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1.
Plant growth regulator-dependent (PGR-dependent) in vitro shoot organogenesis has been extensively studied in tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum), whereas PGR-independent adventitious shoot organogenesis received marginal attention in L. esculentum and no consideration at all in other Lycopersicon species. In the present study, induction of PGR-independent adventitious shoots was by decapitation of the apex and removal of preexisting shoot meristems of the seedling, and seedling culture on a medium with no PGR supplements. The existence of PGR-independent regeneration-ability was verified in L. esculentum genotypes (high pigment photomorphogenic mutants and wild-type counterparts) and was uncover amongst L. cheesmanii, L. chilense, L. chmielewskii, L. hirsutum, L. parviflorum, L.␣peruvianum and L. pimpinellifolium. Compared to species other than L. esculentum, high pigment photomorphogenic mutants displayed the weakest PGR-independent regeneration-ability. Our results imply that decapitated seedlings cultured on a medium without PGRs can serve as a convenient assay system for genotypic variation in self-controlled, PGR-independent, shoot regeneration-ability in a wide range of Lycopersicon species. Using transverse thin slices of the hypocotyl placed onto a medium supplemented with 0.2 μM zeatin reboside and 0.04 μM IAA, we assessed PGR-mediated shoot regeneration in L. esculentum genotypes. In a given genotype, more plants per seedling were established by PGR-mediated than by PGR-independent regeneration. However, with both modes of organogenesis, only a fraction of shoot buds eventually grew into normal plants, while others developed into abnormal regenerants having no stem. Percentage of stem-deficiency, in a given genotype, was higher in PGR-treated cultures, which indicates that PGRs amplify the formation frequency of imperfect adventitious apical shoot meristems. Unlike L. esculentum, adventitious shoot buds of other Lycopersicon species, induced by wounding seedlings that were not treated with PGRs, rarely formed regenerants lacking a stem.  相似文献   

2.
Salt tolerance defined in terms of fruit yield under different NaCl concentrations (171.1 and 325.1 mM) is analyzed in 11 lines belonging to: Lycopersicon esculentum, L. cheesmanii, L. chmielewski, L. peruvianum and L. pimpinellifolium. Four L. pimpinellifolium lines and two L. cheesmanii lines tolerated the 171.1mM treatment; the latter species even tolerates 325.1 mM of NaCl. Changes in gene expression induced by salt treatment were also investigated by studying anther and leaf zymograms for L. esculentum and one salt-tolerant L. pimpinellifolium line, and leaf proteinograms for all lines. Changes in leaf PRX and MDH enzymatic systems were detected, mainly in the salt-sensitive genotype (L. esculentum). Four saltrelated peptides from 14 500 to 40 000 daltons were found. A polyclonal antibody raised against one of these peptides (number 2), also binds another peptide, named 2, of much higher molecular weight, present both in control and salt-tolerant L. cheesmanii lines at the end of 171.1 mM treatment. The xero-halophyte shrub Atriplex halimus also showed a likely 2-homologous peptide with this treatment, while its counterpart C3 species A. triangularis did not.  相似文献   

3.
Summary Forty single-copy, nuclear probes of known chromosomal position were used to examine restriction fragment length polymorphism in the tomato genus Lycopersion. The probes were from three libraries: one cDNA, and two genomic libraries ne genomic made with EcoRI and the other with PstI. Total DNA from 156 plants representing eight species was cut with five different restriction enzymes and scored in 198 probe-enzyme combinations. Genetic distances between accessions (populations) and species were calculated from the resultant restriction patterns and proportion of shared bands. Accessions belonging to the same species largely clustered together, confirming their current classification. However, one mountain accession, classified as L. peruvianum var. humifusum (LA2150), was sufficiently distinct from the other accessions of L. peruvianum that it may qualify as a separate species L. esculentum and L. pimpinellifolium were the least clearly differentiated, possibly reflecting introgressive hybridization, known to have been promoted by man in recent history. Dendrograms constructed from cDNA versus genomic clones were nearly identical in their general grouping of species. The dendrograms revealed two major dichotomies in the genus: one corresponding to mating behavior [self-compatible (SC) versus self-incompatible (SI) species] and the other corresponding to fruit color (red versus green-fruited species). The ratio of withinversus between-accession diversity was much lower for SC species, indicating that most of the diversity within these species exists between populations, rather than within populations. Overall, the amount of genetic variation in the SI species far exceeded that found in SC species. This result is exemplified by the fact that more genetic variation could be found within a single accession of one of the SI species (e.g., L. peruvianum) than among all accessions tested of any one of the SC species (e.g., L. esculentum or L. pimpinellifolium). Results from this study are discussed in relationship to germ plasm collection/utilization and with regard to the use of RFLPs in tomato breeding and genetics.  相似文献   

