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A cDNA clone, designated as PvNAS2, encoding asparagine amidotransferase(asparagine synthetase) was isolated from nodule tissue of commonbean (Phaseolus vulgaris cv. Negro Jamapa). Southern blot analysisindicated that asparagine synthetase in bean is encoded by asmall gene family. Northern analysis of RNAs from various plantorgans demonstrated that PvNAS2 is highly expressed in roots,followed by nodules in which it is mainly induced during theearly days of nitrogen fixation. Investigations with the PvNAS2promoter gusA fusion revealed that the expression of PvNAS2in roots is confined to vascular bundles and meristematic tissues,while in root nodules its expression is solely localized tovascular traces and outer cortical cells encompassing the centralnitrogen-fixing zone, but never detected in either infectedor non-infected cells located in the central region of the nodule.PvNAS2 is down-regulated when carbon availability is reducedin nodules, and the addition of sugars to the plants, mainlyglucose, boosted its induction, leading to the increased asparagineproduction. In contrast to PvNAS2 expression and the concomitantasparagine synthesis, glucose supplement resulted in the reductionof ureide content in nodules. Studies with glucose analoguesas well as hexokinase inhibitors suggested a role for hexokinasein the sugar-sensing mechanism that regulates PvNAS2 expressionin roots. In light of the above results, it is proposed that,in bean, low carbon availability in nodules prompts the down-regulationof the asparagine synthetase enzyme and concomitantly asparagineproduction. Thereby a favourable environment is created forthe efficient transfer of the amido group of glutamine for thesynthesis of purines, and then ureide generation. Key words: Asparagine and ureide synthesis, asparagine synthetase, nodules, Phaseolus vulgaris, sugar signalling  相似文献   

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H M Lam  S S Peng    G M Coruzzi 《Plant physiology》1994,106(4):1347-1357
Here, we characterize a cDNA encoding a glutamine-dependent asparagine synthetase (ASN1) from Arabidopsis thaliana and assess the effects of metabolic regulation on ASN1 mRNA levels. Sequence analysis shows that the predicted ASN1 peptide contains a purF-type glutamine-binding domain. Southern blot experiments and cDNA clone analysis suggest that ASN1 is the only gene encoding glutamine-dependent asparagine synthetase in A. thaliana. The ASN1 gene is expressed predominantly in shoot tissues, where light has a negative effect on its mRNA accumulation. This negative effect of light on ASN1 mRNA levels was shown to be mediated, at least in part, via the photoreceptor phytochrome. We also investigated whether light-induced changes in nitrogen to carbon ratios might exert a metabolic regulation of the ASN1 mRNA accumulation. These experiments demonstrated that the accumulation of ASN1 mRNA in dark-grown plants is strongly repressed by the presence of exogenous sucrose. Moreover, this sucrose repression of ASN1 expression can be partially rescued by supplementation with exogenous amino acids such as asparagine, glutamine, and glutamate. These findings suggest that the expression of the ASN1 gene is under the metabolic control of the nitrogen to carbon ratio in cells. This is consistent with the fact that asparagine, synthesized by the ASN1 gene product, is a favored compound for nitrogen storage and nitrogen transport in dark-grown plants. We have put forth a working model suggesting that when nitrogen to carbon ratios are high, the gene product of ASN1 functions to re-direct the flow of nitrogen into asparagine, which acts as a shunt for storage and/or long-distance transport of nitrogen.  相似文献   

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Alfalfa NADH-dependent glutamate synthase (NADH-GOGAT), together with glutamine synthetase, plays a central role in the assimilation of symbiotically fixed nitrogen into amino acids in root nodules. Antibodies previously raised against purified NADH-GOGAT were employed to screen a cDNA library prepared using RNA isolated from nodules of 20-day-old alfalfa plants. A 7.2-kb cDNA clone was obtained that contained the entire protein coding region of NADH-GOGAT. Analysis of this cDNA and determination of the amino-terminal amino acids of the purified protein revealed that NADH-GOGAT is synthesized as a 2194-amino acid protein that includes a 101-amino acid presequence. The deduced amino acid sequence shares significant identity with maize ferredoxin-dependent GOGAT, and with both large and small subunits of Escherichia coli NADPH-GOGAT. DNA gel blot analysis of alfalfa genomic DNA suggests the presence of a single NADH-GOGAT gene or a small gene family. The expression of NADH-GOGAT mRNA, enzyme protein, and enzyme activity was developmentally regulated in root nodules. A dramatic increase in gene expression occurred coincidentally with the onset of nitrogen fixation in the bacteroid, and was absent in both ineffective plants that were nodulated with effective Rhizobium meliloti and effective plants that had been nodulated with ineffective R. meliloti strains. Maximum NADH-GOGAT expression, therefore, appears to require an effective, nitrogen-fixing symbiosis.  相似文献   

