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1.
Posttranslational modifications that give rise to multiple forms of α-amylase (EC 3.2.1.1) in barley (Hordeum vulgare L. cv Himalaya) were studied. When analyzed by denaturing polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, barley α-amylase has a molecular mass of 43 to 44 kilodaltons, but isoelectric focusing resolves the enzyme into a large number of isoforms. To precisely identify these isoforms, we propose a system of classification based on their isoelectric points (pl). α-Amylases with pls of approximately 5, previously referred to as low pl or Amy1 isoforms, have been designated HAMY1, and α-amylases with pls of approximately 6, referred to as high pl or Amy2, are designated HAMY2. Individual isoforms of HAMY1 and HAMY2 are identified by their pls. For example, the most acidic α-amylase synthesized and secreted by barley aleurone layers is designated HAMY1(4.56). Some of the diversity in the pls of barley α-amylases arises from posttranslational modifications of the enzyme. We report the isolation of a factor from barley aleurone layers and incubation media that can modify HAMY1 isoforms in vitro. This factor has a molecular mass between 30 and 50 kilodaltons, and it can catalyze the conversion of HAMY1(4.90) and HAMY1(4.64) to isoforms 4.72 and 4.56, respectively. The in vitro conversion of HAMY1 isoforms by the factor is favored by pH values of approximately 5 and is inhibited at approximately pH 7. The level of this factor in aleurone layers and incubation media is not affected by treatment of the tissue with gibberellic acid. The amylase-modifying activity from barley will also modify α-amylases isolated from human saliva and porcine pancreas. An activity that can modify HAMY1 isoforms in vitro has also been isolated from Onozuka R10 cellulase. Because the activity isolated from barley lowers the pl of α-amylase from barley, human saliva, and porcine pancreas, we speculate that it is a deamidase.  相似文献   

2.
The effect of gibberellic acid and Ca2+ on the accumulation of α-amylase mRNAs in aleurone layers of barley (Hordeum vulgare L. cv Himalaya) was studied using cDNA clones containing sequences of mRNAs for the high and low isoelectric point (pI) α-amylases. There is no significant hybridization between the two α-amylase cDNA clones under the hybridization and washing conditions employed. These clones were therefore used to monitor levels of mRNAs for high and low pI α-amylases. It is shown that although the synthesis of the high pI α-amylase proteins depends on the presence of Ca2+ in the incubation medium, the accumulation of mRNA for this group occurs to the same degree in the presence or the absence of Ca2+. The accumulation of low pI α-amylase mRNA is also not affected by the presence or absence of Ca2+ in the incubation medium. These results establish gibberellic acid, not Ca2+, as the principal regulator of α-amylase mRNA accumulation in barley aleurone, while Ca2+ controls high pI α-amylase synthesis at a later step in the biosynthetic pathway.  相似文献   

3.
The gibberellic acid (GA3)-induced α-amylases from the aleurone layers of Himalaya barley (Hordeum vulgare L. cv Himalaya) have been purified by cycloheptaamylose-Sepharose affinity chromatography and fractionated by DEAE-cellulose chromatography. Four fractions (α-amylases 1-4) were obtained which fell into two groups (A and B) on the basis of a number of characteristics. Major differences in serological characteristics and in proteolytic fingerprints were found between group A (α-amylases 1 and 2) and group B (α-amylases 3 and 4). Also, the lag time for appearance of group B enzyme activity was longer than for group A, and the appearance of group B required higher GA3 levels than group A. The components of each group behaved similarly, although differences in proteolytic fingerprints were detected.

These results together with those from other studies indicate that GA3 differentially controls the expression of two α-amylase genes or groups of genes giving rise to two groups of α-amylases with many different properties.