4.
The juice of unripe fruit from a wild species of tomato, Lycopersicon peruvianum (L.) Mill., LA 107, contains over 50% of its soluble proteins as the sum of two proteinase inhibitors. These are the highest levels of proteinase inhibitors and highest percentage of soluble proteins as proteinase inhibitors of any plant or animal tissue found to date. Fruit of the modern tomato, L. esculentum Mill., contains only negligible quantities of the two inhibitors. The two proteinase inhibitors in the fruit of L. peruvianum are members of the Inhibitor I and II families previously found in potato tubers and in leaves of wounded potato and tomato plants. The levels of the two inhibitors in the unripe fruit decrease significantly during ripening. Unripe fruit from other wild Lycopersicon species such as L. parviflorum Rick, Kesicki, Fobes et Holle, L. hirsutum Humb. et Bonpe., L. pimpinellifolium Mill., and other lines of L. peruvianum contain moderate levels of the inhibitors that also decrease during ripening. Another wild tomato species, L. pennellii Corr., is similar to L. esculentum in not containing the two proteinase inhibitors in either unripe or ripe fruit. The transient levels of the inhibitors in fruit of wild species indicate that they are present in unripe fruit as defensive chemicals against insects, birds or small mammals and their disappearance during ripening may render them edible to facilitate seed dispersal. High levels of mRNAs coding for Inhibitors I and II in unripe fruit of L. peruvianum, LA 107, indicate that strong promoters may regulate the developmentally expressed proteinase-inhibitor genes in tomato fruit that may have a substantial potential for use in genetic-engineering experiments to enhance the production of large quantities of proteinase inhibitors or other proteins in field tomatoes.Abbreviations poly(A)+ mRNA polyadenylated mRNA - SDS-PAGE sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide electrophoresis Project 1791, College of Agriculture and Home Economics Research Center, Washington, State University  相似文献   

5.
The large- and small-subunit polypeptide composition of fraction 1 protein contained in seven species of Lycopersicon and Solanum pennellii was determined by electrofocusing. The eight species of protein had large subunits composed of three polypeptides separated by about 0.05 pH unit, but there was no difference in the isoelectric points of the clusters of three polypeptides. By this criterion, no surviving mutations have appeared in the extranuclear DNA coding for the cluster of large-subunit polypeptides during a period of evolution which generated the eight species of plants. The genus Lycopersicon appears to be much younger than its sister genus Nicotiana in the family Solanaceae, where four types of polypeptide clusters have evolved. Three different small-subunit polypeptides whose isoelectric points are coded by nuclear DNA have arisen among the seven Lycopersicon species, and L. hirsutum and S. pennellii have proteins containing single polypeptides and are therefore considered older than L. chilense, L. chimielewskii, and L. parviflorum, whose proteins contain two polypeptides. L. cheesemanii, L. pimpinellifolium, and L. esculentum (and probably L. peruvianum) seem to be the most recently evolved species since their fraction 1 proteins have small subunits composed of three polypeptides.This research was supported by NSF Grant 75-07368 and Contract No. EY-76-S-03-0034, P. A. #8, from the Department of Energy.  相似文献   

