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1.
Proteinase inhibitors are widely distributed in animals, plants and microorganisms and their roles in plants are associated with defense against pests. The utilization of proteinase inhibitors for crop protection has been actively investigated with a variety of proteinase inhibitors. Soybean Kunitz trypsin inhibitor (SKTI), one of the major seed storage protein, is synthesized for a short period during seed development. To investigate the role of SKTI in a plant's defense system against insect predation, a recombinant plasmid containing the full-length cDNA of SKTI under control of the CaMV 35S promoter was introduced into rice protoplasts by using the PEG direct gene transfer method and a large number of transgenic rice plants were regenerated. The integration, expression, and inheritance of this gene was demonstrated in R1 and R2 generations by Southern, northern, and western analyses. Accumulation levels (0.05–2.5% of soluble proteins) of SKTI protein were detected in R1 and R2 plants. Bioassay with R1 and R2 transgenic plants revealed that transgenic plants are more resistant to destructive insect pest of rice, brown planthopper (Nilaparvata lugens Stål), than the control plants. Thus, introduction of SKTI into rice plants can be used to control insect pests.  相似文献   

2.
cDNAs encoding two Bowman-Birk proteinase inhibitors were isolated from the leaves of alfalfa (Medicago sativa). The cDNAs are derived from a small gene family (3 to 10 genes) encoding alfalfa trypsin inhibitors (ATIs). Each cDNA clone encoded a mature ATI that was part of a larger, putative preprotein. ATI mRNAs are continuously expressed in flower parts, but are mechanically wound-inducible in the stems and leaves. ATI mRNA is shown to be continuously present in roots of soil-grown plants, but its presence is primarily in response to microorganisms present in the soil. Additionally, while mechanical wounding of the alfalfa roots induced ATI mRNA synthesis both in the roots and in the leaves, microbial infection of the roots triggered ATI mRNA synthesis in the roots but not in the leaves. These results suggest that both local and systemic signalling pathways for proteinase inhibitor synthesis are present in alfalfa plants.  相似文献   

3.
植物蛋白酶抑制剂在植物抗虫与抗病中的作用   总被引:13,自引:0,他引:13  
综述了植物蛋白酶抑制剂抗虫与抗病作用的研究进展.蛋白酶抑制剂广泛存在于植物体内,与植物抗虫抗病密切相关.植物蛋白酶抑制剂能抑制昆虫肠道蛋白酶,使昆虫生长发育缓慢,甚至死亡.但取食蛋白酶抑制剂后,昆虫能迅速分泌对抑制剂不敏感的蛋白酶,而使蛋白酶抑制剂无效.食物蛋白的含量和质量也影响植物蛋白酶抑制剂的抗虫效果.病原菌的感染能诱导植物产生蛋白酶抑制剂,诱导产生的蛋白酶抑制剂能抑制病原菌的生长.  相似文献   

4.
Elicitors and inhibitors of chemical induction were used to manipulate the activities of several putative defense-related proteins in leaves of the tomato, Lycopersicon esculentum Mill. The four presumptive defenses manipulated were proteinase inhibitors, polyphenol oxidase, peroxidase, and lipoxygenase. The elicitors used were jasmonic acid, methyl jasmonate, ultraviolet light, and feeding by larvae of the noctuid, Helicoverpa zea Boddie; the inhibitors used were salicylic acid and acetylsalicylic acid. These chemical manipulations were combined with short-term growth assays using larvae of the generalist noctuid, Spodoptera exigua Hubner, in order to assess the relative roles of the proteins in induced resistance to S. exigua. When activities of proteinase inhibitors and/or polyphenol oxidase in leaf tissue were high (e.g., in damaged or elicited plants), growth rates of larvae of S. exigua were low; when activities of polyphenol oxidase and proteinase inhibitors were low (e.g., in undamaged or damaged, inhibited plants), growth rates of larvae were high. In contrast, high activities of peroxidase and lipoxygenase were not associated with decreases in suitability of leaf tissue for S. exigua. The association of high levels of proteinase inhibitors and polyphenol oxidase with resistance to S. exigua – irrespective of the presence or absence of damage – strongly implicates these proteins as causal agents in induced resistance to S. exigua.  相似文献   

5.
The cDNA for a 73-mer peptide containing two locust serine proteinase inhibitors was cloned, fused to the constitutive CaMV35S promoter and introduced into potato by Agrobacterium-mediated transformation. From 23 independent transgenic lines, three with high mRNA level and proteinase inhibitory activity were propagated in vitro and transferred to pots. The peptide from the leaves was identified by its N-terminal sequence and by Ki values against chymotrypsin and trypsin. Colorado potato beetle larvae reared on transgenic plants grew slightly but significantly more slowly than those on control plants. This supports the notion that expression of multifunctional proteinase inhibitors of insect origin might be a good strategy to improve insect resistance in plants.  相似文献   