  相似文献   

4.
After 4 days in an atmosphere of N2, aleurone layers of barley (Hordeum vulgare L. cv Himalaya) remained viable as judged by their ability to produce near normal amounts of α-amylases when incubated with gibberellic acid (GA3) in air. However, layers did not produce α-amylase when GA3 was supplied under N2, apparently because α-amylase mRNA failed to accumulate.  相似文献   

5.
The addition of abscisic acid to barley (Hordeum vulgare L. cv. Himalaya) aleurone layers at the same time as gibberellic acid completely prevents the gibberellin-induced increases in the percentage of polysomes, the formation of polyribosomes, and the synthesis of α-amylase, even when the molar concentration of gibberellic acid is four times greater than the concentration of abscisic acid. The addition of abscisic acid to aleurone cells producing α-amylase (midcourse addition) inhibits the further synthesis of α-amylase and decreases the percentage of polysomes but does not change the number of ribosomes per cell.  相似文献   

6.
Sun Z  Henson CA 《Plant physiology》1990,94(1):320-327
The initial hydrolysis of native (unboiled) starch granules in germinating cereal kernels is considered to be due to α-amylases. We report that barley (Hordeum vulgare L.) seed α-glucosidases (EC 3.2.1.20) can hydrolyze native starch granules isolated from barley kernels and can do so at rates comparable to those of the predominant α-amylase isozymes. Two α-glucosidase charge isoforms were used individually and in combination with purified barley α-amylases to study in vitro starch digestion. Dramatic synergism, as much as 10.7-fold, of native starch granule hydrolysis, as determined by reducing sugar production, occurred when high pl α-glucosidase was combined with either high or low pl α-amylase. Synergism was also found when low pl α-glucosidase was combined with α-amylases. Scanning electron micrographs revealed that starch granule degradation by α-amylases alone occurred specifically at the equatorial grooves of lenticular granules. Granules hydrolyzed by combinations of α-glucosidases and α-amylases exhibited larger and more numerous holes on granule surfaces than did those granules attacked by α-amylase alone. As the presence of α-glucosidases resulted in more areas being susceptible to hydrolysis, we propose that this synergism is due, in part, to the ability of the α-glucosidases to hydrolyze glucosidic bonds other than α-1,4- and α-1,6- that are present at the granule surface, thereby eliminating bonds which were barriers to hydrolysis by α-amylases. Since both α-glucosidase and α-amylase are synthesized in aleurone cells during germination and secreted to the endosperm, the synergism documented here may function in vivo as well as in vitro.  相似文献   

7.
The cell walls of barley (Hordeum vulgare var. Himalaya) aleurone layers undergo extensive degradation during the tissue's response to gibberellic acid. Previous work had shown that these cell walls consist almost entirely of arabinoxylan. In this study we show that gibberellic acid stimulates endo-β-1,4-xylanase activity in isolated aleurone layers. In addition, gibberellic acid enhances the activity of two glycosidases: β-xylopyranosidase and α-arabinofuranosidase. No gibberellic acid-stimulated cellulase activity was detected. Germination studies showed a similar pattern of enzyme development in intact seeds.  相似文献   

8.
Response of barley aleurone layers to abscisic Acid   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3       下载免费PDF全文
Ho DT 《Plant physiology》1976,58(2):175-178
Cordycepin, an inhibitor of RNA synthesis in barley (Hordeum vulgare L.) aleurone cells, does not inhibit the gibberellic acid-enhanced α-amylase (EC 3.2.1.1.) synthesis in barley aleurone layers if it is added 12 hours or more after the addition of the hormone. However, the accumulation of α-amylase activity after 12 hours of gibberellic acid can be decreased by abscisic acid. The accumulation of α-amylase activity is sustained or quickly restored when cordycepin is added simultaneously or some time after abscisic acid, indicating that the response of aleurone layers to abscisic acid depends on the continuous synthesis of a short lived RNA. By analysis of the newly synthesized proteins by gel electrophoresis with sodium dodecylsulfate, we observed that the synthesis of α-amylase is decreased in the presence of abscisic acid while the synthesis of most of the other proteins remains unchanged. From the rate of resumption of α-amylase production in the presence of cordycepin and abscisic acid, it appears that abscisic acid does not have a measurable effect on the stability of α-amylase mRNA.  相似文献   