6.
L. peruvianum var humifusum is reproductively the most isolated of the species of the genusLycopersicon. It can be crossed with the cultivated tomato usingL. chilense as an intermediary. After a series of backcrosses of the three-genome hybrid F1 (L. esculentum ×L. chilense) ×L. peruvianum var humifusum withL. esculentum, accompanied by selection for resistance to some economically important diseases, several lines were established. One of these lines, Cm 180, which showed resistance toClavibacter michiganensis subsp.michiganensis, was subjected to genetic analysis. This resistance was found to be controlled by a single dominant gene (Cm) that was not allelic to the gene originating fromL. hirsutum f.glabratum. ThisCm gene was genetically mapped on chromosome 4. The germ plasm ofL. peruvianum var humifusum in combination withL. chilense was transferred intoL. esculentum. Different breeding lines possessing resistance to various diseases and pests could be developed from this material.  相似文献   

7.
We have shown that a major QTL for fruit weight (fw2.2) maps to the same position on chromosome 2 in the green-fruited wild tomato species, Lycopersicon pennellii and in the red-fruited wild tomato species, L. pimpinellifolium. An introgression line F2 derived from L. esculentum (tomato) x L. pennellii and a backcross 1 (BC1) population derived from L. esculentum x L. pimpinellifolium both place fw2.2 near TG91 and TG167 on chromosome 2 of the tomato highdensity linkage map. fw2.2 accounts for 30% and 47% of the total phenotypic variance in the L. pimpinellifolium and L. pennellii populations, respectively, indicating that this is a major QTL controlling fruit weight in both species. Partial dominance (d/a of 0.44) was observed for the L. pennellii allele of fw 2.2 as compared with the L. esculentum allele. A QTL with very similar phenotypic affects and gene action has also been identified and mapped to the same chromosomal region in other wild tomato accessions: L. cheesmanii and L. pimpinellifolium. Together, these data suggest that fw2.2 represents an orthologous QTL (i.e., derived by speciation as opposed to duplication) common to most, if not all, wild tomato species. High-resolution mapping may ultimately lead to the cloning of this key locus controlling fruit development in tomato.  相似文献   

8.
The fungal pathogen Alternaria alternata f. sp. lycopersici produces AAL-toxins that function as chemical determinants of the Alternaria stem canker disease in the tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum). In resistant cultivars, the disease is controlled by the Asc locus on chromosome 3. Our aim was to characterize novel sources of resistance to the fungus and of insensitivity to the host-selective AAL-toxins. To that end, the degree of sensitivity of wild tomato species to AAL-toxins was analyzed. Of all members of the genus Lycopersicon, only L. cheesmanii was revealed to be sensitive to AAL-toxins and susceptible to fungal infection. Besides moderately insensitive responses from some species, L. pennellii and L. peruvianum were shown to be highly insensitive to AAL-toxins as well as resistant to the pathogen. Genetic analyses showed that high insensitivity to AAL-toxins from L. pennellii is inherited in tomato as a single complete dominant locus. This is in contrast to the incomplete dominance of insensitivity to AAL-toxins of L. esculentum. Subsequent classical genetics, RFLP mapping and allelic testing indicated that high insensitivity to AAL-toxins from L. pennellii is conferred by a new allele of the Asc locus.  相似文献   

9.
Plants of 25 wild Lycopersicon accessions were screened in the greenhouse for resistance to the whitefly-borne tomato yellow leaf curl virus (TYLCV). High levels of resistance were detected in 7 of 9 accessions of L. peruvianum and in all 5 accessions of L. chilense tested. In contrast, plants of 7 accessions of L. hirsutum and 3 of 4 accessions of L. pimpinellifolium were highly susceptible. Plants of accession CIAS 27 (L. pimpinellifolium) showed moderate resistance to TYLCV.  相似文献   