6.
Inhibitors of chymotrypsin and the alkaline proteinase of Aspergillus oryzae were present in the shoots of barley seedlings and weak activities were also detected in the shoot tops of 6-week-old plants. Treatments which induce inhibitor formation in tomato and potato leaves had no effect when tested on mature leaves, seedlings, or young tillers of barley. Fractionation experiments with isoelectric focusing showed that the barley leaves contained several proteinase inhibitors acting on both chymotrypsin and the Aspergillus proteinase, and one inhibitor which acted only on the Aspergillus enzyme. All of these inhibitors were different from the five Aspergillus proteinase inhibitors which are abundant in the endosperm of resting seeds. Two chymotrypsin inhibitors with weaker activity on the Aspergillus proteinase were present in rootlets and also in embryos of resting seeds. These inhibitors were different from both the endospermal inhibitors and the inhibitors present in young leaves.  相似文献   

7.
Proteinase inhibitors can be induced by wounding in shoots of tomato ( Lycopersicon esculentum [L.] Mill. cv. Moneymaker). These inhibitors are toxic to insects, but their ecological importance is not clear. Published work suggests that proteinase inhibitors may be wound-inducible in tomato only while the plants are young (less than 30 days). In the present investigation the influence of plant age on wound-inducible proteinase inhibitor was re-assessed using tomato plants grown in an outdoor polythene tunnel, with natural lighting and without supplementary heat. In contrast to previous findings, proteinase inhibitor was shown to be induced by wounding in plants of all ages. However, the systemic efficacy of wounds was much reduced in mature plants, possibly because such plants have outgrown the range of the wound-signalling system.  相似文献   

8.
The PKPIJ-B gene encoding a chymotrypsin inhibitor from a subfamily of potato Kunitz-type proteinase inhibitors (PKPI) in potatoes (Solanum tuberosum L. cv. Yubilei Zhukova) was cloned into a pET23a vector and then expressed in Escherichia coli. The recombinant PKPIJ-B protein obtained in the inclusion bodies was denatured, purified by high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) on Mono Q under denaturing conditions, and renaturated. The renaturated protein was additionally purified using HPLC on DEAE-ToyoPearl. The PKPIJ-B protein efficiently suppressed chymotrypsin activity, had a weaker effect on trypsin, and inhibited the growth and development of phytopathogenic microorganisms affecting potato plants.  相似文献   

9.
The sulfhydryl group reagent p-chloromecuribenzene sulfonic acid (PCMBS), an established inhibitor of active apoplastic phloem loading of sucrose in several plant species, is shown to be a powerful inhibitor of wound-induced and systemin-induced activation of proteinase inhibitor synthesis and accumulation in leaves of tomato plants (Lycopersicon esculentum cv Castlemart). PCMBS, supplied to young tomato plants through their cut stems, blocks accumulation of proteinase inhibitors in leaves in response to wounding. The application of systemin directly to fresh wounds enhances systemic accumulation of proteinase inhibitors to levels higher than wounding alone. Placed on fresh wounds, PCMBS severely inhibits systemic induction of proteinase inhibitors, in both the presence and absence of exogenous systemin. PCMBS inhibition can be reversed by cysteine, dithiothreitol, and glutathione. Radiolabeled systemin placed on fresh wounds is readily transported from the wounded leaves to upper leaves. However, in the presence of PCMBS, radiolabeled systemin is not transported away from wound sites. Induction of proteinase inhibitor I synthesis by oligouronides (degree of polymerization [almost equal to] 20), linolenic acid, or methyl jasmonate was not inhibited by PCMBS. The cumulative data support a possible role for sulfhydryl groups in mediating the translocation of systemin from wound sites to distal receptor sites in tomato plants and further support a role for systemin as a systemic wound signal.  相似文献   