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Nucleotide sequence analysis of cDNAs for asparagine synthetase (AS) of Pisum sativum has uncovered two distinct AS mRNAs (AS1 and AS2) encoding polypeptides that are highly homologous to the human AS enzyme. The amino-terminal residues of both AS1 and AS2 polypeptides are identical to the glutamine-binding domain of the human AS enzyme, indicating that the full-length AS1 and AS2 cDNAs encode glutamine-dependent AS enzymes. Analysis of nuclear DNA shows that AS1 and AS2 are each encoded by single genes in P.sativum. Gene-specific Northern blot analysis reveals that dark treatment induces high-level accumulation of AS1 mRNA in leaves, while light treatment represses this effect as much as 30-fold. Moreover, the dark-induced accumulation of AS1 mRNA was shown to be a phytochrome-mediated response. Both AS1 and AS2 mRNAs also accumulate to high levels in cotyledons of germinating seedlings and in nitrogen-fixing root nodules. These patterns of AS gene expression correlate well with the physiological role of asparagine as a nitrogen transport amino acid during plant development.  相似文献   

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The investigation and improvement of nitrogen efficiency in oilseed rape ( Brassica napus L.) are important issues in rapeseed breeding. The objective of this study was to modify ammonium assimilation in transgenic rapeseed plants through the expression of the Escherichia coli asparagine synthetase (AsnA, E.C. 6.3.1.1) gene under the control of the cauliflower mosaic virus (CaMV) 35S promoter, and to study its influence on amino acid composition in leaves and on seed traits related to nitrogen efficiency. In regenerated transgenic plants, the 37 kDa AsnA protein was detected by Western blot analysis, but was lacking in untransformed control plants of cv. Drakkar. In the transformants, in vitro asparagine synthetase activities ranged from 105 to 185 nmol asparagine mg−1 protein h−1, whereas, in untransformed control plants, only negligible asparagine synthetase activities of up to 5 nmol asparagine mg−1 protein h−1 were found. Despite these significant activities, no changes in the amino acid composition in the leaves or in the phloem of transgenic plants were detectable. In a pot experiment, two transgenic lines expressing the prokaryotic asparagine synthetase clearly performed inferiorly to control plants at limiting nitrogen (N) fertilizer supply. Although the seed N content was increased, the seed yield and the seed N yield were reduced, which was interpreted as an increased nitrate assimilation leading, at limiting N supply, to a reduced seed yield and seed N yield. At high N fertilizer supply, the differences were less pronounced for one transgenic line, whereas the other showed a higher seed N yield and an improved nitrogen harvest index. The results show that the expression of the E. coli asnA gene in oilseed rape could be of advantage at high N supply, but not at limiting N fertilizer supply.  相似文献   

