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1.
Proteins antigenically similar to the acyl carrier protein (ACP) found in the mitochondria of Neurospora crassa were detected by immunoblotting and radioimmunoassay techniques in mitochondria isolated from yeast, potatoes, and pea leaves. These mitochondrial proteins were similar to Neurospora ACP both in their electrophoretic mobility and in their unusual decrease in mobility upon reduction. Authentic ACP(s) show this type of change upon conversion of the acylated to the unacylated form. Purified ACP from both spinach chloroplasts and Escherichia coli cells cross-reacted with antibodies raised against Neurospora ACP. Purified ACP from Neurospora cross-reacted with antibodies raised against spinach chloroplast ACP and E. coli ACP. Mitochondria isolated from beef heart and rat brain were tested extensively and exhibited no cross-reaction with any of the three anti-ACP preparations. The discovery of ACP in the mitochondria of other organisms raises questions concerning the possible relationship between ACP and beta-oxidation in mitochondria, the involvement of ACP in de novo biosynthesis of some of the acyl chains in mitochondria and the subcellular locations of fatty acid biosynthesis in plants and eucaryotic micro-organisms.  相似文献   

2.
We have cultivated the cel mutant of Neurospora crassa defective in cytosolic fatty acid synthesis with [2-14C]malonate and found radioactivity covalently attached to the mitochondrial acyl-carrier protein (ACP), a subunit of the respiratory chain NADH:ubiquinone oxidoreductase. We purified the ACP by reverse-phase HPLC: the bound acyl groups were trans-esterified to methylesters and analyzed by gas chromatography. The saturated C6 to C18 fatty acids and oleic acid were detected. De novo synthesis and desaturation of fatty acids at the ACP subunit of NADH:ubiquinone oxidoreductase and use of the products of this mitochondrial synthetic pathway for cardiolipin synthesis is discussed.  相似文献   

3.
The acyl carrier protein (ACP), an essential protein cofactor for fatty acid synthesis, has been isolated from two cyanobacteria: the filamentous, heterocystous, Anabaena variabilis (ATCC 29211) and the unicellular Synechocystis 6803 (ATCC 27184). Both ACPs have been purified to homogeneity utilizing a three-column procedure. Synechocystis 6803 ACP was purified 1800-fold with 67% yield, while A. variabilis ACP was purified 1040-fold with 50% yield. Yields of 13.0 micrograms ACP/g Synechocystis 6803 and 9.0 micrograms ACP/g A. variabilis were achieved. Amino acid analysis indicated that these ACPs were highly charged acidic proteins similar to other known ACPs. Sequence analysis revealed that both cyanobacterial ACPs were highly conserved with both spinach and Escherichia coli ACP at the phosphopantetheine prosthetic group region. Examining the probability of alpha-helix and beta-turn regions in various ACPs, showed that cyanobacterial ACPs were more closely related to E. coli ACP than spinach ACP I. Immunoblot analysis and a competitive binding assay for ACP illustrated that both ACPs bound poorly to spinach ACP I antibody. SDS/PAGE and native PAGE of Synechocystis 6803 ACP and A. variabilis ACP showed that cyanobacteria ACPs co-migrated with E. coli ACP and had relative molecular masses of 18,100 and 17,900 respectively. Both native and urea gel analysis of acyl-ACP products from fatty acid synthase reactions demonstrated that bacterial ACPs and plant ACP gave essentially the same metabolic products when assayed using either bacterial or plant fatty acid synthase. A. variabilis and Synechocystis 6803 ACP could be acylated using E. coli acyl ACP synthetase.  相似文献   

4.
The chloroplast genome of chromophytic and rhodophytic algae differs from the plastid genome of plants and green algae in that it encodes the gene for the small subunit (rbcS) of ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase. Hybridization studies indicated that there was a second region of chloroplast DNA from the marine diatom Cylindrotheca sp. strain N1 that strongly hybridized to a previously isolated Cylindrotheca fragment that contained the rbcS gene and flanking sequences. Subsequent determination of the oligonucleotide sequence of this second chloroplast DNA fragment, however, indicated that hybridization was due to identical sequences 3' to the previously cloned Cylindrotheca chloroplast rbcL rbcS genes. Sequences derived from the 5' end of the second chloroplast DNA fragment contained a short open reading frame of 80 amino acids which was found to be highly homologous to bacterial acyl carrier protein and nuclear-encoded acyl carrier protein from plants. Amino acid residues in the environment of Ser-36 of the Escherichia coli protein, which is bound to a 4'-phosphopantetheine moiety, are virtually identical in the Cylindrotheca deduced sequence and all other sources of this protein. Unlike plant acyl carrier-deduced amino acid sequences, there was no leader peptide sequence found for the presumptive Cylindrotheca protein, consistent with the location of this DNA fragment on the chloroplast genome of this organism. DNA encoding the putative acyl carrier protein gene and rbcS thus represent two genes that are chloroplast-encoded in the chromophytic marine diatom Cylindrotheca, a significant departure from the organization of such genes in plants.  相似文献   

