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 31 毫秒
1.
2.
The recently cloned cDNA for pea chloroplast thioredoxin f was used to produce, by PCR, a fragment coding for a protein lacking the transit peptide. This cDNA fragment was subcloned into a pET expression vector and used to transform E. coli cells. After induction with IPTG the transformed cells produce the protein, mainly in the soluble fraction of the broken cells. The recombinant thioredoxin f has been purified and used to raise antibodies and analysed for activity. The antibodies appear to be specific towards thioredoxin f and do not recognize other types of thioredoxin. The recombinant protein could activate two chloroplastic enzymes, namely NADP-dependent malate dehydrogenase (NADP-MDH) and fructose 1,6-bisphosphatase (FBPase), both using dithiothreitol as a chemical reductant and in a light-reconstituted/thylakoid assay. Recombinant pea thioredoxin f turned out to be an excellent catalyst for NADP-MDH activation, being the more efficient than a recombinant m-type thioredoxin of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii and the thioredoxin of E. coli. At the concentrations of thioredoxin used in the target enzyme activation assays only the recombinant thioredoxin f activated the FBPase.  相似文献   

3.
Cytokinin metabolism in plants is very complex. More than 20 cytokinins bearing isoprenoid and aromatic side chains were identified by high performance liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry (HPLC-MS) in pea (Pisum sativum L. cv. Gotik) leaves, indicating diverse metabolic conversions of primary products of cytokinin biosynthesis. To determine the potential involvement of two enzymes metabolizing cytokinins, cytokinin oxidase/dehydrogenase (CKX, EC 1.5.99.12) and zeatin reductase (ZRED, EC 1.3.1.69), in the control of endogenous cytokinin levels, their in vitro activities were investigated in relation to the uptake and metabolism of [2−3H]trans-zeatin ([2−3H]Z) in shoot explants of pea. Trans-zeatin 9-riboside, trans-zeatin 9-riboside-5′-monophosphate and cytokinin degradation products adenine and adenosine were detected as predominant [2−3H]Z metabolites during 2, 5, 8, and 24 h incubation. Increasing formation of adenine and adenosine indicated extensive degradation of [2−3H]Z by CKX. High CKX activity was confirmed in protein preparations from pea leaves, stems, and roots by in vitro assays. Inhibition of CKX by dithiothreitol (15 mM) in the enzyme assays revealed relatively high activity of ZRED catalyzing conversion of Z to dihydrozeatin (DHZ) and evidently competing for the same substrate cytokinin (Z) in protein preparations from pea leaves, but not from pea roots and stems. The conversion of Z to DHZ by pea leaf enzyme was NADPH dependent and was significantly inhibited or completely suppressed in vitro by diethyldithiocarbamic acid (DIECA; 10 mM). Relations of CKX and ZRED in the control of cytokinin levels in pea leaves with respect to their potential role in establishment and maintenance of cytokinin homeostasis in plants are discussed.  相似文献   

4.
Two-dimensional gel electrophoresis of pea root and root hair proteins revealed the existence of at least 10 proteins present at elevated levels in root hairs. One of these, named RH2, was isolated and a partial amino acid sequence was determined from two tryptic peptides. Using this sequence information oligonucleotides were designed to isolate by PCR an RH2 cDNA clone. In situ hybridization studies with this cDNA clone showed that rh2 is not only expressed in root hairs, but also in root epidermal cells lacking these tubular outgrowths. During post-embryonic development the gene is switched on after the transition of protoderm into epidermis and since rh2 is already expressed in a globular pea embryo in the protoderm at the side attached to the suspensor, we conclude that the expression of rh2 is developmentally regulated. At the amino acid level RH2 is 95% homologous to the pea PR protein I49a. These gene encoding I49a is induced in pea pods upon inoculation with the pathogen Fusarium solani [12]. We postulate that rh2 contributes to a constitutive defence barrier in the root epidermis. A similar role has been proposed for chalcone synthase (CHS) and chitinase, pathogenesis-related protein that are also constitutively present in certain epidermal tissues.  相似文献   

5.
6.
Changes in cytokinin pool and cytokinin oxidase/dehydrogenase activity (CKX EC: 1.5.99.12) in response to increasing abscisic acid (ABA) concentrations (0.5–10 μM) were assessed in the last fully expanded leaves and secondary roots of two pea (Pisum sativum) varieties with different vegetation periods. Certain organ diversity in CKX response to exogenous ABA was observed. Treatment provoked altered cytokinin pool in the aboveground parts of both studied cultivars. Specific CKX activity was influenced significantly basically in roots of the treated plants. Results suggest that ABA-mediated cytokinin pool changes are leaf-specific and involve certain root signals in which CKX activity presents an important link. This enzymatic activity most probably regulates vascular transport of active cytokinins from roots to shoots.  相似文献   