10.
Summary Accessions of eight Lycopersicon species and five yellow-flowered Solanum species were used as males in crosses with 2x and 4x L. esculentum to observe seed set and progeny ploidy. Species which failed in crosses to L. esculentum were crossed as males to 2x and 4x L. peruvianum. In cases of low seed set, chromosome counts were undertaken to establish the nature of the progeny. Endosperm Balance Number (EBN) relationships were determined for the crossability groups. Results support the basic concept of an L. esculentum crossability complex and an L. peruvianum crossability complex. Within the L. esculentum complex, all EBNs appear identical with a value of 2. Within the L. peruvianum complex, more variability appears to exist. The EBN values of this group are higher, and may be approximately double those of the L. esculentum complex. The EBN of L. peruvianum var humifusum appears to be somewhat lower than other L. peruvianum types. The EBN values of S. lycopersicoides, S. rickii, S. ochranthum and S. juglandtfolium could not be determined experimentally. Differential aspects of Lycopersicon and tuber-bearing Solanum evolution may be interpreted on the basis of endosperm compatibility.Co-operative investigation of the Vegetable Crops Research Unit, U.S. Department of Agriculture, Agricultural Research Service, and the Wisconsin Agricultural Experiment Station  相似文献   

11.
Summary Using a modified embryo callus culture technique, hybrids between Lycopersicon esculentum and L. peruvianum were developed and their usefulness as bridge lines for facilitating interspecific gene transfer was evaluated. Four of these lines showed a high level of sexual compatibility with several other L. peruvianum var. typicum accessions, as well as with accessions of L. peruvianum var. humifusum and L. peruvianum var. glandulosum and L. esculentum. These bridge line x L. peruvianum hybrids could be crossed with L. esculentum to introgress genes from L. peruvianum into L. esculentum.  相似文献   

12.
Fruit of the domestic tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum Mill.) accumulate soluble sugars primarily in the form of the hexoses, glucose and fructose. In contrast, the predominant sugar in fruit of the wild tomato relative, L. chmielewskii, is sucrose. In the present study, the inheritance and linkage relations of sucrose accumulation were examined in interspecific L. esculentum x L. chmielewskii populations. In backcrosses to either the wild or domestic tomato, segregation for sucrose accumulation permitted qualitative analysis of the trait and indicated monogenic recessive control, although deviations from Mendelian inheritance were observed in some populations. This major gene, designated sucr, was mapped in F2, F3, and BC1F2 populations using a set of 95 informative RFLP and isozyme markers covering the tomato genome. A map location near the centromere of chromosome 3 was established, with tight linkage to the genomic clone TG102. Association of sucrose accumulation with yellow fruit, encoded by an allele of the r gene, permitted alignment with the classical map, thereby confirming the map location of sucr. A linkage map of the region surrounding sucr was obtained by monitoring recombination between flanking markers in the back-crosses to tomato. A cDNA clone of tomato fruit acid invertase, TIV1, was mapped to TG102 and sucr, with no recombination between the two RFLP markers observed in over 1700 meiotic products. Despite the tight linkage, TG102 and TIV1 hybridize to distinct restriction fragments, hence do not represent the same gene. The genetic data strongly suggest that sucr is an allele of the invertase gene and thus support previous biochemical studies that demonstrated low invertase activity in sucrose-accumulating fruit. L. hisutum, another low-invertase, sucrose-accumulating species, was hybridized with L. chmielewskii and the resulting F1 plants accumulated sucrose, indicating that genetic control of soluble sugar composition is conserved in these two species.  相似文献   

13.
Recombinant inbred lines for genetic mapping in tomato   总被引:11,自引:5,他引:6  
A cross between the cultivated tomato Lycopersicon esculentum and a related wild species L. cheesmanii yielded 97 recombinant inbred lines (RILs) which were used to construct a genetic map consisting of 132 molecular markers. Significant deviation from the expected 1:1 ratio between the two homozygous classes was found in 73% of the markers. In 98% of the deviating markers, L. esculentum alleles were present in greater frequency than the L. cheesmanii alleles. For most of the markers with skewed segregation, the direction of the deviation was maintained from F2 to F7 generations. The average heterozygosity in the population was 15%. This value is significantly greater than the 1.5% heterozygosity expected for RILs in the F7 generation. On average, recombination between linked markers was twice as high in the RILs than in the F2 population used to derive them. The utility of RILs for the mapping of qualitative and quantitative traits is discussed.  相似文献   