10.
The effect of crude proteinase inhibitor extracts from seeds of different crop plants (black gram, chickpea, chickling vetch, finger millet, French bean, green gram, horse gram, lentil, pea and soybean) on the insecticidal activity of B. thuringiensis var. kurstaki HD-1 was investigated against neonate larvae of H. armigera by diet incorporation method. The larval mortality due to crude proteinase inhibitors alone (5% seed weight equivalent) ranged from 4.1 to 19.1%; the maximum mortality with finger millet and the minimum with pea var. DDR-23. A mixture of B. thuringiensis var. kurstaki HD-1 (10 ppm) and proteinase inhibitor (5% seed weight equivalent) was synergistic in larval mortality with respect to proteinase inhibitors of pea var. DMR-16, chickling vetch var. RLK-1098 and B101-212, lentil var. ILL-8095 and L-4076, soybean var. PK-1042, PK-416 and Pusa-22, chickpea var. Pusa-413, French bean (Chitra) and black gram; and antagonistic with respect to those of finger millet, horse gram and kidney bean. The larval growth reduction with crude proteinase inhibitors alone ranged from 17.9 to 53.1%; the maximum growth reduction with soybean var. PK-1042 and minimum with lentil var. L-4076. A mixture of B. thuringiensis var. kurstaki and proteinase inhibitor was synergistic in growth reduction with respect to proteinase inhibitors of lentil var. ILL-8095, and L-4626 and antagonistic with respect to that of finger millet. The midgut proteinase inhibition with crude seed extracts (3.3% seed weight equivalent) ranged from 9.3 to 60.9% and was negatively correlated with larval mortality. These results showed that interactive effect of B. thuringiensis var. kurstaki HD-1 and proteinase inhibitors in the larvae of H. armigera depended upon the quality and quantity of proteinase inhibitors, which vary widely in different plants.  相似文献   

11.
The Bowman-Birk family (BBI) of proteinase inhibitors is probably the most studied family of plant inhibitors. We describe the primary structure and the gene expression profile of 14 putative BBIs from the sugarcane expressed sequence tag database and show how we used these newly discovered sequences together with 87 previously described BBI sequences from the GenBank database to construct phylogenetic trees for the BBI family. Phylogenetic analysis revealed that BBI-type inhibitors from monocotyledonous and dicotyledonous plants could be clearly separated into different groups, while the overall topology of the BBI tree suggests a different pattern of evolution for BBI families in flowering plants. We also found that BBI proteinase inhibitors from dicotyledonous plants were well conserved, accumulating only slight differences during their evolution. In addition, we found that BBIs from monocotyledonous plants were highly variable, indicating an interesting process of evolution based on internal gene duplications and mutation events.  相似文献   

12.
Seeds of 32 species selected from two of the four major groups of gymnosperms, the ancient Cycadales and the economically important Coniferales, were analysed for inhibitors (I) of the serine proteinases trypsin (T), chymotrypsin (C), subtilisin (S) and elastase (E) using isoelectric focusing (IEF) combined with gelatin replicas. Subtilisin inhibitors were detected in 17 species, being particularly active in the Cycadales. Several species of the genera Cephalotaxus, Pseudotsuga and Cycas contained inhibitors active against elastase while strong CSTIs and CSIs were also present in Cycas pectinata and C. siamensis. No inhibitors were detected in seeds of Chamaecyparis, Thuja, Abies, Larix, Picea and Pinus spp. Serine proteinase inhibitors were purified from seeds of C. siamensis by affinity chromatography using trypsin and chymotrypsin, IEF and SDS-PAGE. Several CSTI components with Mr ranging from 4000 to 18,000 were partially sequenced using Edman degradation and mass spectrometry. Most of the sequences were similar to a hypothetical protein encoded by an mRNA from sporophylls of C. rumphii which in turn was similar to Kunitz-type proteinase inhibitors from flowering plants. Analysis of expressed sequence tag (EST) databases confirmed the presence of mRNAs encoding Kunitz-type inhibitors in the Cycadales and Coniferales and also demonstrated their presence in a third major group of gymnosperms, the Ginkgoales. This is the first report of Kunitz-type serine proteinase inhibitors from plants other than Angiosperms.  相似文献   

13.
Dombrowski JE 《Plant physiology》2003,132(4):2098-2107
Plants respond to various stresses by expressing distinct sets of genes. The effects of multiple stresses on plants and their interactions are not well understood. We have discovered that salt stress causes the accumulation of proteinase inhibitors and the activation of other wound-related genes in tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum) plants. Salt stress was also found to enhance the plant's response to wounding locally and systemically. The tomato mutant (def-1), which has an impairment in the octadecanoid pathway, displayed a severe reduction in the accumulation of proteinase inhibitors under salt stress, indicating that salt stress-induced accumulation of proteinase inhibitors was jasmonic acid dependent. The analysis of salt stress in another tomato mutant, spr-1, which carries a mutation in a systemin-specific signaling component, and transgenic tomato plants that express an antisense-prosystemin cDNA, showed that prosystemin activity was not required for the salt-induced accumulation of proteinase inhibitors, but was necessary to achieve maximal levels. These results suggest that a prosystemin independent- but jasmonic acid-dependent pathway is utilized for proteinase inhibitor accumulation in response to salt stress.  相似文献   

