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A member of the potato proteinase inhibitor II (PPI-II) gene family under the control of the cauliflower mosaic virus 35S promoter has been introduced into tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum). Purification of the PPI-II protein that accumulates in transgenic tobacco has confirmed that the N-terminal signal sequence is removed and that the inhibitor accumulates as a protein of the expected size (21 kD). However, a smaller peptide of approximately 5.4 kD has also been identified as a foreign gene product in transgenic tobacco plants. This peptide is recognized by an anti-PPI-II antibody, inhibits the serine proteinase chymotrypsin, and is not observed in nontransgenic tobacco. Furthermore, amino acid sequencing demonstrates that the peptide is identical to a lower molecular weight chymotrypsin inhibitor found in potato tubers and designated as potato chymotrypsin inhibitor I (PCI-I). Together, these data confirm that, as postulated to occur in potato, PCI-I does arise from the full-length PPI-II protein by posttranslational processing. The use of transgenic tobacco represents an ideal system with which to determine the precise mechanism by which this protein modification occurs.  相似文献   

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Asr is a family of genes that maps to chromosome 4 of tomato. Asr2, a recently reported member of this family, is believed to be regulated by abscisic acid (ABA), stress and ripening. A genomic Asr2 clone has been fully sequenced, and candidate upstream regulatory elements have been identified. To prove that the promoter region is functional in vivo, we fused it upstream of the β-glucuronidase (GUS) reporter gene. The resulting chimeric gene fusion was used for transient expression assays in papaya embryogenic calli and leaves. In addition, the same construct was used to produce transgenic tomato, papaya, tobacco, and potato plants. Asr2 upstream sequences showed promoter function in all of these systems. Under the experimental conditions tested, ABA stimulated GUS expression in papaya and tobacco, but not in tomato and potato systems.  相似文献   

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Summary Two cDNA clones containing the complete coding region of a developmentally controlled (tuber-specific) as well as environmentally inducible (wound-inducible) gene from potato (Solanum tuberosum) have been sequenced. The open reading frame codes for 154 amino acids. Its sequence is highly homologous to the proteinase inhibitor II from tomato, indicating that the cDNA's encode the corresponding proteinase inhibitor II of potato. In addition the putative potato proteinase inhibitor II contains a sequence which is completely homologous with that of another small peptide proteinase inhibitor from potato, called PCI-I. Evidence is presented that this small peptide is probably derived from the proteinase inhibitor II by posttranslational processing.Northern type experiments using RNA from wounded and nonwounded leaves demonstrate that RNA homologous to the putative proteinase inhibitor II cDNA's accumulates in leaves as a consequence of wounding, whereas normally the expression of this gene is under strict developmental control, since it is detected only in tubers of potato (Rosahl et al. 1986). In addition the induction of this gene in leaves can also be achieved by the addition of different polysaccharides such as poly galacturonic acid or chitosan. In contrast to the induction of its expression by wounding in leaves, wounding of tubers results in a disappearance of the proteinase II inhibitor m-RNA from these organs.  相似文献   

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The systemic induction of expression of the gene for proteinase inhibitor II after wounding different parts of potato (Solanum tuberosum L.) plants was analysed at the RNA level. Wounding of either leaves or tubers led to an induction of expression of this gene in non-wounded upper and lower leaves as well as in the upper stem segment, whereas no expression was observed in nonwounded roots or in the lower stem segment. The signal mediating the systemic induction in nonwounded tissue must therefore be able to move both acropetally and basipetally. The systemic wound response is specific for the expression of the proteinase-inhibitor-II gene as no influence was observed for the expression of genes encoding the small subunit of ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase and the tuber storage protein patatin which were examined in parallel with the proteinase-inhibitor-II gene.Abbreviation ssRubisco small subunit of ribulose-1,5-bis-phosphate carboxylase  相似文献   