7.
The cdc2 kinases are important cell cycle regulators in all eukaryotes. MAP kinases, a closely related family of protein kinases, are involved in cell cycle regulation in yeasts and vertebrates, but previously have not been documented in plants. We used PCR to amplify Brassica napus DNA sequences using primers corresponding to amino sequences that are common to all known protein kinases. One sequence was highly similar to KSS1, a MAP kinase from Saccharomyces cerevisiae. This sequence was used to isolate a full-length MAP kinase-like clone from a pea cDNA library. The pea clone, called D5, shared approximately 50% amino acid identity with MAP kinases from yeasts and vertebrates and about 41% identity with plant cdc2 kinases. An expression protein encoded by D5 was recognized by an antiserum specific to human MAP kinases (ERKs). Messenger RNA corresponding to D5 was present at similar levels in all tissues examined, without regard to whether cell division or elongation were occurring in those tissues.  相似文献   

8.
9.
Long-distance signalling and a mutational analysis of branching in pea   总被引:17,自引:0,他引:17  
Four ramosus mutants with increased branching at basal andaerial nodes have been used to investigate the genetic regulation of budoutgrowth in Pisum sativum L. (garden pea). Studies oflong-distance signalling, xylem sap cytokinin concentrations, shootauxin level, auxin transport and auxin response are discussed. A modelof branching control is presented that encompasses twograft-transmissible signals in addition to auxin and cytokinin. Mutantsrms1 through rms4 are not deficient in indole-3-aceticacid (IAA) or in the basipetal transport of this hormone. Three of thefour mutants, rms1, rms3 and rms4, have veryreduced cytokinin concentrations in xylem sap from roots. This reductionin xylem sap cytokinin concentration appears to be caused by a propertyof the shoot and may be part of a feedback mechanism induced by anaspect of bud outgrowth. The shoot-to-root feedback signal is unlikelyto be auxin itself, as auxin levels and transport are not correlatedwith xylem sap cytokinin concentrations in various intact and graftedmutant and wild-type plants. Rms1 and Rms2 act inshoot and rootstock to regulate the level or transport ofgraft-transmissible signals. Various grafting studies and double mutantanalyses have associated Rms2 with the regulation of theshoot-to-root feedback signal. Rms1 is associated with a secondunknown graft-transmissible signal that is postulated to move in thedirection of root-to-shoot. Exogenous auxin appears to interact withboth of the signals regulated by Rms1 and Rms2 in theinhibition of branching after decapitation. The action of Rms3and Rms4 is less apparent at this stage, although both appearto act largely in the shoot.  相似文献   

10.
The expression of a lectin gene in pea (Pisum sativum L.) roots has been investigated using the copy DNA of a pea seed lectin as a probe. An mRNA which has the same size as the seed mRNA but which is about 4000 times less abundant has been detected in 21-d-old roots. The probe detected lectin expression as early as 4 d after sowing, with the highest level being reached at 10 d, i.e. just before nodulation. In later stages (16-d- and 21-d-old roots), expression was substantially decreased. The correlation between infection by Rhizobium leguminosarum and lectin expression in pea roots has been investigated by comparing root lectin mRNA levels in inoculated plants and in plants grown under conditions preventing nodulation. Neither growth in a nitrate concentration which inhibited nodulation nor growth in the absence of Rhizobium appreciably affected lectin expression in roots.Abbreviation cDNA copy DNA - poly(A)+RNA polyadenylated RNA  相似文献   

11.
Genes that are expressed during leaf senescence in Brassica napus were identified by the isolation of representative cDNA clones. DNA sequence and deduced protein sequence from two senescence-related cDNAs, LSC94 and LSC222, representing genes that are expressed early in leaf senescence before any yellowing of the leaves is visible, showed similarities to genes for pathogenesis-related (PR) proteins: a PR-1a-like protein and a class IV chitinase, respectively. The LSC94 and LSC222 genes showed differential regulation with respect to each other; an increase in expression was detected at different times during development of healthy leaves. Expression of both genes was induced by salicylic acid treatment. These findings suggest that some PR genes, as well as being induced by pathogen infection, may have alternative functions during plant development, for example in the process of leaf senescence.  相似文献   

12.
13.
We initiated a proteomics-based approach to identify root proteins affected by salinity in pea (Pisum sativum cv. Cutlass). Salinity stress was imposed either on 2-wk old pea plants by watering with salt water over 6 wk or by germinating and growing pea seeds for 7 days in Petri dishes. Concentrations of NaCl above 75 mM had significant negative effects on growth and development of peas in both systems. Salinity-induced root proteome-level changes in pea were investigated by 2-D electrophoresis of proteins from control, 75 and 150 mM NaCl-treated plants and seedlings. The majority of the protein spots visualised showed reproducible abundance in root protein extracts from whole plants and seedlings. Of these proteins, 35 spots that exhibited significant changes in abundance due to NaCl treatment were selected for identification using ESI-Q-TOF MS/MS. The identities of these proteins, which include pathogenesis-related (PR) 10 proteins, antioxidant enzymes such as superoxide dismutase (SOD) as well as nucleoside diphosphate kinase (NDPK) are presented, and the roles of some of them in mediating responses of pea to salinity are discussed. This is the first report of salinity-induced changes in the root proteome of pea that suggests a potential role for PR10 proteins in salinity stress responses. Our findings also suggest the possible existence of a novel signal transduction pathway involving SOD, H2O2, NDPK and PR10 proteins with a potentially crucial role in abiotic stress responses.  相似文献   

