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1.
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Pathogenic Gram-negative bacteria are a major public health concern because they are causative agents of life-threatening hospital-acquired infections. Due to the increasing rates of resistance to available antibiotics, there is an urgent need to develop new drugs. Acetyl-coenzyme A carboxylase (ACCase) is a promising target for the development of novel antibiotics. We describe here the expression, purification, and enzymatic activity of recombinant ACCases from two clinically relevant Gram-negative pathogens, Acinetobacter baumannii and Klebsiella pneumoniae. Recombinant ACCase subunits (AccAD, AccB, and AccC) were expressed and purified, and the holoenzymes were reconstituted. ACCase enzyme activity was monitored by direct detection of malonyl-coenzyme A (malonyl-CoA) formation by liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry (LC–MS/MS). Steady-state kinetics experiments showed similar kcat and KM values for both enzymes. In addition, similar IC50 values were observed for inhibition of both enzymes by a previously reported ACCase inhibitor. To provide a higher throughput assay suitable for inhibitor screening, we developed and validated a luminescence-based ACCase assay that monitors ATP depletion. Finally, we established an enzyme activity assay for the isolated AccAD (carboxyltransferase) subunit, which is useful for determining whether novel ACCase inhibitors inhibit the biotin carboxylase or carboxyltransferase site of ACCase. The methods described here could be applied toward the identification and characterization of novel inhibitors.  相似文献   

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Acetyl-CoA carboxylase (ACCase; EC 6.4.1.2) is a regulatory enzyme of fatty acid synthesis, and in some higher-plant plastids is a multi-subunit complex consisting of biotin carboxylase (BC), biotin-carboxyl carrier protein (BCCP), and carboxyl transferase (CT). We recently described a Nicotiana tabacum L. (tobacco) cDNA with a deduced amino acid sequence similar to that of prokaryotic BC. We here provide further biochemical and immunological evidence that this higher-plant polypeptide is an authentic BC component of ACCase. The BC protein co-purified with ACCase activity and with BCCP during gel permeation chromatography of Pisum sativum L. (pea) chloroplast proteins. Antibodies to the Ricinus communis L. (castor) BC co-precipitated ACCase activity and BCCP. During castor seed development, ACCase activity and the levels of BC and BCCP increased and subsequently decreased in parallel, indicating their coordinate regulation. The BC protein comprised about 0.8% of the soluble protein in developing castor seed, and less than 0.05% of the protein in young leaf or root. Polypeptides cross-reacting with antibodies to castor BC were detected in several dicotyledons and in the monocotyledons Hemerocallis fulva L. (day lily), Iris L., and Allium cepa L. (onion), but not in the Gramineae species Hordeum vulgare L. (barley) and Panicum virgatum L. (switchgrass). The castor endosperm and pea chloroplast ACCases were not significantly inhibited by long-chain acyl-acyl carrier protein, free fatty acids or acyl carrier protein. The BC polypeptide was detected throughout Brassica napus L. (rapeseed) embryo development, in contrast to the multi-functional ACCase isoenzyme which was only detected early in development. These results firmly establish the identity of the BC polypeptide in plants and provide insight into the structure, regulation and roles of higherplant ACCases.Abbreviations ACCase acetyl-CoA carboxylase - ACP acyl carrier protein - BC biotin carboxylase - BCCP biotin carboxyl carrier protein - CT carboxyl transferase - MF multi-functional - MS multi-subunit We thank our colleagues Nicki Engeseth and Vicki Eccleston for advice on fatty acid analysis and Sarah Hunter for providing the developing Iris seed. This work was supported in part by grant MCB 9406466 from NSF. Acknowledgement is also made to the Michigan Agriculture Experiment Station for its support of this research.  相似文献   