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Excised maize (Zea mays L.) root tips were used to monitor the effects of prolonged glucose starvation on nitrogen metabolism. Following root-tip excision, sugar content was rapidly exhausted, and protein content declined to 40 and 8% of its initial value after 96 and 192 h, respectively. During starvation the contents of free amino acids changed. Amino acids that belonged to the same synthetic family showed a similar pattern of changes, indicating that their content, during starvation, is controlled mainly at the level of their common biosynthetic steps. Asparagine, which is a good marker of protein and amino-acid degradation under stress conditions, accumulated considerably until 45 h of starvation and accounted for 50% of the nitrogen released by protein degradation at that time. After 45 h of starvation, nitrogen ceased to be stored in asparagine and was excreted from the cell, first as ammonia until 90–100 h and then, when starvation had become irreversible, as amino acids and aminated compounds. The study of asparagine metabolism and nitrogen-assimilation pathways throughout starvation showed that: (i) asparagine synthesis occurred via asparagine synthetase (EC 6.3.1.1) rather than asparagine aminotransferase (EC 2.6.1.14) or the -cyanoalanine pathway, and asparagine degradation occurred via asparaginase (EC 3.5.1.1); and (ii) the enzymic activities related to nitrogen reduction and assimilation and amino-acid synthesis decreased continuously, whereas glutamate dehydrogenase (EC 1.4.1.2–4) activities increased during the reversible period of starvation. Considered together, metabolite analysis and enzymic-activity measurements showed that starvation may be divided into three phases: (i) the acclimation phase (0 to 30–35 h) in which the root tips adapt to transient sugar deprivation and partly store the nitrogen released by protein degradation, (ii) the survival phase (30–35 to 90–100 h) in which the root tips expel the nitrogen released by protein degradation and starvation may be reversed by sugar addition and (iii) the cell-disorganization phase (beyond 100 h) in which all metabolites and enzymic activities decrease and the root tips die.Abbreviations AlaAT alanine aminotransferase - AspAT aspartate aminotransferase - AS asparagine synthetase - Asnase asparaginase - AsnAT asparagine aminotransferase - -CS -cyanoalanine synthase - GDH glutamate dehydrogenase - Glnase glutaminase - GOGAT glutamate synthase - GS glutamine synthetase - NiR nitrite reductase - NR nitrate reductase  相似文献   

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A full-length cDNA encoding sucrose synthase was isolated from the tropical epiphytic CAM orchid Mokara Yellow. The cDNA is 2748bp in length containing an open reading frame of 2447bp encoding 816 amino acids with a predicted molecular mass of 93.1 kDa. The deduced amino acid sequence of M. Yellow sucrose synthase (Msus1) shares more than 80% identity with those from other monocotyledonous plants. The sucrose synthase gene was demonstrated to encode a functional sucrose synthase protein by expression as recombinant protein in Escherichia coli. Northern blot analysis showed that the expression pattern of Msus1 mRNA is tissue specific with highest levels in strong sinks such as expanding leaves and root tips, but not detectable in mature leaves and flowers. Incubation with sugars resulted in a significant increase in the steady-state Msus1 mRNA levels in shoots of seedlings.  相似文献   

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Cytosolic triosephosphate isomerase is a single gene in rice.   总被引:7,自引:3,他引:4       下载免费PDF全文
Y Xu  T C Hall 《Plant physiology》1993,101(2):683-687
A cDNA clone encoding rice (Oryza sativa L.) cytosolic triosephosphate isomerase (TPI), an important glycolytic enzyme, was isolated and characterized. The clone (pRTPI-6) contains an open reading frame of 759 base pairs, encoding a polypeptide chain of 253 amino acid residues (M(r) 27,060). The identity of this clone was defined by its high homology (85% nucleotide sequence and 89% amino acid sequence identical match) with a maize mRNA sequence encoding the cytosolic TPI and with TPIs from other species. Genomic DNA blot analysis using the cDNA as a probe showed that the cytosolic TPI gene is present as a single copy per haploid rice genome, as opposed to that found in maize, in which multiple TPI gene copies exist. A single TPI mRNA species of about 1100 nucleotides was detected by gel blot hybridization analysis of RNA isolated from root, culm, and leaf tissues, indicating that its expression is ubiquitous. Based on sequence comparison and molecular analysis, we propose that the chloroplast-located TPI may be encoded by divergent structural nuclear genes in rice.  相似文献   

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Asparagine synthetase in corn roots   总被引:9,自引:6,他引:3       下载免费PDF全文
Stulen I  Oaks A 《Plant physiology》1977,60(5):680-683
The level of asparagine synthetase is low in 10-mm root tips from corn seedings (Zea mays W64 × W182F) but relatively high in mature root sections taken 20 to 35 mm from the tip. When root tips are excised there is a marked increase in asparagine synthetase over a 5-hour period. In mature root sections, on the other hand, the asparagine synthetase activity declines over the same 5-hour period. The increase in the root tip is sensitive to cordycepin, 6-methylpurine, and cycloheximide, which indicates that both RNA and protein synthesis are involved in the formation of asparagine synthetase in the root tip sections. The glutamine analogue azaserine also inhibits formation of the enzyme in root tips, as does glucose. The increase in the root tip is not sensitive to asparagine. Additions of glucose or asparagine have no effect on enzyme activity in extracts. When cycloheximide, azaserine, or glucose is added to the mature root sections there is no effect on recovered enzyme activity.  相似文献   

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