5.
Pantothenate is the precursor of the essential cofactor coenzyme A (CoA). Pantothenate kinase (CoaA) catalyzes the first and regulatory step in the CoA biosynthetic pathway. The pantothenate analogs N-pentylpantothenamide and N-heptylpantothenamide possess antibiotic activity against Escherichia coli. Both compounds are substrates for E. coli CoaA and competitively inhibit the phosphorylation of pantothenate. The phosphorylated pantothenamides are further converted to CoA analogs, which were previously predicted to act as inhibitors of CoA-dependent enzymes. Here we show that the mechanism for the toxicity of the pantothenamides is due to the inhibition of fatty acid biosynthesis through the formation and accumulation of the inactive acyl carrier protein (ACP), which was easily observed as a faster migrating protein using conformationally sensitive gel electrophoresis. E. coli treated with the pantothenamides lost the ability to incorporate [1-(14)C]acetate to its membrane lipids, indicative of the inhibition of fatty acid synthesis. Cellular CoA was maintained at the level sufficient for bacterial protein synthesis. Electrospray ionization time-of-flight mass spectrometry confirmed that the inactive ACP was the product of the transfer of the inactive phosphopantothenamide moiety of the CoA analog to apo-ACP, forming the ACP analog that lacks the sulfhydryl group for the attachment of acyl chains for fatty acid synthesis. Inactive ACP accumulated in pantothenamide-treated cells because of the active hydrolysis of regular ACP and the slow turnover of the inactive prosthetic group. Thus, the pantothenamides are pro-antibiotics that inhibit fatty acid synthesis and bacterial growth because of the covalent modification of ACP.  相似文献   

6.
Acyl carrier protein (ACP) is an essential cofactor of fatty acid synthase. In plants, ACP is synthesized in the cytosol as a larger precursor protein and then is imported into the plastid where it is processed to a smaller mature form. The active form of ACP uses a covalently linked 4[prime]-phosphopantetheine prosthetic group derived from coenzyme A to covalently bind the acyl intermediates during fatty acid synthesis. The prosthetic group is added to ACP by holoACP synthase. This enzyme activity is associated with both the plastidial subcellular fraction and the soluble, or cytoplasmic, fraction. To gain further insight into potential in vivo pathways for the synthesis and maturation of ACP, in this study we examined whether precursor holoACP can be imported by isolated spinach (Spinacia oleracea) chloroplasts. Precursor holoACP containing a [35S]phosphopantetheine prosthetic group was prepared, and the radiolabel was used to demonstrate import of the phosphopantethenylated protein into isolated chloroplasts. In addition, timed chloroplast import assays indicated that in vitro import of the phosphopantethenylated protein is at least as efficient as import of the precursor apoprotein. Evidence was also obtained for a low level turnover of the prosthetic group among endogenous plastidial ACPs when coenzyme A was supplied exogenously.  相似文献   