14.
The cellular and subcellular localization of proteinase Inhibitors I and II proteins, synthesized in transgenic tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum L.) plants from chimeric genes regulated by the 35S promoter, was investigated by immunocytochemical techniques. Newly synthesized inhibitor proteins were deposited in the cell vacuoles as in wild-type plants, but were also secreted into the cell walls of outer epidermal and secretory cells of the root cap. The Na ionophore monensin increased the levels of proteinase inhibitors found in rough endoplasmic reticulum, Golgi cisternae and in the cell walls of transgenic plants, supporting a role for the secretory pathway in the sorting and targeting of Inhibitor I and II proteins. The two inhibitor proteins were detected by Western-blot analysis in water-washes obtained from roots of transgenic tomato seedlings, confirming their extracellular presence. Wild-type tomato plants exhibited the presence of Inhibitor I and II proteins in the external cell walls, using silver-enhanced immunogold labelling, but not by Western-blot analysis. The extracellular Inhibitor I from transgenic plant roots migrated in electrophoretic gels with a slightly different apparent mass than the Inhibitor I isolated from tomato leaf vacuoles, indicating that specific structural features of this inhibitor protein have been altered during or after extracellular deposition. The presence of extracellular inhibitors in roots may help provide protection for the growing meristems against insects or microorganisms present in the soil.Abbreviations CaMV cauliflower mosaic virus - TEM transmission electron microscope Transmission electron microscopy was performed at the Electron Microscopy Center (EMC) of Washington State University. The authors thank the EMC staff for their technical advice and collaboration. We also thank Greg Wichelns for growing our plants and Greg Pearce, Scott Johnson, and Martha L. Orozco for their advice and technical help. The work was supported in part by the Washington State College of Agriculture and Home Economics Project No. 1791 and National Science Foundation grants Nos. DCB-8702538 and DCB-8608594.  相似文献   

15.
A giant taro proteinase inhibitor (GTPI) cDNA was expressed in transgenic tobacco using three different gene constructs. The highest expression level obtained was ca. 0.3% of total soluble protein when the cDNA was driven by the Arabidopsis rbcS ats1 promoter. Repeated feeding trials with Helicoverpa armigera larvae fed on clonally derived T0 and T1 plants expressing GTPI demonstrated that, relative to those fed on control plants, some growth inhibition (22–40%) occurs, but there was no increase in larval mortality. Proteinase activities of larvae fed on GTPI-expressing tobacco or GTPI-containing diet were examined to monitor the spectrum of digestive proteinases in the midgut. Total proteinase activity was reduced by 13%, but GTPI-insensitive proteinase activity was increased by up to 17%. Trypsin was inhibited by 58%, but chymotrypsin and elastase were increased by 26% and 16% respectively. These results point to an adaptive mechanism in this insect that elevates the levels of other classes of proteinases to compensate for the trypsin activity inhibited by dietary proteinase inhibitors.  相似文献   

16.
The physical pathway of a systemic signal linking local woundingand systemic synthesis of proteinase inhibitors was investigatedin tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum Mill. ‘Moneymaker’)plants. Lucifer Yellow was used to visualize wound induced flowin the xylem. Cuts under water or severe wounds (heat or largecrushing wounds) induced flows in the xylem to other parts ofthe plant in a pattern determined by the vascular architecture.The detailed distribution of systemic proteinase inhibitor activityfollowing these wounds was similar to the pattern of wound inducedflow in the xylem. Steaming the petiole of the wounded organdid not prevent the systemic induction of proteinase inhibitorby a severe wound. It was concluded that elicitors releasedby a severe wound were distributed systemically in the xylem.Small crushing wounds did not induce systemic flow in the xylembut did induce proteinase inhibitor activity in organs importingvia the phloem. Steaming the petiole of the wounded leaf preventedsystemic induction of proteinase inhibitor by small crushingwounds, a result which is consistent with the translocationof elicitors in the phloem. These results indicate the participationof more than one signalling pathway in the systemic inductionof proteinase inhibitor synthesis by wounding. Copyright 1999Annals of Botany Company Elicitors, proteinase inhibitors, Lycopersicon esculentum, signal pathway, vascular anatomy, wound response.  相似文献   

