus indicating a possible role in the protection against fungal penetration. The occurrence of substantial amounts of HRGPs in papillae, known to be physical barriers formed in response to infection, and in intercellular spaces provides additional support to the concept that such glycoproteins play an important role in disease resistance.  相似文献   

14.
The interactions between tumor cells and laminin or other components of the extracellular matrix have been shown to play an important role in tumor invasion and metastasis. These interactions are mediated by different cell surface molecules, including the monomeric 67 kD laminin receptor. This molecule appears to be very peculiar since so far only a full-length gene encoding a 37 kD precursor protein has been isolated and the mechanism by which the precursor reaches the mature form is not understood. Based on clinical data, which clearly demonstrate the importance of the receptor in tumor progression, studies were conducted to define the structure, expression, and function of this laminin receptor as a step toward developing therapeutic strategies that target this molecule. The data suggest that acylation of the precursor is the key mechanism in maturation of the 67 kD form. The function of the membrane receptor is to stabilize the binding of laminin to cell surface integrins, acting as an integrin-accessory molecule, although homology of the gene encoding the receptor precursor with other genes suggests additional functions. Downregulation of the receptor expression on tumor cells might open new therapeutic approaches to decrease tumor aggressiveness. J. Cell. Biochem. 67:155–165, 1997. © 1997 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

15.
In an effort to understand the role of hydroxyproline-rich glycoproteins (HRGPs) in plant cell wall structure, we studied the distribution and physical properties of PC-1-like proteins (PC-1 being the major pericarp HRGP) throughout sporophytic tissues of two maize (Zea mays L.) varieties. We determined total amounts of hydroxyproline, an indicator of HRGPs, and did tissue print and Western blot analysis. We found hydroxyproline in cell walls of stems, leaves, roots, tassels, and silks. We also observed reactivity of anti-PC-1 monoclonal antibodies with anatomical prints of these tissues on nitrocellulose paper. Stem nodes and silks contained the most hydroxyproline and exhibited the strongest reaction with the antibody. PC-1 was localized in vascular bundles and the epidermis of stem tissue. However, localization to a specific cell type in the silk could not be determined at the resolution of the tissue print. The stem node protein had the same electrophoretic mobility as the pericarp protein as determined on Western blots prepared from cationic neutral gels. Protein extracts from silk tissues of both varieties studied contained one protein of the same size/charge as that found in pericarp, as well as some minor variant bands. The data presented here document that cell wall proteins are present in many tissues of the maize plant, although they are primarily in cell types contributing to support.  相似文献   

16.
Organic solvent extraction, reverse-phase high performance liquid chromatography and enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay with surface binding monoclonal antibodies were used to isolate membrane molecules of procyclic culture forms of Trypanosoma simiae and Trypanosoma congolense. Gel electrophoresis of the purified molecules revealed two predominant molecular species from each parasite that were broadly similar yet showed different apparent molecular masses and staining characteristics. The molecules were shown to be glycosylphosphatidylinositol-lipid anchored glycoconjugates, rich in carbohydrates. Each moiety displayed surface-disposed carbohydrate epitopes that were recognized on the surface of both species of trypanosomes by monoclonal antibodies specific for procyclic parasites of the subgenus Nannomonas. The epitopes were previously shown to be displayed on the glutamic acid-alanine rich protein of T. congolense yet neither this protein, nor its encoding gene is present in T. simiae. The results indicate that although T. congolense and T. simiae share common carbohydrate surface epitopes, these are displayed on biochemically different molecules. We speculate that the surface disposed carbohydrate structures are involved in parasite-tsetse interactions since these species have the same developmental cycles in the insect vector.  相似文献   