5.
A multisubunit acetyl coenzyme A carboxylase from soybean   总被引:8,自引:0,他引:8  
A multisubunit form of acetyl coenzyme A (CoA) carboxylase (ACCase) from soybean (Glycine max) was characterized. The enzyme catalyzes the formation of malonyl CoA from acetyl CoA, a rate-limiting step in fatty acid biosynthesis. The four known components that constitute plastid ACCase are biotin carboxylase (BC), biotin carboxyl carrier protein (BCCP), and the alpha- and beta-subunits of carboxyltransferase (alpha- and beta-CT). At least three different cDNAs were isolated from germinating soybean seeds that encode BC, two that encode BCCP, and four that encode alpha-CT. Whereas BC, BCCP, and alpha-CT are products of nuclear genes, the DNA that encodes soybean beta-CT is located in chloroplasts. Translation products from cDNAs for BC, BCCP, and alpha-CT were imported into isolated pea (Pisum sativum) chloroplasts and became integrated into ACCase. Edman microsequence analysis of the subunits after import permitted the identification of the amino-terminal sequence of the mature protein after removal of the transit sequences. Antibodies specific for each of the chloroplast ACCase subunits were generated against products from the cDNAs expressed in bacteria. The antibodies permitted components of ACCase to be followed during fractionation of the chloroplast stroma. Even in the presence of 0.5 M KCl, a complex that contained BC plus BCCP emerged from Sephacryl 400 with an apparent molecular mass greater than about 800 kD. A second complex, which contained alpha- and beta-CT, was also recovered from the column, and it had an apparent molecular mass of greater than about 600 kD. By mixing the two complexes together at appropriate ratios, ACCase enzymatic activity was restored. Even higher ACCase activities were recovered by mixing complexes from pea and soybean. The results demonstrate that the active form of ACCase can be reassembled and that it could form a high-molecular-mass complex.  相似文献   

6.
Two forms of acetyl-CoA carboxylase (ACCase) have been characterized in pea ( Pisum sativum L.) leaves; a heteromeric chloroplast enzyme and a homomeric, presumably cytosolic enzyme. The biotin carboxylase (BC), biotin carboxyl carrier protein (BCCP), and β-carboxyltransferase (CT) subunits of the plastidial-ACCase have recently been characterized and cloned. To further characterize the carboxyl-transferase, an improved assay for CT was developed and used to follow its partial purification. CT activity co-purifies with ACCase activity during gel permeation chromatography. However, upon anion-exchange chromatography or native PAGE, CT separates from the BC and BCCP subunits of plastidiaI-ACCase and ACCase activity is lost. In addition, it is demonstrated that a previously sequenced pea chloroplast cDNA of unknown function (IEP96) with a predicted molecular weight of 91 kDa encodes the α-CT subunit of the MS-ACCase. Antibodies raised against the first 404 amino acids of IEP96 protein detected a polypeptide with molecular weight of 91 kDa that co-eluted during gel permeation chromatography with plastidial CT and ACCase activities. These antibodies also immunoprecipitated the activities of both ACCase and CT with the concomitant precipitation of the β-CT subunit. Furthermore, antibodies against β-CT immunoprecipitated the IEP96 protein. Two-dimensional PAGE and DEAE purification of ACCase protein demonstrated that the β-CT forms a tight association with the IEP96 protein. Pea leaf was fractionated into soluble and membrane fractions and the α-CT subunit was primarily associated with the membrane fraction. Together, these data demonstrate that IEP96 is the α-CT subunit of pea chloroplast ACCase.  相似文献   

7.
Two genes, accB and accE, that form part of the same operon, were cloned from Streptomyces coelicolor A3(2). AccB is homologous to the carboxyl transferase domain of several propionyl coezyme A (CoA) carboxylases and acyl-CoA carboxylases (ACCases) of actinomycete origin, while AccE shows no significant homology to any known protein. Expression of accB and accE in Escherichia coli and subsequent in vitro reconstitution of enzyme activity in the presence of the biotinylated protein AccA1 or AccA2 confirmed that AccB was the carboxyl transferase subunit of an ACCase. The additional presence of AccE considerably enhanced the activity of the enzyme complex, suggesting that this small polypeptide is a functional component of the ACCase. The impossibility of obtaining an accB null mutant and the thiostrepton growth dependency of a tipAp accB conditional mutant confirmed that AccB is essential for S. coelicolor viability. Normal growth phenotype in the absence of the inducer was restored in the conditional mutant by the addition of exogenous long-chain fatty acids in the medium, indicating that the inducer-dependent phenotype was specifically related to a conditional block in fatty acid biosynthesis. Thus, AccB, together with AccA2, which is also an essential protein (E. Rodriguez and H. Gramajo, Microbiology 143:3109-3119, 1999), are the most likely components of an ACCase whose main physiological role is the synthesis of malonyl-CoA, the first committed step of fatty acid synthesis. Although normal growth of the conditional mutant was restored by fatty acids, the cultures did not produce actinorhodin or undecylprodigiosin, suggesting a direct participation of this enzyme complex in the supply of malonyl-CoA for the synthesis of these secondary metabolites.  相似文献   