7.
Fatty acid synthase from the uropygial gland of goose was inactivated by iodoacetamide with a second-order rate constant of 1.3 M-1 S-1 at pH 6.0 and 25 degrees C. Of the seven component activities of the synthase, only the condensation activity was significantly inhibited by iodoacetamide modification. Since preincubation of the enzyme with acetyl-CoA, but not with malonyl-CoA, protected the enzyme from inactivation by iodoacetamide, it is suggested that iodoacetamide probably modified the primer-binding thiol group at the condensation active site. Determination of the stoichiometry of modification was done using [1-14C]iodoacetamide that was purified by high-performance liquid chromatography. Graphical analysis of the data showed that binding of 1.2 carboxamidomethyl groups per subunit of fatty acid synthase would result in complete inhibition of the enzyme activity, suggesting that there is one condensation domain per subunit of fatty acid synthase. Analysis of the tryptic peptide map of the enzyme that was modified with [1-14C]iodoacetamide in the presence and absence of acetyl-CoA revealed that acetyl-CoA prevented the labeling of a major radioactive peptide and a minor radioactive peptide. These two peptides were purified by high-performance liquid chromatography. Amino acid analysis of these two peptides revealed that the major radioactive peptide contained S-carboxymethylcysteine while the minor radioactive peptide did not. However, the latter peptide contained beta-alanine, suggesting that this peptide was from the acyl carrier protein segment of fatty acid synthase and that the iodoacetamide treatment resulted in modification of the pantetheine thiol, although to a lower extent than the primer-binding thiol. The sequence of the primer-binding active site peptide from the condensation domain was H2N-Gly-Pro-Ser-Leu-Ser-Ile-Asp- Thr-Ala-Cys(carboxamidomethyl)-X-Ser-Ser-Leu-Met-Ala-Leu-Glu-Asn-A la-Tyr-Lys- COOH, the first reported sequence of the condensation active site from a vertebrate fatty acid synthase. The acyl carrier protein segment showed extensive sequence homology with the acyl carrier protein of Escherichia coli, particularly in the vicinity of the phosphopantetheine attachment, and the sequence was H2N-Asp-Val-Ser-Ser-Leu- Asn-Ala-Asp-Ser-Thr-Leu-Ala-Asp-Leu-Gly-Leu-Asp-Ser(4'-phosphopanteth ein e) -Leu-Met-Gly-Val-Glu-Val-Arg-COOH.  相似文献   

8.
Recently a chloroplast holo-acyl carrier protein (holoACP) synthase activity was identified which attached the phosphopantetheine prosthetic group to acyl carrier protein, producing holoACP (Fernandez and Lamppa (1990) Plant Cell 2, 195-206). Here we show that the mature form of ACP (apoACP), after entry into the chloroplast and removal of the transit peptide, is a substrate for modification by the holoACP synthase. Modification occurs optimally at 37 degrees C and is inhibited by 5 mM 3',5'-ADP and 2 mM EDTA. An ACP construct (matACP) lacking the transit peptide was also converted to the holoACP form in an organelle-free assay, independent of precursor cleavage. The matACP construct was used to monitor the chromatographic separation of the holoACP synthase from the transit peptidase. Superose 12 gel filtration analysis indicates that the holoACP synthase has an apparent Mr of approximately 50,000. Using fractions enriched for the holoACP synthase it was demonstrated that the precursor of ACP is also modified in the presence of CoA and subsequently can be proteolytically processed directly to holoACP. Kinetic analysis, however, indicates that removal of the transit peptide is a much faster reaction than phosphopantetheine addition, suggesting that apoACP is the primary substrate for the chloroplast holoACP synthase in vivo.  相似文献   

9.
A DNA fragment containing the Pseudomonas aeruginosa fabD (encoding malonyl-coenzyme A [CoA]:acyl carrier protein [ACP] transacylase), fabG (encoding beta-ketoacyl-ACP reductase), acpP (encoding ACP), and fabF (encoding beta-ketoacyl-ACP synthase II) genes was cloned and sequenced. This fab gene cluster is delimited by the plsX (encoding a poorly understood enzyme of phospholipid metabolism) and pabC (encoding 4-amino-4-deoxychorismate lyase) genes; the fabF and pabC genes seem to be translationally coupled. The fabH gene (encoding beta-ketoacyl-ACP synthase III), which in most gram-negative bacteria is located between plsX and fabD, is absent from this gene cluster. A chromosomal temperature-sensitive fabD mutant was obtained by site-directed mutagenesis that resulted in a W258Q change. A chromosomal fabF insertion mutant was generated, and the resulting mutant strain contained substantially reduced levels of cis-vaccenic acid. Multiple attempts aimed at disruption of the chromosomal fabG gene were unsuccessful. We purified FabD as a hexahistidine fusion protein (H6-FabD) and ACP in its native form via an ACP-intein-chitin binding domain fusion protein, using a novel expression and purification scheme that should be applicable to ACP from other bacteria. Matrix-assisted laser desorption-ionization spectroscopy, native polyacrylamide electrophoresis, and amino-terminal sequencing revealed that (i) most of the purified ACP was properly modified with its 4'-phosphopantetheine functional group, (ii) it was not acylated, and (iii) the amino-terminal methionine was removed. In an in vitro system, purified ACP functioned as acyl acceptor and H(6)-FabD exhibited malonyl-CoA:ACP transacylase activity.  相似文献   