9.
α-Amylases are glucan hydrolases that cleave α-1,4-glucosidic bonds in starch. In vascular plants, α-amylases can be classified into three subfamilies. Arabidopsis has one member of each subfamily. Among them, only AtAMY3 is localized in the chloroplast. We expressed and purified AtAMY3 from Escherichia coli and carried out a biochemical characterization of the protein to find factors that regulate its activity. Recombinant AtAMY3 was active toward both insoluble starch granules and soluble substrates, with a strong preference for β-limit dextrin over amylopectin. Activity was shown to be dependent on a conserved aspartic acid residue (Asp666), identified as the catalytic nucleophile in other plant α-amylases such as the barley AMY1. AtAMY3 released small linear and branched glucans from Arabidopsis starch granules, and the proportion of branched glucans increased after the predigestion of starch with a β-amylase. Optimal rates of starch digestion in vitro was achieved when both AtAMY3 and β-amylase activities were present, suggesting that the two enzymes work synergistically at the granule surface. We also found that AtAMY3 has unique properties among other characterized plant α-amylases, with a pH optimum of 7.5–8, appropriate for activity in the chloroplast stroma. AtAMY3 is also redox-regulated, and the inactive oxidized form of AtAMY3 could be reactivated by reduced thioredoxins. Site-directed mutagenesis combined with mass spectrometry analysis showed that a disulfide bridge between Cys499 and Cys587 is central to this regulation. This work provides new insights into how α-amylase activity may be regulated in the chloroplast.  相似文献   

10.
The effects of gibberellic acid (GA3) and calcium ions on the production of α-amylase and acid phosphatase by isolated aleurone layers of barley (Hordeum vulgare L. cv Himalaya) were studied. Aleurone layers not previously exposed to GA3 or Ca2+ show qualitative and quantitative changes in hydrolase production following incubation in either GA3 or Ca2+ or both. Incubation in H2O or Ca2+ results in the production of low levels of α-amylase or acid phosphatase. The addition of GA3 to the incubation medium causes a 10- to 20-fold increase in the amounts of these enzymes released from the tissue, and addition of Ca2+ at 10 millimolar causes a further 8- to 9-fold increase in α-amylase release and a 75% increase in phosphatase release. Production of α-amylase isoenzymes is also modified by the levels of GA3 and Ca2+ in the incubation medium. α-Amylase 2 is produced under all conditions of incubation, while α-amylase 1 appears only when layers are incubated in GA3 or GA3 plus Ca2+. The synthesis of α-amylases 3 and 4 requires the presence of both GA3 and Ca2+ in the incubation medium. Laurell rocket immuno-electrophoresis shows that two distinct groups of α-amylase antigens are present in incubation media of aleurone layers incubated with both GA3 and Ca2+, while only one group of antigens is found in media of layers incubated in GA3 alone. Strontium ions can be substituted for Ca2+ in increasing hydrolase production, although higher concentrations of Sr2+ are required for maximal response. We conclude that GA3 is required for the production of α-amylase 1 and that both GA3 and either Ca2+ or Sr2+ are required for the production of isoenzymes 3 and 4 of barley aleurone α-amylase.  相似文献   

11.
Amylases in developing barley seeds   总被引:5,自引:2,他引:3       下载免费PDF全文
The amylases of developing barley seeds (Hordeum vulgare L. cv. Himalaya) were investigated by colorimetric and electrophoretic methods. Maxima of amylolytic activity appeared in the aleurone layers and starchy endosperm at 5 and 20 days after anthesis. Amylase from 5-day-old aleurone layers could be separated into four rapidly moving bands with α-amylase activity. By 20 days the four bands had been replaced by seven bands of medium mobility. These seven bands of amylase were electrophoretically identical to those observed when mature aleurone layers are treated with gibberellic acid. Immature aleurone layers failed to respond to exogenous gibberellic acid. In the starchy endosperm the seven bands of medium mobility were also present. Calcium-dependent alterations in the electrophoretic mobility and activity of particular bands occurred during the maturation of the starchy endosperm. Treatment of the immature starchy endosperm with papain yielded four forms of β-amylase.  相似文献   