8.
The determination of kinetic parameters of chitinases using natural substrates is difficult due to low K(m) values, which require the use of low substrate concentrations that are hard to measure. Using the natural substrate (GlcNAc)(4), we have developed an assay for the determination of k(cat) and K(m)values of chitinases. Product concentrations as low as 0.5 microM were detected using normal-phase high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) with an amide 80 column (0.20 x 25 cm) using spectrophotometric detection at 210 nm. By means of this assay, k(cat) and K(m)values for chitinases A (ChiA) and B (ChiB) of Serratia marcescens were found to be 33+/-1s(-1) and 9+/-1 microM and 28+/-2s(-1) and 4+/-2 microM, respectively. For ChiB, these values were compared to those found with commonly used substrates where the leaving group is a (nonnatural) chromophore, revealing considerable differences. For example, assays with 4-methylumbelliferyl-(GlcNAc)(2) yielded a k(cat) value of 18+/-2s(-1) and a K(m) value of 30+/-6 microM. For two ChiB mutants containing a Trp --> Ala mutation in the +1 or +2 subsites, the natural substrate and the 4-methylumbelliferyl-(GlcNAc)(2) assays yielded rather similar K(m) values (5-fold difference at most) but showed dramatic differences in k(cat) values (up to 90-fold). These results illustrate the risk of using artificial substrates for characterization of chitinases and, thus, show that the new HPLC-based assay is a valuable tool for future chitinase research.  相似文献   

9.
The committed step for de novo fatty acid biosynthesis is the carboxylation of acetyl-CoA catalyzed by acetyl-CoA carboxylase (ACCase). Plastidial ACCase from most plants is a multisubunit complex composed of multiple copies of four different polypeptides, biotin carboxyl carrier protein (BCCP), biotin carboxylase (BC), and carboxyltransferase (alpha-CT and beta-CT). Immunoblot analyses revealed these four proteins were mostly (69% of total) associated with a 17,000 g insoluble fraction from lysed pea chloroplasts. Under the same conditions only 8% of ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase was associated with this insoluble fraction. BCCP and biotin carboxylase BC subunits freely dissociated from 17 kg insoluble fractions under high ionic strength conditions, whereas alpha-CT and beta-CT subunits remained tightly associated. Both CT subunits were highly enriched in envelope versus stroma and thylakoid preparations whereas BC and BCCP subunits were predominantly stromal-localized due to partial dissociation. Rapid solubilization of intact chloroplasts with Triton X-100 followed by centrifugation at 30 kg resulted in a pellet that was up to 8-fold enriched in ACCase activity and 21-fold enriched in BC activity. Triton-insoluble 30 kg pellets were reduced in lipid and chlorophyll content but enriched in chloroplast DNA due to the isolation of nucleoid particles. However, ACCase was not directly associated with nucleoids since enzymatic digestion of DNA or RNA had no effect on the association with Triton-insoluble matter. The amount of Triton-insoluble ACCase was similar in chloroplasts isolated from dark- or light-adapted leaves suggesting transitory starch granules were also not involved in this association. It is proposed that ACCase is associated with envelope membranes through interactions with an unidentified integral membrane protein.  相似文献   

10.
This study investigates mechanisms of multiple resistance to glyphosate, acetyl-coenzyme A carboxylase (ACCase) and acetolactate synthase (ALS)-inhibiting herbicides in two Lolium rigidum populations from Australia. When treated with glyphosate, susceptible (S) plants accumulated 4- to 6-fold more shikimic acid than resistant (R) plants. The resistant plants did not have the known glyphosate resistance endowing mutation of 5-enolpyruvylshikimate-3 phosphate synthase (EPSPS) at Pro-106, nor was there over-expression of EPSPS in either of the R populations. However, [14C]-glyphosate translocation experiments showed that the R plants in both populations have altered glyphosate translocation patterns compared to the S plants. The R plants showed much less glyphosate translocation to untreated young leaves, but more to the treated leaf tip, than did the S plants. Sequencing of the carboxyl transferase domain of the plastidic ACCase gene revealed no resistance endowing amino acid substitutions in the two R populations, and the ALS in vitro inhibition assay demonstrated herbicide-sensitive ALS in the ALS R population (WALR70). By using the cytochrome P450 inhibitor malathion and amitrole with ALS and ACCase herbicides, respectively, we showed that malathion reverses chlorsulfuron resistance and amitrole reverses diclofop resistance in the R population examined. Therefore, we conclude that multiple glyphosate, ACCase and ALS herbicide resistance in the two R populations is due to the presence of distinct non-target site based resistance mechanisms for each herbicide. Glyphosate resistance is due to reduced rates of glyphosate translocation, and resistance to ACCase and ALS herbicides is likely due to enhanced herbicide metabolism involving different cytochrome P450 enzymes.  相似文献   

