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In a hypersensitive reaction to pathogen infection, expression of the β-1,3-glucanase gn1 gene is induced in cells surrounding the necrotic lesions. The 5′-flanking sequence of gn1 was examined to investigate the molecular basis controlling activation of gene expression during this plant defense response. Studies on transgenic tobacco plants containing gn1 promoter deletions fused to the β-glucuronidase reporter gene revealed the presence of negative and positive regulatory sequences mediating both the level and the spatial distribution of gn1 expression. Promoter sequences to ?138 bp were sufficient to confer increased gene expression around the necrotic lesions produced in response to Pseudomonas syringae pv. syringae inoculation. It is demonstrated by electrophoretic mobility shift assays that nuclear proteins in both healthy and hypersensitively reacting tobacco leaves interact with DNA sequences within the regulatory elements identified. Among the binding sequences characterized, the promoter region extending from ?250 to ?217 bp contained the DNA motif -GGCGGC- found to be conserved in most if not all promoters of genes encoding pathogenesis-related basic proteins. The activity bound by this promoter sequence was stronger in hypersensitively responding tissues than in healthy untreated tobacco leaves.  相似文献   

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The pattern of expression directed by the promoter of the maize Tub α 1 gene was investigated by analysis of chloramphenicol acetyl transferase (CAT) and β-glucuronidase (GUS) activities in transient expression experiments of maize and tobacco protoplasts. The same promoter was also investigated by histochemical GUS analysis in transgenic tobacco plants containing promoter gene fusions. As determined by histochemical tests, the Tub α 1 promoter gene preferentially directs GUS expression in regenerating root tip meristems and pollen. This pattern corresponds to the distinctive features of natural expression of the gene in maize as determined by Northern analysis. However, no expression is observed in other meristematic tissues of the transgenic tobacco plants, as in shoot apex or in coleoptiles, which is weakly detected in maize. Analysis of the regulatory properties of 5' promoter deletions showed that the proximal region of the promoter, from positions −1410 or −449 to 15 bp upstream of the ATG, is sufficient to establish the qualitative pattern of expression in transgenic tobacco plants. Deletions to positions −352 or −117 abolished the expression in roots, but not in pollen, suggesting that upstream of these positions there are elements responsible for the pattern in root. Further deletions abolished all the promoter activity, suggesting that this promoter region contains the elements essential for expression in pollen. The different patterns and levels of transient and stable expression are discussed.  相似文献   

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Tobacco genes encoding the PR-1a protein and a glycine-rich protein are expressed after treatment of plants with salicylate or infection with tobacco mosaic virus. Upstream sequences of these genes were fused to reporter genes, and these constructs were used to transform tobacco. Upstream sequences of the PR-1a gene of 689 base pairs or longer were sufficient for induction of the reporter gene in tobacco mosaic virus-inoculated leaves, systemically induced leaves from infected plants, and leaves treated with salicylate. No such induction was found with upstream sequences of 643 base pairs or shorter of the PR-1a gene. When the PR-1a upstream sequence from nucleotides -625 to -902 was fused to the cauliflower mosaic virus 35S core promoter, a construct was obtained that conferred tobacco mosaic virus and salicylate inducibility to the reporter gene in transgenic plants. This confirmed the localization of tobacco mosaic virus- and salicylate-responsive elements between positions -643 and -689 in the PR-1a promoter. With the glycine-rich protein gene, an upstream sequence of 645 base pairs was sufficient for tobacco mosaic virus and salicylate inducibility of the reporter gene, whereas constructs containing 400 base pairs or fewer of the glycine-rich protein promoter were largely inactive.  相似文献   

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Pathogenesis-related proteins of group 1 (PR-1) are strongly induced in plants by pathogen attack, exposure of the plants to (acetyl)salicylic acid (ASA, SA), and by developmental cues. Functional analysis of the PR-1a promoter identified a region of 139 bp (from -691 to -553) mediating expression of the GUS reporter gene in response to ASA. Inspection of this region revealed two TGACG elements reminiscent of activation sequence-1 (as-1). Recently, as-1 has been reported to be responsive to SA in the context of the CaMV 35S RNA promoter. To address the question of whether the as-1-like sequence may be of functional significance for the expression of the PR-1a gene, gel shift assays were performed with TGA1a, a protein been shown to interact with as-1 in vitro. TGA1a was found to bind to the PR-1a as-1-like sequence with similar specificity and affinity as to as-1. Furthermore, mutations were introduced in the as-1-like sequence in the context of the inducible 906 bp PR-1a promoter which are impaired in binding TGA1a in vitro. Significantly reduced levels of GUS reporter gene activity were obtained with the mutant promoter regions as compared to the wild-type PR-1a promoter in response to all stimuli in transgenic tobacco plants. Yet, mutation of the as-1-like sequence did not abolish induction of reporter gene expression. Taken together, these results suggest that the level of expression of the tobacco PR-1a gene is controlled by an as-1-like sequence motif in the PR-1a upstream region, possibly interacting with a factor related to TGA1a.  相似文献   