12.
The specific measurement of α-amylase activity in crude plant extracts is difficult because of the presence of β-amylases which directly interfere with most assay methods. Methods compared in this study include heat treatment at 70°C for 20 min, HgCl2 treatment, and the use of the α-amylase specific substrate starch azure. In comparing alfalfa (Medicago sativa L.), soybeans (Glycine max [L.] Merr.), and malted barley (Hordeum vulgare L.), the starch azure assay was the only satisfactory method for all tissues. While β-amylase can liberate no color alone, over 10 International units per milliliter β-amylase activity has a stimulatory effect on the rate of color release. This stimulation becomes constant (about 4-fold) at β-amylase activities over 1,000 International units per milliliter. Two starch azure procedures were developed to eliminate β-amylase interference: (a) the dilution procedure, the serial dilution of samples until β-amylase levels are below levels that interfere; (b) the β-amylase saturation procedure, addition of exogenous β-amylase to increase endogenous β-amylase activity to saturating levels. Both procedures yield linear calibrations up to 0.3 International units per milliliter. These two procedures produced statistically identical results with most tissues, but not for all tissues. Differences between the two methods with some plant tissues was attributed to inaccuracy with the dilution procedure in tissues high in β-amylase activity or inhibitory effects of the commercial β-amylase. The β-amylase saturation procedure was found to be preferable with most species. The heat treatment was satisfactory only for malted barley, as α-amylases in alfalfa and soybeans are heat labile. Whereas HgCl2 proved to be a potent inhibitor of β-amylase activity at concentrations of 10 to 100 micromolar, these concentrations also partially inhibited α-amylase in barley malt. The reported α-amylase activities in crude enzyme extracts from a number of plant species are apparently the first specific measurements reported for any plant tissues other than germinating cereals.  相似文献   

13.
Zwar JA  Jacobsen JV 《Plant physiology》1972,49(6):1000-1006
The effects of gibberellic acid on the incorporation of radio-active uridine and adenosine into RNA of barley aleurone layers were investigated using a double labeling method combined with acrylamide gel electrophoresis. After 16 hours of incubation, gibberellic acid stimulated the incorporation of label into all species of RNA, but the effects were very small (0-10%) for ribosomal and transfer RNA and comparatively large (up to 300%) for RNA sedimenting between 5S and 14S. This result was obtained for both isolated aleurone layers and for layers still attached to the endosperm. A similar but less marked pattern occurred in layers incubated for 8 hours, but the effect was not observed after 4 hours. The gibberellic acid-enhanced RNA labeling was not due to micro-organisms. The following evidence was obtained for an association between the gibberellic acid-enhanced RNA synthesis and α-amylase synthesis: (a) synthesis of α-amylase took place in parallel with incorporation of label into gibberellic acid-RNA; (b) actinomycin D inhibited amylase synthesis and gibberellic acid-RNA by similar percentages; (c) 5-fluorouracil halved incorporation of label into ribosomal RNA but had no effect on amylase synthesis and gibberellic acid-RNA; and (d) abscisic acid had little effect on synthesis of RNA in the absence of gibberellic acid, but when it was included with gibberellic acid the synthesis of both enzyme and gibberellic acid-RNA was eliminated. We conclude that large changes in the synthesis of the major RNA species are not necessary for α-amylase synthesis to occur but that α-amylase synthesis does not occur without the production of gibberrellic acid-RNA. Gibberellic acid-RNA is probably less than 1% of the total tissue RNA, is polydisperse on acrylamide gels, and could be messenger species for α-amylase and other hydrolytic enzymes whose synthesis is under gibberellic acid control.  相似文献   