11.
Holden CP  Storey KB 《Cryobiology》2000,40(4):323-331
Freeze tolerance by various amphibians includes cryoprotectant production in the form of glucose. Activation of the catalytic subunit of liver cAMP-dependent protein kinase (PKAc) facilitates activation of glycogenolysis, a critical biochemical process necessary for production of glucose. Here, we purified PKAc from Rana sylvatica liver to determine the extent to which cold temperature, which stimulates cryoprotectant production, affected PKAc activity and function. PKAc was purified to greater than 95% homogeneity, with a final specific activity of 71 nmol phosphate transferred/min/mg protein. The molecular weight of frog liver PKAc was 47.6 +/- 1.1 kDa and K(m) values for the phosphate acceptor kemptide and Mg-ATP were 9.0 +/- 0.1 and 51.8 +/- 1.0 microM at 22 degrees C, respectively. K(m) values for both substrates dropped significantly at 5 degrees C. The enzyme was sensitive to specific inhibitors of mammalian PKAc (PKA(i), H89) but was only moderately inhibited by high salt concentrations. Furthermore, salt inhibition was reduced at low temperature. The effect of temperature on enzyme activity indicated a conformational change in PKAc at 10 +/- 2 degrees C, with calculated activation energies of 51 +/- 4 kJ/mol at temperatures above 10 degrees C and 110 +/- 9 kJ/mol below 10 degrees C. PKAc in wood frog liver plays a crucial role in mediating the freeze-induced glycogenolysis that is responsible for the production of 200-300 mM levels of glucose as a cryoprotectant. Differential effects of low temperature on enzyme function, increased substrate affinity and reduced ion inhibition, appear to be central to this role.  相似文献   

12.
The biotin carboxylase (AccC) is part of the multi-component bacterial acetyl coenzyme-A carboxylase (ACCase) and is essential for pathogen survival. We describe herein the affinity optimization of an initial hit to give 2-(2-chlorobenzylamino)-1-(cyclohexylmethyl)-1H-benzo[d]imidazole-5-carboxamide (1), which was identified using our proprietary Automated Ligand Identification System (ALIS).1 The X-ray co-crystal structure of 1 was solved and revealed several key interactions and opportunities for further optimization in the ATP site of AccC. Structure Based Drug Design (SBDD) and parallel synthetic approaches resulted in a novel series of AccC inhibitors, exemplified by (R)-2-(2-chlorobenzylamino)-1-(2,3-dihydro-1H-inden-1-yl)-1H-imidazo[4,5-b]pyridine-5-carboxamide (40). This compound is a potent and selective inhibitor of bacterial AccC with an IC50 of 20 nM and a MIC of 0.8 μg/mL against a sensitized strain of Escherichia coli (HS294 E. coli).  相似文献   

13.
Conventional methods to determine esterase activity from insects are composed of a three-step process where the enzyme is allowed to hydrolyze a 1-naphthyl acetate substrate, that reaction is quenched by a SDS detergent, and then a Fast Blue B dye complex is formed with 1-naphthol, the product of 1-naphthyl acetate hydrolysis. These methods measure dye-product complex rather than the product, 1-naphthol. A new assay is presented that continuously monitors the formation of 1-naphthol with the hydrolysis of an esterase substrate. The esterase activity was determined as the slope of the linear regression change in absorbance over time at 320 nm. The continuous assay provides a simple, rapid, and sensitive method for measuring esterases extracted from a single diamondback moth in 1-10 min. The detection limit of the assay is approximately 0.6 microM 1-naphthol. The 1-naphthol product from the esterase reaction was confirmed by HPLC analysis. According to the assay, the K(m) and V(max) values of the esterase were 28 +/- 2 microM and 6.0 +/- 0.1 microM/min, respectively, at 37 degrees C for 1-naphthyl acetate. The K(i) value was 9 +/- 2 microM using azadirachtin, an insecticide from neem tree, Azadirachta indica (A.Juss). Azadirachtin was a reversible competitive inhibitor of the esterase activity.  相似文献   