17.
Cell wall hydroxyproline-rich glycoproteins (HRGPs) and glycine-rich proteins (GRPs) were examined at the protein and at the mRNA levels in developing soybean tissues by tissue print immunoblots and RNA blots. In young soybean stems, HRGPs are expressed most heavily in cambium cells, in a few layers of cortex cells surrounding primary phloem, and in some parenchyma cells around the primary xylem, whereas GRPs are highly expressed in the primary xylem and also in the primary phloem. In older soybean stems, HRGP genes are expressed exclusively in cambium cells and GRP genes are most heavily expressed in newly differentiated secondary xylem cells. Similar expression patterns of HRGPs and of GRPs were found in soybean petioles, seedcoats, and young hypocotyls, and also in bean petioles and stems. HRGPs and GRPs become insolubilized in soybean stem cell walls. Three major HRGP mRNAs and two major GRP mRNAs accumulate in soybean stems. Soluble HRGPs are abundant in young hypocotyl apical regions and young root apical regions, whereas in hypocotyl and root mature regions, soluble HRGPs are found only in a few layers of cortex cells surrounding the vascular bundles. GRPs are specifically localized in primary xylem cell walls of young root. These results show that the gene expression of HRGPs and GRPs is developmentally regulated in a tissue-specific manner. In soybean tissues, HRGPs are most heavily expressed in meristematic cells and in some of those cells that may be under stress, whereas GRPs are expressed in all cells that are or are going to be lignified.  相似文献   

18.
Mucin glycoproteins in neoplasia   总被引:30,自引:0,他引:30  
Mucins are high molecular weight glycoproteins that are heavily glycosylated with many oligosaccharide side chains linked O-glycosidically to the protein backbone. With the recent application of molecular biological methods, the structures of apomucins and regulation of mucin genes are beginning to be understood. At least nine human mucin genes have been identified to date. Although a complete protein sequence is known for only three human mucins (MUC1, MUC2, and MUC7), common motifs have been identified in many mucins. The pattern of tissue and cell-specific expression of these mucin genes are emerging, suggesting a distinct role for each member of this diverse mucin gene family. In epithelial cancers, many of the phenotypic markers for pre-malignant and malignant cells have been found on the carbohydrate and peptide moieties of mucin glycoproteins. The expression of carbohydrate antigens appears to be due to modification of peripheral carbohydrate structures and the exposure of inner core region carbohydrates. The expression of some of the sialylated carbohydrate antigens appears to correlate with poor prognosis and increased metastatic potential in some cancers. The exposure of peptide backbone structures of mucin glycoproteins in malignancies appears to be due to abnormal glycosylation during biosynthesis. Dysregulation of tissue and cell-specific expression of mucin genes also occurs in epithelial cancers. At present, the role of mucin glycoproteins in various stages of epithelial cell carcinogenesis (including the preneoplastic state and metastasis), in cancer diagnosis and immunotherapy is under investigation.  相似文献   

19.
Glucoamylase and glucose oxidase fromAspergillus niger have been purified to homogeneity by chromatography on DEAE-cellulose and the purified enzymes have been used to investigate structural and antigenicity relationships. In structure, glucoamylase and glucose oxidase are glycoproteins containing 14% and 16% carbohydrate. Earlier methylation and reductive -elimination results have shown that glucoamylase has an unusual arrangement of carbohydrate residues, with 20 single mannose units and 25 di-, tri-, or tetrasaccharide chains of mannose, glucose, and galactose, all attached O-glycosidically to serine and threonine residues of the protein moiety. The antigenicity of the glucoamylase has now been found to reside predominantly in the types and arrangement of the carbohydrate chains. Glucose oxidase contains mannose, galactose, and glucosamine in the N-acetyl form in the native enzyme, but the complete structure of the carbohydrate chains has not yet been determined. The antigenicity of this enzyme does not reside in the carbohydrate units, but rather in the polypeptide chains of the two subunits of the enzyme. Glucose oxidase can be dissociated into subunits by mercaptoethanol and sodium dodecyl sulfate treatment, while glucoamylase cannot be dissociated, but undergoes only an unfolding of the polypeptide chain under these conditions. The subunits of glucose oxidase do not react with the anti-glucose oxidase antibodies, but the unfolded molecule and peptide fragments produced from glucoamylase by cyanogen bromide cleavage do react with antiglucoamylase antibodies.  相似文献   

20.
An increasing number of sequence-related, cysteine-rich membrane proteins containing metalloproteinase-like and disintegrin-like domains (the MDC protein family) have been identified in mammalian tissues. Here, we report the cloning and sequence analysis of cDNAs encoding several rat orthologues of this protein family, some of which are found to be expressed exclusively in the male reproductive tract, others exhibiting a broader tissue distribution. We also examine their expression in prepubertal and adult rat testis, which, in conjunction with the data on tissue distribution, form a necessary prelude to further studies aimed at establishing their individual functions. Mol. Reprod. Dev. 48:159–167, 1997. © 1997 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

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