14.
Inter-simple sequence repeat (ISSR) analysis was for the first time used to study the genetic diversity and phylogenetic relationships in 54 wild accessions and cultivars of the genus Lycopersicon. Analysis involved 14 ISSR primers homologous to microsatellite repeats and containing additional selective anchor nucleotides. In total, 318 ISSR fragments were amplified for the wild and cultivated tomato genomes. The interspecific polymorphism revealed with the ISSR primers was 95.6%. Species-specific ISSR fragments were detected for each tomato species. The highest number (more than 20) of species-specific fragments were obtained for L. esculentum sensu lato, although the intraspecific variation of ISSR patterns was low. UPGMA cluster analysis was used to construct a dendrogram and to estimate the genetic distances between the species of the genus Lycopersicon; between populations ofL. peruvianum, L. pimpinellifolium, and L. esculentum; and between tomato cultivars. The ISSR-based phylogeny was generally consistent with Lycopersicon taxonomy based on morphological and molecular evidence, suggesting the applicability of ISSR analysis for genotyping and phylogenetic studies in tomato.  相似文献   

15.
The two-spotted spider mite (Tetranychus urticae Koch) is an important pest of tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum Mill.) crops in temperate regions as this spider mite has a very large capacity for population increase and causes severe tomato yield losses. There is no described tomato cultivar fully resistant to this pest, although resistant accessions have been reported within the green-fruited tomato wild species L. pennellii (Corr.) D’Arcy and L. hirsutum Humb. & Bonpl. We observed a L. pimpinellifolium (Jusl.) Mill. accession, ‘TO-937’, which seemed to be completely resistant to mite attacks and we crossed it with the susceptible L. esculentum cultivar. ‘Moneymaker’ to obtain a family of generations consisting of the two parents, the F1, the F2, the BC1 to L. esculentum, and the BC1 to L. pimpinellifolium. This family was evaluated for mite resistance in a polyethylene greenhouse using an experimental design in 60 small complete blocks distributed along 12 double rows. Each block consisted of five F2 plants in one row and one plant of each of the two parents, the F1, the BC1 to L. esculentum, and the BC1 to L. pimpinellifolium in the adjacent row. Plants at the 10–15 leaf stage were artificially infested by putting on them two pieces of French bean leaf heavily infested with T. urticae. After two months, evaluations of infestation were made by visual observation of mite nets and leaf damage. Plants that were free of signs of mite reproduction on the top half were considered as resistant, plants with silky nets only on their basal leaves, intermediate, and plants with mite reproduction on both basal and top canopies were scored as susceptible. Dominance for resistance appeared because all the ‘To-937’, BC1 to L. pimpinellifolium, and F1 plants were resistant. Not all ‘Moneymaker’ plants behaved as susceptible because 35% of plants were intermediate. In the BC1 to L. pimpinellifolium and the F2, most plants were scored as resistant, only 7 % BC1 and 3 % F2 plants were intermediate, and a single F2 plant (0.3 %) was susceptible. With these figures, resistance seemed to be controlled by either four or two genes according to whether segregation in the BC1 or in the F2, respectively, were considered. These results could in part be explained because of appearance of negative interplot interference due to the high frequency of resistant genotypes within most of the generations. Therefore, the family was evaluated again but using a different experimental design. In the new experiment, 16 ‘TO-937’, 17 ‘Moneymaker’, 17 F1, 37 BC1 to L. pimpinellifolium, 38 BC1 to L. esculentum, and 125 F2 plants were included. Each of these test plants was grown besides a susceptible ‘Moneymaker’ auxilliary plant that served to keep mite population high and homogeneous in the greenhouse. Negative interplot interference was avoided with this design and all the ‘TO-937’, F1, and BC1 to L. pimpinellifolium plants were resistant, all ‘Moneymaker’ test plants were susceptible, and 52 % BC1 to L. esculentum and 25 % F2 plants were susceptible, which fitted very well with the expected for resistance governed by a single dominant gene. The simple inheritance mode found will favour sucessful introgression of mite resistance into commercial tomatoes from the very close relative L. pimpinellifolium.  相似文献   