10.
Acyl carrier protein (ACP) was purified from Euglena gracilis variety bacillaris in yields of about 1 mg/100 g (wet wt) of cells. Antibodies against the purified protein were raised in hens and isolated from eggs. Antibodies raised against Euglena ACP inhibited the Euglena chloroplast nonaggregated fatty acid synthetase using either Euglena or Escherichia coli ACP as a substrate. Comparisons with other ACPs included the following items: biologic activity, acidic pI, size, behavior in size exclusion media, and amino acid sequence of the N-terminal portion of the molecule.  相似文献   

11.
F Kurosaki  M Itoh  M Yamada  A Nishi 《FEBS letters》1991,288(1-2):219-221
Synthetic activity of a polyketide compound 6-hydroxymellein was induced in elicitor-treated carrot root tissues. The activity was significantly inhibited by an antiserum raised against the acyl carrier protein (ACP) of fatty acid synthetase, suggesting that the enzyme(s) for 6-hydroxymellein synthesis require(s) a functional unit similar to ACP. However, the synthetic activity was not stimulated by the addition of ACP purified from Escherichia coli and was not lost even after fractionation by gel-filtration chromatography. The active fraction obtained by gel-filtration (136 kDa) was subjected to immunoblot analysis, and a 128 kDa polypeptide in the fraction was found to cross-react with anti-ACP serum. These observations suggest that the biosynthesis of 6-hydroxymellein in carrot cells is catalyzed by an enzyme consisting of a single peptide chain.  相似文献   

12.
Acyl carrier protein (ACP) is a chloroplast-localized cofactor of fatty acid synthesis, desaturation, and acyl transfer. We have transformed tobacco with a chimeric gene consisting of the tobacco ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase promoter and transit peptide and the sequence encoding the mature spinach ACP-I. Spinach ACP-I was expressed in the transformed plants at levels twofold to threefold higher than the endogenous tobacco ACPs as determined by protein immunoblots and assays of ACP in leaf extracts. In addition to these elevated levels of the holo form, there were high levels of apoACP-I, a form lacking the 4'-phosphopantetheine prosthetic group and not previously detected in vivo. The mature forms of both apoACP-I and holoACP-I were located in the chloroplasts, indicating that the transit peptide was cleaved and that attachment of the prosthetic group was not required for uptake into the plastid. There were also significant levels of spinach acyl-ACP-I, demonstrating that spinach ACP-I participated in tobacco fatty acid metabolism. Lipid analyses of the transformed plants indicated that the increased ACP levels caused no significant alterations in leaf lipid biosynthesis.  相似文献   

13.
Import of the acyl carrier protein (ACP) precursor into the chloroplast resulted in two products of about 14 kilodalton (kD) and 18 kD when analyzed by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Time course experiments indicate that the latter is a modification derivative of the 14-kD peptide after the removal of the transit peptide. Substitution of serine 38 by alanine, eliminating the phosphopantetheine prosthetic group attachment site of ACP, produced a precursor mutant that gave rise to only the 14-kD peptide during import, showing that the modified form depends on the presence of serine 38. Furthermore, these results demonstrate that the prosthetic group is not essential for ACP translocation across the envelope or proteolytic processing. Analysis of the products of import by nondenaturing, conformationally sensitive gels showed reversal of the relative mobility of the 14-kD peptide and the modified form, raising the possibility that the modification is the addition of the phosphopantetheine. Proteolytic processing and the modification reaction were reconstituted in an organelle-free assay. The addition of coenzyme A to the organelle-free assay completely converted the 14-kD peptide to the modified form at 10 micromolar, and this only occurred with the wild-type substrate. Reciprocally, treatment of the products of a modification reaction with Escherichia coli phosphodiesterase converted the modified ACP from back to the 14-kD peptide. These results strongly support the conclusion that there is a holo-ACP synthase in the soluble compartment of the chloroplast capable of transferring the phosphopantetheine of coenzyme A to ACP.  相似文献   