14.
A full-length cDNA clone encoding carbonic anhydrase was isolated from an Arabidopsis thaliana (Columbia) leaf library. Comparison of the derived amino acid sequence obtained from this clone with those of pea and spinach reveals a considerable degree of identity. The carbonic anhydrase cDNA was used to probe the level of RNA encoding this protein in the leaves of plants grown in elevated CO2 (660 ppm). We have found that under these conditions the steady-state level of carbonic anhydrase mRNA was increased in comparison with control plants grown in normal atmospheric concentrations of CO2 (330 ppm). This raises the intruiging possibility that there exists in higher plants a mechanism for perceiving and responding to changes in environmental CO2 concentrations at the genetic level.  相似文献   

15.
16.
T. L. Wang  E. A. Wood  N. J. Brewin 《Planta》1982,155(4):350-355
The cytokinin content of roots and nodules of pea and the culture supernatants from two strains of Rhizobium leguminosarum has been examined. Roots, nodules and wild-type Rhizobium culture medium contained very little cytokinin as indicated by bioassay. Chemical ionisation gas chromatography-mass spectrometric analysis of the isopentenyladenine content of the culture medium from the Rhizobium strains confirmed that the content of the wild-type was low (approx. 1 ng dm-3) but that it was increased by the introduction of the Agrobacterium Ti plasmid into the Rhizobium strain.Abbreviations CI chemical ionisation - GCMS gas chromatography-mass spectrometry - HPLC high performance liquid chromatography - iPAde isopentenyladenine - MIM multiple ion monitoring  相似文献   

17.
Summary Sexual and somatic hybrid plants have been produced between Sinapis alba L. (white mustard) and Brassica napus L. (oil-seed rape), with the aim to transfer resistance to the beet cyst nematode Heterodera schachtii Schm. (BCN) from white mustard into the oil-seed rape gene pool. Only crosses between diploid accessions of S. alba (2n = 24, Sa1Sa1) as the pistillate parent and several B. napus accessions (2n = 38, AACC) yielded hybrid plants with 31 chromosomes. Crosses between tetraploid accessions of S. alba (2n = 48, Sa1Sa1Sa1Sa1) and B. napus were unsuccessful. Somatic hybrid plants were also obtained between a diploid accession of S. alba and B. napus. These hybrids were mitotically unstable, the number of chromosomes ranging from 56 to more than 90. Analysis of total DNA using a pea rDNA probe confirmed the hybrid nature of the sexual hybrids, whereas for the somatic hybrids a pattern identical to that of B. napus was obtained. Using chloroplast (cp) and mitochondrial (mt) DNA sequences, we found that all of the sexual F1 hybrids and somatic hybrids contained cpDNA and mtDNA of the S. alba parent. No recombinant mtDNA or cpDNA pattern was observed. Three BC1 plants were obtained when sexual hybrids were back-crossed with B. napus. Backcrossing of somatic hybrids with B. napus was not successful. Three sexual hybrids and one BC1 plant, the latter obtained from a cross between a sexual hybrid and B. napus, were found to show a high level of BCN resistance. The level of BCN resistance of the somatic hybrids was in general high, but varied between cuttings from the same plant. Results from cytological studies of chromosome association at meiotic metaphase I in the sexual hybrids suggest partial homology between chromosomes of the AC and Sa1 genomes and thus their potential for gene exchange.  相似文献   

18.
19.
20.
The PEND protein is a DNA-binding protein in the inner envelope membrane of the developing chloroplast. It consists of a short pre-sequence, an N-terminal DNA-binding domain (cbZIP), a central repeat domain, and a C-terminal transmembrane domain. PEND homologs have been detected in various angiosperms, including Arabidopsis thaliana, Brassica napus, Medicago truncatula, cucumber and cherry. Monocot homologs have also been detected in barley and rice, but sequence conservation was low in monocots. PEND-related sequences have not been detected in non-flowering plants and algae. Green fluorescent protein fusions consisting of the N-terminal as well as full-length PEND homologs in A. thaliana and B. napus were targeted to chloroplasts, and localized to nucleoids and chloroplast periphery, respectively. Immunoblot analysis suggested that crucifer homologs were present in chloroplasts probably as a dimer, as in the case of pea. These results suggest that PEND protein is present in angiosperms, and the homologs in crucifers are functionally analogous to the PEND protein in pea.  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