首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 46 毫秒
1.
2.
3.
4.
The cloning of 11 different homology groups of cDNAs representing genes expressed in aleurone, but not in starchy endosperm of 20-day-old barley grains is described. Among the cDNAs, four are aleurone-specific, while the remaining are also expressed in the embryo, but not in any other part of the plant.Sequence analysis of one of the aleurone-specific clones, B11E, reveals an open reading frame coding for an unidentified 10.4 kDa protein with a putative signal sequence and a possible metal-binding finger. The B11E gene has a high GC content in the 5 leader sequence (63%), as well as in the coding region (70%) compared to known cDNAs from the barley starchy endosperm. Northern analysis of B11E indicates maximum mRNA abundance around mid-phase of grain development.When isolated immature aleurone/pericarp is incubated in tissue culture medium (MS) the B11E message disappears, indicating a requirement for a diffusible factor from the intact grain for its continued presence.  相似文献   

5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
A previous report described several cDNAs corresponding to mRNAs which accumulated in wheat aleurone layers treated with gibberellic acid (GA) (Baulcombe and Buffard, 1983). The protein sequence deduced from one of these clones (2529) has extensive similarity to the thiol protease, cathepsin B from mammalian cells. Southern analysis of wheat DNA has shown that the 2529 mRNA is encoded by a small family of genes carried on the group 4 chromosome. The nucleotide sequence of a member of the gene family expressed at a low level in aleurone layers and the use of a primer extension assay to identify a clone of a member of the gene family producing an abundant mRNA are reported. The 2529 mRNA accumulates in the scutellum and the aleurone layer of germinating grains where its expression is regulated by GA. In the scutellum the expression was restricted to the parenchyma, suggesting that the 2529 product may have a role other than for mobilization of the endosperm.  相似文献   

10.
The bifunctional alpha-amylase/subtilisin inhibitor (BASI) is an abundant protein in barley seeds, proposed to play multiple and apparently diverse roles in regulation of starch hydrolysis and in seed defence against pathogens. In the Triticeae, the protein has evolved the ability to specifically inhibit the main group of alpha-amylases expressed during germination of barley and encoded by the amyl gene family found only in the Triticeae. The expression of the asi gene that encodes BASI has been reported to be controlled by the hormones abscisic acid (ABA) and gibberellic acid (GA). Despite many studies at the gene and protein level, the function of this gene in the plant remains unclear. In this study, the 5'-flanking region (1033 bp, 1033-asi promoter) and the 3'-flanking region (655 bp) of the asi gene were isolated and characterised. The 1033-asi promoter sequence showed homology to a number of ciselements that play a role in ABA and GA regulated expression of other genes. With a green fluorescent protein gene (gfp) as reporter, the 1033-asi promoter was studied for spatial, temporal and hormonal control of gene expression. The 1033-asi promoter and its deletions direct transient gfp expression in the pericarp and at low levels in mature aleurone cells, and this expression is not regulated by ABA or GA. In transgenic barley plants, the 1033-asi promoter directed tissue-specific expression of the gfp gene in developing grain and germinating grain but not in roots or leaves. In developing grain, expression of gfp was observed specifically in the pericarp, the vascular tissue, the nucellar projection cells and the endosperm transfer cells and the hormones ABA or GA did not regulate this expression. In mature germinating grain gfp expression was observed in the embryo but not in aleurone or starchy endosperm. However, GA induced gfp expression in the aleurone of mature imbibed seeds from which the embryo had been removed. Expression in maternal rather than endosperm tissues of the grain suggests that earlier widespread assumptions that the protein is expressed largely in the endosperm may have been largely based on analysis of mixed grain tissues. This novel pattern of expression suggests that both activities of the protein may be primarily involved in seed defence in the peripheral tissues of the seed.  相似文献   

11.
12.
13.
14.
Isozymes of barley α-amylase were matched to cDNAs that encode them using transient expression in oat aleurone layers. Four cDNAs, including two that are previously unpublished, were inserted into oat aleurone cells by microparticle bombardment. The cDNAs were under the control of theAct1 promoter of rice. Expression levels were sufficient for in-gel detection of enzyme activity following isoelectric focusing of aleurone homogenates. The system has also proved useful in characterizing a hybrid β-glucanase gene.  相似文献   

15.
16.
17.
Northern hybridizations were used to study the site of synthesis of three carboxypeptidases (Cpases I-III) which occur in the starchy endosperm of germinating barley grain ( Hordeum vulgare L.). Further evidence was obtained by studying secretion of these enzymes from scutella or aleurone layers separated from germinating grains. Messenger RNA for Cpase II was detected only in developing grain, and the bulk of the mRNA was localized in the starchy endosperm. This suggests that Cpase II is synthesized at the site of its accumulation, the starchy endosperm. In contrast, Cpase I is expressed during germination and the predominant site of synthesis is the scutellum, from which it is secreted into the starchy endosperm. Cpase III is also synthesized during germination, but the bulk of it is synthesized in and secreted from the aleurone layer. Thus, the three carboxypeptidases, all of which seem to play a role in hydrolysis of the reserve proteins in the starchy endosperm during germination, have different sites of synthesis.  相似文献   

18.
19.
20.
K. Gausing 《Planta》1994,192(4):574-580
Genes/cDNAs encoding so-called lipid-transfer proteins (LTPs) have been isolated from a variety of tissues from different plants, but the in-vivo function of the LTP proteins is not yet known. In barley (Hordeum vulgare L.), the LTP1 gene (encoding a probable amylase/ protease inhibitor, Mundy and Rogers 1986, Planta 169, 51–63) is active in aleurone tissue, and in this paper two LTP-encoding cDNAs isolated from green leaves are described. The encoded proteins start with signal sequences, they are 75% homologous to each other, 60–63% homologous to rice aleurone LTP and maize seed/ coleoptile LTP, but only 48% homologous to barley aleurone LTP. Northern hybridization experiments established that the two seedling-specific genes are both highly expressed in leaves and coleoptiles whereas the LTP1 gene is inactive in seedlings. No LTP gene expression was detected in roots using either seedling or aleurone cDNA clones as probes. Tissue-print hybridization indicates that the LTP genes are first expressed in young epidermal cells in leaves and coleoptiles, and subsequently expressed in the vascular strands. Genomic Southern analysis indicates that the barley LTP gene family has four to six members.Abbreviation LTP lipid transfer protein I thank Dr. J. Mundy, Carlsberg Research Laboratory, Copenhagen, Denmark for the PAPI cDNA clone and R. Barkardottir, Department of Molceular Biology, University of Aarhus, Denmark for providing RNA for some of the Northern analyses. I also thank I. Bjørndal and L. Kjeldbjerg for excellent technical assistance. This work was supported by the The Danish Biotechnology Programme.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号