16.
The high variability found among Tomato yellow leaf curl virus (TYLCV) isolates from different geographical areas makes progress in breeding for TYLCV resistance slow. By using Agrobacterium-mediated inoculation, we have identified several new resistant sources to TYLCV within a extraordinarily variable wild Lycopersicon gene pool, collected in semidesert areas of Ecuador and Peru changed into wet by “El Nińo”. This screening assay revealed a high susceptibility within L. esculentum and L. pennellii, but different levels of resistance within L. pimpinellifolium and L. hirsutum. Resistance level was related to the collection place, being concentrated in accessions collected in Northern Peru (Piura province). Agroinoculation allowed the selection of 4 Lycopersicon pimpinellifolium and 2 Lycopersicon hirsutum accessions with higher level of resistance than accessions of these species previously reported, avoiding interference due to vector resistance mechanisms reported in both species. These new resistance sources will be included in pyramiding strategies aimed at obtaining durable resistance to TYLCV.  相似文献   

17.
Three chromosomal segments from the wild tomato, L. chmielewskii, introgressed into the L. esculentum genome have been previously mapped to the middle and terminal regions of chromosome 7 (7M, 7T respectively), and to the terminal region of chromosome 10 (10T). The present study was designed to investigate the physiological mechanisms controlled by the 7M and 7T segments on tomato soluble solids (SS) and pH, and their genetic regulation during fruit development. The effects of 7M and 7T were studied in 64 BC2F5 backcross inbred lines (BILs) developed from a cross between LA 1501 (an L. esculentum line containing the 7M and 7T fragments from L. chmielewskii), and VF145B-7879 (a processing cultivar). BILs were classified into four homozygous genotypes with respect to the introgressed segments based on RFLP analysis, and evaluated for fruit chemical characteristics at different harvest stages. Gene(s) in the 7M fragment reduce fruit water uptake during ripening increasing pH, sugars, and SS concentration. Gene(s) in the 7T fragment were found to be associated with higher mature green fruit starch concentration and red ripe fruit weight. Comparisons between tomatoes ripened on or off the vine suggest that the physiological mechanisms influenced by the L. chmielewskii alleles are dependent on the translocation of photosynthates and water during fruit ripening.  相似文献   

18.
Forty-eight lines of Lycopersicon and four lines of Solanum were screened for resistance to twelve Heterodera rostochiensis populations of known patho-type(s). Plant lines were assessed for resistance first by examining the outside of the root ball for cysts and later by washing the root ball to extract all cysts. Possible resistant plant selections were re-tested against three eelworm populations, including the one to which they were first shown resistant. Resistance was discovered in two lines of Lycopersicon pimpinelli-folium, two L. esculentum L. pimpinellifolium crosses, L. esculentum var. cerasiforme, six lines of L. peruvianum, in L. peruvianum var. humifusum, L. hirsutum var. glabratum, and in Solanum indicum. Because resistance was found most commonly in L. peruvianum and because it has already been used as a resistant parent in breeding programmes to incorporate resistance to root-knot nematode (Meloidogyne spp.) in tomato, L. peruvianum seems to be the best source of resistance among plants tested so far. The host-parasite relationships of resistant L. hirsutum var. glabratum (B 6013) were compared with those of a commercial, susceptible tomato, L. esculentum‘Ailsa Craig’. Plants were inoculated with three eelworm isolates; the extent of eelworm invasion, plant reaction and eelworm development were studied. Larvae invaded and penetrated roots of the resistant plant as freely and in as large numbers as they penetrated roots of the susceptible tomato. In the latter, numerous larvae matured while, in contrast, few larvae matured in the roots of L. hirsutum var. glabratum. L. hirsutum var. glabratum was shown to possess a root diffusate as active in hatching larvae of Heterodera rostochiensis as that of L. esculentum‘Ailsa Craig’. The existence of pathotypes of H. rostochiensis, identifiable by their differing abilities to increase on resistant tomato lines, was not clearly revealed in the experiments.  相似文献   