14.
Most actinomycetes, including Mycobacterium tuberculosis, do not produce glutathione but make an alternative thiol, mycothiol, which has functions similar to those of glutathione. A key step in mycothiol biosynthesis is the ATP-dependent ligation of Cys to GlcN-Ins catalyzed by MshC to produce Cys-GlcN-Ins, AMP, and PP(i). MshC is essential for growth of M. tuberculosis and is therefore a potential target for drugs directed against tuberculosis. A coupled-enzyme assay for MshC was developed using pyrophosphatase to convert pyrophosphate to phosphate and spectrophotometric detection of the latter via the phosphomolybdate complex with malachite green. The assay was readily adapted for use in a 96-well microtiter plate format. A secondary high-performance liquid chromatography assay measuring Cys-GlcN-Ins production was used to validate potential hits. Preliminary testing on a library of 2,024 compounds predicted to inhibit ATP-dependent enzymes identified many promiscuous and pyrophosphatase inhibitors of MshC and a single validated inhibitor with IC(50) approximately 100 microM.  相似文献   

15.
The p70 S6 ribosomal protein kinase 1 (S6K) is a substrate and effector of the mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR). The mTOR/S6K pathway is implicated in cancer and metabolic disorders. To study the molecular regulation of S6K and identify specific inhibitors, availability of active recombinant S6K and robust enzyme assays are critically needed. To date, however, expression of active recombinant S6K has not been feasible as S6K activation requires a cascade of phosphorylation events. We have compared several engineered S6K enzymes. Expression of the Flag-S6KDeltaCT(T389E) in HEK293 cells resulted in a highly active S6K that was constitutively phosphorylated on T229 in the activation-loop (T-loop). The active enzyme was readily purified in large scale by anti-Flag affinity chromatography achieving a high purity. We developed a high capacity homogeneous time-resolved fluorescence resonance energy transfer. Lance assay for measurement of substrate phosphorylation and analysis of kinetic parameters. The Michaelis constant (Km) values of S6K for ATP and the Biotin-S6 substrate peptide were determined to be 21.4+/-0.29 and 0.9+/-0.48 microM, respectively. The Lance assay was further validated with a diverse panel of literature inhibitors, in which the PKC inhibitors staurosporine, Ro-318220, and the PKA inhibitor Balanol potently inhibited S6K. Dose-response and inhibition mechanism by these inhibitors were also studied. Our data provide a new simplified strategy to achieve rapid production of active S6K and demonstrate utility of the Lance assay for S6K enzyme screen in searching for specific inhibitors.  相似文献   

16.
A mutation (Acc1-S2) in the structural gene for maize (Zea mays L.) acetyl-coenzyme A carboxylase (ACCase) that significantly reduces sethoxydim inhibition of leaf ACCase activity was used to investigate the gene-enzyme relationship regulating ACCase activity during oil deposition in developing kernels. Mutant embryo and endosperm ACCase activities were more than 600-fold less sensitive to sethoxydim inhibition than ACCase in wild-type kernel tissues. Moreover, in vitro cultured mutant kernels developed normally in the presence of sethoxydim concentrations that inhibited wild-type kernel development. The results indicate that the Acc1-encoded ACCase accounts for the majority of ACCase activity in developing maize kernels, suggesting that Acc1-encoded ACCase functions not only during membrane biogenesis in leaves but is also the predominant form of ACCase involved in storage lipid biosynthesis in maize embryos.  相似文献   

17.
Two genes, accB and accE, that form part of the same operon, were cloned from Streptomyces coelicolor A3(2). AccB is homologous to the carboxyl transferase domain of several propionyl coezyme A (CoA) carboxylases and acyl-CoA carboxylases (ACCases) of actinomycete origin, while AccE shows no significant homology to any known protein. Expression of accB and accE in Escherichia coli and subsequent in vitro reconstitution of enzyme activity in the presence of the biotinylated protein AccA1 or AccA2 confirmed that AccB was the carboxyl transferase subunit of an ACCase. The additional presence of AccE considerably enhanced the activity of the enzyme complex, suggesting that this small polypeptide is a functional component of the ACCase. The impossibility of obtaining an accB null mutant and the thiostrepton growth dependency of a tipAp accB conditional mutant confirmed that AccB is essential for S. coelicolor viability. Normal growth phenotype in the absence of the inducer was restored in the conditional mutant by the addition of exogenous long-chain fatty acids in the medium, indicating that the inducer-dependent phenotype was specifically related to a conditional block in fatty acid biosynthesis. Thus, AccB, together with AccA2, which is also an essential protein (E. Rodriguez and H. Gramajo, Microbiology 143:3109–3119, 1999), are the most likely components of an ACCase whose main physiological role is the synthesis of malonyl-CoA, the first committed step of fatty acid synthesis. Although normal growth of the conditional mutant was restored by fatty acids, the cultures did not produce actinorhodin or undecylprodigiosin, suggesting a direct participation of this enzyme complex in the supply of malonyl-CoA for the synthesis of these secondary metabolites.  相似文献   