14.
Expression of plant acyl carrier protein (ACP) in Escherichia coli at levels above that of constitutive E. coli ACP does not appear to substantially alter bacterial growth or fatty acid metabolism. The plant ACP expressed in E. coli contains pantetheine and approximately 50% is present in vivo as acyl-ACP. We have purified and characterized the recombinant spinach ACP-I. NH2-terminal amino acid sequencing indicated identity to authentic spinach ACP-I, and there was no evidence for terminal methionine or formylmethionine. Recombinant ACP-I was found to completely cross-react immunologically with polyclonal antibody raised to spinach ACP-I. Recombinant ACP-I was a poor substrate for E. coli fatty acid synthesis. In contrast, Brassica napus fatty acid synthetase gave similar reaction rates with both recombinant and E. coli ACP. Similarly, malonyl-coenzyme A:acyl carrier protein transacylase isolated from E. coli was only poorly able to utilize the recombinant ACP-I while the same enzyme from B. napus reacted equally well with either E. coli ACP or recombinant ACP-I. E. coli acyl-ACP synthetase showed a higher reaction rate for recombinant ACP-I than for E. coli ACP. Expression of spinach ACP-I in E. coli provides, for the first time, plant ACP in large quantities and should aid in both structural analysis of this protein and in investigations of the many ACP-dependent reactions of plant lipid metabolism.  相似文献   

15.
The distinguishing structural and functional domains of plant acyl-acyl carrier protein (ACP) thioesterases and their complex interaction with the ACP-linked fatty acid substrate complex have remained elusive. E. coli based heterologous expression and characterisation of many plant thioesterases reported so far have not been extended and linked to in silico modelling studies to explain the diversity in plant thioesterase substrate specificities. In this study, a thioesterase cDNA isolated from immature seed tissues of Jatropha curcas was found to be type B and specific to stearoyl acyl ACP when expressed in E. coli K27fadD88, a lipid utilisation mutant. Homology modelling and molecular docking of a selected region of the isolated JcFatB protein predicted that it had high affinity towards both stearate (18:0) and palmitate (16:0). Structural analysis of the sequence confirmed the presence of a transit peptide that is processed in multiple steps. The enzyme is localised in the chloroplasts and has an N-terminal inner chloroplast transmembrane domain characteristic of type B plant thioesterases. Docking of ligands with JcFatB and its comparison with a modelled Jatropha thioesterase type A provided further evidence for native substrate preferences of Jatropha thioesterases. This study provides essential clues to develop future methods for large-scale bacterial production of free fatty acids and for design of strategies to modulate the seed oil composition in this important non-edible, seed oil plant.  相似文献   

16.
The acyl carrier proteins (ACPs) of fatty acid synthesis are functional only when modified by attachment of the prosthetic group, 4'-phosphopantetheine (4'-PP), which is transferred from CoA to the hydroxyl group of a specific serine residue. Almost 40 years ago Vagelos and Larrabee reported an enzyme from Escherichia coli that removed the prosthetic group. We report that this enzyme, called ACP hydrolyase or ACP phosphodiesterase, is encoded by a gene (yajB) of previously unknown function that we have renamed acpH. A mutant E. coli strain having a total deletion of the acpH gene has been constructed that grows normally, showing that phosphodiesterase activity is not essential for growth, although it is required for turnover of the ACP prosthetic group in vivo. ACP phosphodiesterase (AcpH) has been purified to homogeneity for the first time and is a soluble protein that very readily aggregates upon overexpression in vivo or concentration in vitro. The purified enzyme has been shown to cleave acyl-ACP species with acyl chains of 6-16 carbon atoms and is active on some, but not all, non-native ACP species tested. Possible physiological roles for AcpH are discussed.  相似文献   

17.
Posttranslational acylation of several chloroplast proteins with palmitic acid was recently demonstrated in Spirodela oligorrhiza (AK Mattoo, M Edelman [1987] Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 84: 1497-1501). We have now identified an in vivo acylated, soluble protein having an apparent Mr of 10 kilodaltons on sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis as an acylated form of acyl carrier protein (ACP). This 10-kilodalton protein is present in low abundance, and its acylation is light-stimulated. Turnover of the acyl moiety but not the apo-protein is rapid in the light. The acylated 10-kilodalton protein coelectrophoreses with in vitro synthesized palmitoyl-acyl carrier protein and is immunoprecipitated from soluble extracts with an antibody raised against spinach ACP. Cerulenin, an inhibitor of β-ketoacyl-ACP synthetase, inhibited in vivo acylation of Spirodela ACP. Cell-free extracts of Spirodela plants were able to catalyze the transfer of palmitate from palmitoyl-CoA to ACP, suggesting the existence in higher plants of a pathway for acylation of ACP that involves transacylation from acyl-CoA.  相似文献   