19.
Long-term chilling of young tomato plants under low light   总被引:8,自引:0,他引:8  
The properties of two Calvin-cycle key enzymes, i.e. stromal fructose-1,6-bisphosphatase (sFBPase) and ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (Rubisco) were studied in the cultivated tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum Mill.) and in four lines of a wild tomato (L. peruvianum Mill.) from different altitudes. During chilling for 14 d at 10°C and low light, the activation energy (EA) of the reaction catalyzed by sFBPase decreased by 5–10 kJ·mol–1 inL. esculentum and the threeL. peruvianum lines from high altitudes. InL. peruvianum, no loss or only small losses of enzyme activity were observed during the chilling. Together with the change in EA, this indicates that the latter species is able to acclimate its Calvin-cycle enzymes to low temperatures. InL. esculentum, the chilling stress resulted in the irreversible loss of 57% of the initial sFBPase activity. Under moderately photoinhibiting chilling conditions for 3 d, theL. peruvianum line from an intermediate altitude showed the largest decreases in both the ratio of variable to maximum chlorophyll fluorescence (Fv/Fm) and the in-vivo activation state of sFBPase, while the otherL. peruvianum lines showed no inhibition of sFBPase activation. Ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase was isolated by differential ammonium-sulfate precipitation and gel filtration and characterized by two-dimensional electrophoresis. The enzyme fromL. esculentum had three isoforms of the small subunit of Rubisco, each with different isoelectric points. Of these, theL. peruvianum enzyme contained only the two more-acidic isoforms. Arrhenius plots of the specific activity of purified Rubisco showed breakpoints at approx. 17°C. Upon chilling, the specific activity of the enzyme fromL. esculentum decreased by 51%, while EA below the breakpoint temperature increased from 129 to 189 kJ·mol–1. In contrast, Rubisco from theL. peruvianum lines from high altitudes was unaffected by chilling. We tested several possibile explanations for Rubisco inactivation, using two-dimensional electrophoresis, analytical ultracentrifugation, gel filtration and inhibitor tests. No indications were found for differential expression of the subunit isoforms, proteolysis, aggregation, subunit disassembly, or inhibitor accumulation in the enzyme from chilledL. esculentum. We suggest that the activity loss in theL. esculentum enzyme upon chilling is the result of a modification of sulfhydryl groups or other sidechains of the protein.Abbreviations a.s.l. above sea level - Chl chlorophyll - DTT dithiothreitol - EA activation energy - FBP fructose-1,6-bisphosphate - Fv/Fm ratio of variable to maximum chlorophyll fluorescence - HL high light (500 mol photons·m–2·s–1) - LSU large subunit of Rubisco - ME 2-mercaptoethanol - Rubisco ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase - RuBP ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate - sFBPase stromal fructose-1,6-bisphosphatase - SSU small subunit of Rubisco  相似文献   

20.
Summary The locus, I2, which in tomato confers resistance against Fusarium oxysporum f. sp. lycopersici race 2, was introgressed into Lycopersicon esculentum from the wild species L. pimpinellifolium (P.I. 126915). We searched for restriction fragment length polymorphisms (RFLPs) between nearly isogenic lines (NILs) in clones that map to the region introgressed from the wild species. Since I2 maps to chromosome 11, we used DNA clones from this chromosome as hybridization probes to Southern blots containing bound DNA of the NILs digested with 23 restriction enzymes. Of the 14 chromosome 11 clones, 9 exhibited polymorphism. These clones were further hybridized to verification filters that contained DNA from resistant and susceptible L. esculentum varieties digested with the enzymes that gave the polymorphism. One clone, TG105, was found to be associated with I2; 19 susceptible lines showed a different RFLP with this probe than 16 resistant lines, including the original L. pimpinellifolium accession used as a source for the resistance gene. These results together with our mapping analysis indicate that TG105 is closely linked to the resistance gene.  相似文献   

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