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The proteinase inhibitor II (pin2) gene family exhibits two different modes of expression. It is, on the one hand, constitutively expressed in flowers of potato and tomato plants. and in potato tubers. On the other hand, its expression is induced in the plant foliage by mechanical wounding. To define cis-regulatory elements involved in pin2 promoter activity, deletion analysis of a potato pin2 promoter has been performed in stably and transiently transformed potato and tobacco plants. Two different elements, a quantitative enhancer and a regulatory element, are required for promoter activity. While functional promoter elements required for pin2 activity in tubers and wounded leaves could not be separated, its expression in flowers is mediated by different cis-acting sequences. Induction of pin2 expression in leaves by treatment with the plant growth regulators abscisic acid and jasmonic acid, and the general metabolite sucrose, depends on the presence of the regulatory element involved in expression in tubers and wounded leaves. Thus, pin2 expression in tubers and wounded leaves apparently results from the action of similar hormonal signals on closely linked promoter elements, while a different signal pathway leads to its constitutive expression in flowers.  相似文献   

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W E Brown  K Takio  K Titani  C A Ryan 《Biochemistry》1985,24(9):2105-2108
The primary structure of the wound-inducible trypsin inhibitor from alfalfa (ATI) establishes it as a member of the Bowman-Birk proteinase inhibitor family. The time course of induction of ATI in alfalfa following wounding is similar to the induction of the nonhomologous proteinase inhibitors I and II in tomato and potato leaves, and, like inhibitors I and II, ATI is induced to accumulate in excised leaves supplied with the proteinase inhibitor inducing factor from tomato leaves. The similarity of the wound induction of ATI to that of inhibitors I and II indicates that wound-regulated systems are present in Solanaceae and Leguminosae plant families that possess a common fundamental recognition system regulating synthesis of proteinase inhibitors in response to pest attacks. ATI is the first Bowman-Birk inhibitor that has been found in leaves and is the only member of this family known to be regulated by wounding.  相似文献   

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Asr is a family of genes that maps to chromosome 4 of tomato. Asr2, a recently reported member of this family, is believed to be regulated by abscisic acid (ABA), stress and ripening. A genomic Asr2 clone has been fully sequenced, and candidate upstream regulatory elements have been identified. To prove that the promoter region is functional in vivo, we fused it upstream of the β-glucuronidase (GUS) reporter gene. The resulting chimeric gene fusion was used for transient expression assays in papaya embryogenic calli and leaves. In addition, the same construct was used to produce transgenic tomato, papaya, tobacco, and potato plants. Asr2 upstream sequences showed promoter function in all of these systems. Under the experimental conditions tested, ABA stimulated GUS expression in papaya and tobacco, but not in tomato and potato systems. Received: 24 March 1997 / Accepted: 26 November 1997  相似文献   

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The expression of chloramphenical acetyl transferase (CAT) protein driven by the wound-inducible promoter from the proteinase inhibitor II K (pin2) gene was examined in whole tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum L.) plants under field conditions. Mechanical wounding of the field-grown leaves caused an accumulation of CAT protein in these leaves which begins several hours after wounding and continues to accumulate for about 36 hours. When sections of leaves were assayed for accumulation of CAT protein following wounding, the CAT protein was found to accumulate in the apical portions of the leaves. When endogenous insects attacked the leaves of transgenic plants grown in the field, the plants responded by inducing CAT protein. The mesophyll cells of the leaf were the site of expression of the CAT protein rather than the mid-vein or major veins within the leaf blade, indicating that the wound-inducible pin2 promoter specifically directs the synthesis of novel genes in tissues preferentially consumed by larval insects.  相似文献   

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A cDNA and a corresponding genomic clone encoding a protein with partial identity to type II proteinase inhibitors from potato, tomato and Nicotiana alata, were isolated from tobacco libraries. The protein of 197 amino acids contains a putative signal peptide of 24 residues and three homologous domains, each with a different reactive site. The tobacco PI-II gene is not expressed in leaves of healthy plants, but is locally induced in leaves subjected to different types of stress (TMV infection, wounding, UV irradiation) and upon ethephon treatment. As opposed to the analogous PI-II genes of potato and tomato, the tobacco gene is not systemically induced by wounding or pathogenic infection. A far-upstream region in the PI-II promoter, containing various direct and indirect repeats, shares considerable sequence similarity to a similar region in the stress-inducible Cu/Zn-superoxide dismutase gene of N. plumbaginifolia.  相似文献   