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The bean grp1.8 gene is specifically expressed in vascular tissue. Monomers and multimers of a 28 bp regulatory element of the grp1.8 promoter ( vs-1 ) specifically activated both the −82 CaMV 35S and the −76/ grp1.8 minimal promoters in vascular tissue of transgenic tobacco plants. vs-1 partially overlaps with a negative regulatory element in the grp1.8 promoter that is necessary for restriction of gene expression to vascular tissue. Nuclear extracts from tobacco and tomato cells contain a factor that binds to vs-1 in vitro . To study the molecular basis of xylem-specific expression mediated by the vs-1 promoter element, a gene was isolated from tomato encoding a protein that binds to vs-1 in vitro . This protein, designated VSF-1, contains a bZIP motif close to the C-terminus. Mutated vs-1 elements were no longer bound by VSF-1 and also failed to activate the minimal −82 CaMV 35S promoter in vivo . Transient expression of VSF-1 in protoplasts stimulated vs-1 dependent activation of the −76/ grp1.8 minimal promoter. Binding studies and use of a polyclonal antiserum against VSF-1 provided further evidence that vs-1 is a potential in vivo target site, as VSF-1 was a part of the observed complex formed between vs-1 and nuclear protein extract. vs-1 does not contain the 5'-ACGT-3' core sequence that is part of known plant bZIP protein binding sites or another palindromic sequence. Based on the unusual binding specificity and a characteristic amino acid sequence in the bZIP domain we propose that VSF-1 and the partially homologous PosF21, a bZIP protein from Arabidopsis , belong to a new family of plant bZIP proteins.  相似文献   

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In animals, plants and fungi, cholera toxin (CTX) can activate signalling pathways dependent on heterotrimeric GTP binding proteins (G-proteins). We transformed tobacco plants with a chimeric gene encoding the A1 subunit of CTX regulated by a light-inducible wheat Cab-1 promoter. Tissues of transgenic plants expressing CTX showed greatly reduced susceptibility to the bacterial pathogen Pseudomonas tabaci, accumulated high levels of salicylic acid (SA) and constitutively expressed pathogenesis-related (PR) protein genes encoding PR-1 and the class II isoforms of PR-2 and PR-3. In contrast, the class I isoforms of PR-2 and PR-3 known to be induced in tobacco by stress, by ethylene treatment and as part of the hypersensitive response to infection, were not induced and displayed normal regulation. In good agreement with these results, microinjection experiments demonstrated that CTX or GTP-gamma-S induced the expression of a PR1-GUS reporter gene but not that of a GLB-GUS reporter gene containing the promoter region of a gene encoding the class I isoform of PR-2. Microinjection and grafting experiments strongly suggest that CTX-sensitive G-proteins are important in inducing the expression of a subset of PR genes and that these G-proteins act locally rather than systemically upstream of SA induction.  相似文献   

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Because of their marked responsiveness to induction signals, genes encoding pathogenesis-related proteins are used as markers to monitor defense gene expression in plants. To develop a non-invasive bioluminescence reporter assay system, we tested acidic PR-1 gene promoters from tobacco and Arabidopsis. These two promoters share common regulatory elements and are believed to show similar responsiveness to various stimuli but the results of transient expression assays by microprojectile bombardment of various plant cells and npr1 mutant Arabidopsis suggest that the tobacco PR-1a promoter is superior to its Arabidopsis counterpart in terms of responsiveness to salicylic acid treatment. Transgenic Arabidopsis seedlings harboring the tobacco PR-1a promoter fused to firefly luciferase showed marked induction in response to treatment with chemicals that induce defense gene expression in plants. These results suggest that the tobacco PR-1a promoter is applicable in monitoring defense-gene expression in various plant species.  相似文献   

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