17.
Plant growth-promoting rhizobacteria (PGPR) increase the viability and health of host plants when they colonize roots and engage in associative symbiosis (Bashan et al. 2004). In return, PGPR viability is increased by host plant roots by the provision of nutrients and a more protective environment (Richardson et al. in Plant Soil 321:305–339, 2009). The PGPR have great potential in agriculture since the combination of certain microorganisms and plants can increase crop production and increase protection against frost, salinity, drought and other environmental stresses such as the presence of xenobiotic pollutants. But there is a great challenge in combining plants and microorganisms without compromising the viability of either microorganisms or seeds. In this paper, we review how anhydrobiotic engineering can be used for the formulation of biotechnological tools that guarantee the supply of both plants and microorganisms in the dry state. We also describe the application of this technology for the selection of desiccation-tolerant PGPR for polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons bioremediation, in soils subjected to seasonal drought, by the rhizoremediation process.  相似文献   

18.
We report on the efficacy of proteinase inhibitors (PIs) from three host plants (chickpea [Cicer arietinum], pigeonpea [Cajanus cajan], and cotton [Gossypium arboreum]) and three non-host (groundnut [Arachis hypogea], winged bean [Psophocarpus tetragonolobus], and potato [Solanum tuberosum]) in retarding the growth of Helicoverpa armigera larvae, a devastating pest of important crop plants. Enzyme assays and electrophoretic analysis of interaction of H. armigera gut proteinases (HGPs) with PIs revealed that non-host PIs inhibited HGP activity efficiently whereas host PIs were ineffective. In the electrophoretic assay, trypsin inhibitor activity bands were detected in all of the host and non-host plants, but HGP inhibitor activity bands were present only in non-host plants (except cotton in the host plant group). H. armigera larvae reared on a diet containing non-host PIs showed growth retardation, a reduction in total and trypsin-like proteinase activity, and the production of inhibitor-insensitive proteinases. Electrophoretic analysis of PI-induced HGP showed differential regulation of proteinase isoforms. Interestingly, HGP activity induced in response to dietary potato PI-II was inhibited by winged bean PIs. The optimized combination of potato PI-II and winged bean PIs identified in the present study and their proposed successive use has potential in developing H. armigera-resistant transgenic plants.  相似文献   

19.
The protease activity of sterile roots of wheat was zero or very low, so that the determined values did not exceed limits of the experimental error. Roots colonized by microorganisms had a significant protease activity. The activity of protease on seeds and roots of the plants growing in a medium inoculated with the soil microflora was higher than in cases when only the epiphytic microflora of seeds served as a source of microorganisms. Sterile roots inoculated with three different strains of bacteria isolated from the rhizosphere and producing protease exhibited a considerable protease activity. The protease activity of non-sterile roots of plants growing in the dark was higher than that of plants growing under normal illumination. Crystalline proteinase was adsorbed on sterile roots and the activity of the enzyme was decreased in this adsorbed state. The adsorption of the enzyme was only slightly higher in the presence of calcium ions. Treatment of roots with a sodum chloride solution, with dextran and ethanol increased the adsorption of the proteinase by roots.  相似文献   

20.
The squash aspartic acid proteinase inhibitor (SQAPI), a proteinaceous proteinase inhibitor from squash, is an effective inhibitor of a range of aspartic proteinases. Proteinaceous aspartic proteinase inhibitors are rare in nature. The only other example in plants probably evolved from a precursor serine proteinase inhibitor. Earlier work based on sequence homology modeling suggested SQAPI evolved from an ancestral cystatin. In this work, we determined the solution structure of SQAPI using NMR and show that SQAPI shares the same fold as a plant cystatin. The structure is characterized by a four-strand anti-parallel β-sheet gripping an α-helix in an analogous manner to fingers of a hand gripping a tennis racquet. Truncation and site-specific mutagenesis revealed that the unstructured N terminus and the loop connecting β-strands 1 and 2 are important for pepsin inhibition, but the loop connecting strands 3 and 4 is not. Using ambiguous restraints based on the mutagenesis results, SQAPI was then docked computationally to pepsin. The resulting model places the N-terminal strand of SQAPI in the S′ side of the substrate binding cleft, whereas the first SQAPI loop binds on the S side of the cleft. The backbone of SQAPI does not interact with the pepsin catalytic Asp32–Asp215 diad, thus avoiding cleavage. The data show that SQAPI does share homologous structural elements with cystatin and appears to retain a similar protease inhibitory mechanism despite its different target. This strongly supports our hypothesis that SQAPI evolved from an ancestral cystatin.  相似文献   

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