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A potato gene encoding cathepsin D inhibitor (CDI) is expressed constitutively in tubers and flower buds and it is inducible in leaves upon wounding of the tissue or by treatment with methyl jasmonate (MJA). A fusion gene (CDI:GUS) in which the 2.4 kb long promoter of the CDI gene was translationaly fused with the coding sequence for -glucuronidase (GUS) showed MJA-inducible expression in transformed tobacco cells in suspension. The maximum level of induction by MJA was obtained in the absence of auxin and repression of MJA-inducible expression of the fusion gene by auxin was released by aphidicolin, the results suggesting that MJA-inducible expression is repressed during active cell division. JA and MJA showed similar activities in inducing the expression of the fusion gene, while other JA-related compounds such as cucurbic acid, tuberonic acid and dihydrojasmonic acid neither induced expression of the fusion gene nor inhibited the MJA-inducible expression of the fusion gene. Methyl dihydrojasmonate specifically stimulated the MJA-inducible expression of the fusion gene. The MJA-inducible expression of the fusion gene was observed even with a 100 bp long promoter of the CDI gene albeit with significantly decreased level of expression compared to the 2.4 kb long promoter. The 100 bp long CDI promoter did not contain a G-box or hexamer motif that had been implicated in the MJA-responsive expression of several other plant genes. Further mutagenesis of the 100 bp long promoter by deletion or oligonucleotide insertion suggested that although a sequence between –100 and –82 is required for the MJA-responsive expression, the presence of this sequence alone does not confer the MJA-responsive expression.Abbreviations BA N6-benzyladenine - CA cucurbic acid - CaMV cauliflower mosaic virus - CDI cathepsin D inhibitor - DMSO dimethyl sulfoxide - GUS -glucuronidase - HJA dihydrojasmonic acid - JA Jasmonic acid - MCA methyl cucurbate - MJA methyl jasmonate - MHJA methyl dihydrojasmonate - MTA methyl tuberonate - PI-II proteinase inhibitor II - TA tuberonic acid - 2,4-D 2,4-dichlorophenoxyacetic acid.  相似文献   

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A DNA clone encoding a cathepsin D inhibitor CathInh was isolated from a potato genomic library using a CathInh cDNA as hybridization probe. The amino acid sequence of the coding region is nearly identical with a CathInh cDNA and CathInh proteins previously isolated from a tuber-specific cDNA library and from tubers, respectively. Analysis of GUS activity resulting from expression of chimeric CathInh promoter-GUS genes in transgenic potato plants revealed expression exclusively confined to potato tubers. No GUS activity could be detected in any other organ of the transgenic plants either constitutively or after wounding or treatment with abscisic and jasmonic acid (JA). Interestingly, part of the promoter region of the CathInh gene, essential for GUS activity in tubers, shows striking similarity to promoter regions of tuber-specific class I patatin genes.  相似文献   

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Proteinase inhibitors I and II were purified to electrophoretic homogeneity from leaves of tomato plants induced by either wounding intact plants or by supplying excised plants with the proteinase inhibitor inducing factor. Affinity chromatography with chymotrypsin-Sepharose was employed as a final purification step for each inhibitor. The tomato leaf inhibitors are very similar to potato tuber inhibitors I and II in subunit molecular weight, composition, and inhibitory activities against chymotrypsin, trypsin, and subtilisin. However, unlike the potato tuber which contains multiple isoinhibitors by isoelectric focusing, the tomato leaf exhibits only two isoinhibitor forms of inhibitor I and a single form of inhibitor II. The molecular weight of native potato inhibitor I was reevaluated by rigorous ultracentrifugal analysis and compared with data from previous analyses. The data confirm that native inhibitor I has a native Mr of about 41,000 and is a pentamer. Inhibitor II has a molecular weight of near 23,000 and is a dimer.  相似文献   

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