18.
19.
Kinases are important drug discovery targets for a wide variety of therapeutic indications; consequently, the measurement of kinase activity remains a common high-throughput screening (HTS) application. Recently, enzyme-coupled luciferase-kinase (LK) format assays have been introduced. This format measures luminescence resulting from metabolism of adenosine triphosphate (ATP) via a luciferin/luciferase-coupled reaction. In the research presented here, 1536-well format time-resolved fluorescence resonance energy transfer (TR-FRET) and LK assays were created to identify novel Rho-associated kinase II (ROCK-II) inhibitors. HTS campaigns for both assays were conducted in this miniaturized format. It was found that both assays were able to consistently reproduce the expected pharmacology of inhibitors known to be specific to ROCK-II (fasudil IC50: 283 +/- 27 nM and 336 +/- 54 nM for TR-FRET and LK assays, respectively; Y-27632 IC50: 133 +/- 7.8 nM and 150 +/- 22 nM for TR-FRET and LK assays, respectively). In addition, both assays proved robust for HTS efforts, demonstrating excellent plate Z' values during the HTS campaign (0.84 +/- 0.03; 0.72 +/- 0.05 for LK and TR-FRET campaigns, respectively). Both formats identified scaffolds of known and novel ROCK-II inhibitors with similar sensitivity. A comparison of the performance of these 2 assay formats in an HTS campaign was enabled by the existence of a subset of 25,000 compounds found in both our institutional and the Molecular Library Screening Center Network screening files. Analysis of the HTS campaign results based on this subset of common compounds showed that both formats had comparable total hit rates, hit distributions, amount of hit clusters, and format-specific artifact. It can be concluded that both assay formats are suitable for the discovery of ROCK-II inhibitors, and the choice of assay format depends on reagents and/or screening technology available.  相似文献   

20.
The heteromeric acetyl-coenzyme A carboxylase catalyzes the first and committed reaction of de novo fatty acid biosynthesis in plastids. This enzyme is composed of four subunits: biotin carboxyl-carrier protein (BCCP), biotin carboxylase, α-carboxyltransferase, and β-carboxyltransferase. With the exception of BCCP, single-copy genes encode these subunits in Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana). Reverse-genetic approaches were used to individually investigate the physiological significance of the two paralogous BCCP-coding genes, CAC1A (At5g16390, codes for BCCP1) and CAC1B (At5g15530, codes for BCCP2). Transfer DNA insertional alleles that completely eliminate the accumulation of BCCP2 have no perceptible effect on plant growth, development, and fatty acid accumulation. In contrast, transfer DNA insertional null allele of the CAC1A gene is embryo lethal and deleteriously affects pollen development and germination. During seed development the effect of the cac1a null allele first becomes apparent at 3-d after flowering, when the synchronous development of the endosperm and embryo is disrupted. Characterization of CAC1A antisense plants showed that reducing BCCP1 accumulation to 35% of wild-type levels, decreases fatty acid accumulation and severely affects normal vegetative plant growth. Detailed expression analysis by a suite of approaches including in situ RNA hybridization, promoter:reporter transgene expression, and quantitative western blotting reveal that the expression of CAC1B is limited to a subset of the CAC1A-expressing tissues, and CAC1B expression levels are only about one-fifth of CAC1A expression levels. Therefore, a likely explanation for the observed unidirectional redundancy between these two paralogous genes is that whereas the BCCP1 protein can compensate for the lack of BCCP2, the absence of BCCP1 cannot be tolerated as BCCP2 levels are not sufficient to support heteromeric acetyl-coenzyme A carboxylase activity at a level that is required for normal growth and development.  相似文献   

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