18.
A synthetic gene of 268 bp encoding the 82 amino acid spinach acyl carrier protein (ACP)-I was constructed based on the known amino acid sequence. Two gene fragments, one encoding the amino-terminal portion and the other the carboxy-terminal portion of the protein, were assembled from synthetic oligonucleotides and inserted into the phage M13mp19. These partial gene constructions were joined and inserted into the plasmid pTZ19R. DNA sequencing confirmed the accuracy of the constructions. The synthetic gene was then subcloned into the Escherichia coli expression vector pKK233-2, under the control of the trc promoter. Western blot analysis and radioimmunoassay indicated that E. coli cells carrying this plasmid produced up to 6 mg/liter of a protein which was immunologically cross-reactive and similar in electrophoretic mobility to authentic spinach acyl carrier protein. The bacterial cells were able to attach the phosphopantetheine prosthetic group to the synthetic plant gene product allowing it to be acylated in vitro by acyl-ACP synthetase.  相似文献   

19.
A proteinacious inhibitor of S-adenosyl-L-methionine (AdoMet)-dependent transmethylation reactions was purified to homogeneity from porcine liver by size exclusion chromatography and FPLC. The molecular weight of the inhibitor was 12,222 Da. A 7400 Da polypeptide fragment of the purified inhibitor was sequenced by matrix-associated laser desorption ionization; time-of-flight MS, and was found to be identical with the known sequence of spinach acyl carrier protein (ACP). Although the remainder of the molecule was not clearly defined, 1H and H-H correlation of spectroscopy (COSY) NMR analysis revealed the presence of an oligosaccharide with alpha-glycosidic linkage. The purified oligosaccharide-linked ACP inhibited several AdoMet-dependent transmethylation reactions such as protein methylase I and II. S-farnesylcysteine O-methyltransferase, DNA methyltransferase and phospholipid methyltransferase. Protein methylase II was inhibited with a Ki value of 2.4 x 10(-3) M in a mixed inhibition pattern, whereas a well-known competitive product inhibitor S-adenosyl-L-homocysteine (AdoHcy) had Ki value of 6.3 x 10(-6) M. Commercially available active ACP fragments (65-74) and ACP from Escherichia coli had less inhibitory activity toward S-farnesylcysteine O-methyltransferase than the purified inhibitor. The biological significance of this oligosaccharide-linked ACP which has two seemingly unrelated functions (inhibitor for transmethylation and fatty acid biosynthesis) remains to be elucidated.  相似文献   

20.
The structure of acyl carrier protein (ACP) may determine the fate of the acyl moieties linked to it in the course of de-novo fatty acid synthesis in higher plants. To investigate a possible correlation between the structure of ACP and the synthesis of medium-chain fatty acids, we isolated and characterized ACP from the seeds of Cuphea lanceolata Ait. (subgenus Eucuphea/Section Heterodon), an annual crop that contains up to 90% decanoic (capric) acid in seed triacylglycerols. After a cell-free extract prepared from developing seeds was treated to 65% saturation with ammonium sulfate, two ACP-isoforms (ACP 1 and ACP 2) were identified in the supernatant that could be purified to homogeneity by anion-exchange chromatography and subsequent reversed-phase high-performance liquid chromatography. The molecular mass determined by matrix-assisted ultraviolet-laser desorption ionization mass spectrometry of ACP 1 was 9315 Da, whereas further heterogeneity was observed for ACP 2 with molecular masses of 8598 and 8703 Da. Aminoterminal sequencing was performed showing a high homology in the primary structures of ACP 1 and ACP 2. Both isoforms were present in the embryo, whereas in the chloroplast-containing seed coat ACP 2 was found in minute amounts, if at all. The expression of ACP 2 correlated with the production of capric acid during the phase of storage-lipid accumulation. These data indicate that ACP 2 is part of the machinery for the synthesis of medium-chain fatty acids, whereas ACP 1 appears to be a constitutive protein.Abbreviations ACP acyl carrier protein - clACP acyl carrier protein from Cuphea lanceolata - 2D-PAOE two-dimensional polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis - DTT dithiothreitol - ecACP acyl carrier protein from Escherichia coli - FPLC fast protein liquid chromatography - HPLC high-performance liquid chromatography - SDS-PAGE sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis - Tricine N-[2-hydroxy-1,1-bis(hydroxymethyl)ethyl]glycine This work was supported by a grant from the German Ministry of Research and Technology (BMFT). The authors wish to thank Professor Röbbelen, University of Göttingen, FRG, for kindly providing the plant material and A. Ingendoh, Department of Medical Physics of the University of Münster, FRG, for carrying out the mass-spectrometric analysis. Portions of this paper are part of the doctoral thesis of Markus Robers.  相似文献   

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