14.
15.
Jones RL 《Plant physiology》1971,47(3):412-416
A β-1, 3-glucanase of barley (Hordeum vulgare) aleurone cells accumulates when half-seeds are imbibed on water, and accumulation continues when the aleurone layers are incubated in buffer solution. The release of the enzyme is a gibberellic acid-dependent process, however. Although gibberellic acid stimulates glucanase release, it does not markedly affect the total amount of glucanase obtained from these cells when compared with water controls. β-1, 3-Glucanase release from aleurone cells is a function of gibberellic acid concentration and commences after a 4-hour lag period. Processes occurring during this lag period are also dependent upon gibberellic acid concentration. Removal of gibberellic acid from the incubation medium at the end of the lag period, however, does not affect subsequent release of glucanase. The release of glucanase from aleurone cells is an active process with a Q10 greater than 3. Inhibitors of respiration and protein and RNA synthesis effectively inhibit the formation and release of glucanase. It is concluded that gibberellic acid functions primarily to enhance glucanase release rather than its formation.  相似文献   

16.
Substrate induction of nitrate reductase in barley aleurone layers   总被引:5,自引:5,他引:5       下载免费PDF全文
Nitrate induces the formation of nitrate reductase activity in barley (Hordeum vulgare L. cv. Himalaya) aleurone layers. Previous work has demonstrated de novo synthesis of α-amylase by gibberellic acid in the same tissue. The increase in nitrate reductase activity is inhibited by cycloheximide and 6-methylpurine, but not by actinomycin D. Nitrate does not induce α-amylase synthesis, and it has no effect on the gibberellic acid-induced synthesis of α-amylase. Also, there is little or no direct effect of gibberellic acid (during the first 6 hr of induction) or of abscisic acid on the nitrate-induced formation of nitrate reductase. Gibberellic acid does interfere with nitrate reductase activity during long-term experiments (greater than 6 hr). However, the time course of this inhibition suggests that the inhibition may be a secondary one. Barley aleurone layers therefore provide a convenient tissue for the study of both substrate- and hormone-induced enzyme formation.  相似文献   

17.
18.
Corcoran MR 《Plant physiology》1966,41(8):1265-1267
Inhibitor C, one of the inhibitory fractions of the extract of Carob fruit, reduces the amount of α-amylase in the culture medium of endosperm halves of barley seed which have been treated with gibberellic acid as compared with seed halves treated with gibberellic acid alone. A similar reduction is found in the α-amylase produced by embryo halves of barley seed which have not been treated with gibberellic acid.  相似文献   

19.
Amylases from aleurone layers and starchy endosperm of barley seeds   总被引:3,自引:2,他引:1       下载免费PDF全文
Amylases from incubated aleurone layers or from starchy endosperm of barley seeds (Hordeum vulgare L. cv. Himalaya) were investigated using acrylamide gel electrophoresis and analytical gel filtration with Sephadex G-200. Electrophoresis of amylase from aleurone layers yields seven visually distinct isozymes with an estimated molecular weight of 43,000. Because each isozyme hydrolyzes β-limit dextrin azure and incorporates calcium-45, they are α-amylases. On Sephadex G-200, amylase from the aleurone layers is separated into seven fractions ranging in estimated molecular weights from 45,000 to 3,000. Little or no activity is observed when six fractions are subjected to electrophoresis. Electrophoresis of only the fraction with the estimated molecular weight of 45,000 gave the seven isozymes. The amylases are heat labile and cannot be stabilized by the presence of substrate or by the protease inhibitor, phenylmethylsulfonylfluoride. Electrophoresis of amylase from the starchy endosperm yields nine β-amylases. Four of these β-amylases are isozymes with an estimated molecular weight of 43,000. The other five forms of β-amylase represent molecular aggregates of the four basic β-amylase monomers. A dimer, a tetramer, and an octamer of β-amylase can be identified with estimated molecular weights of about 86,000, 180,000 and 400,000, respectively. These estimated molecular weights were confirmed on Sephadex G-200. There are five additional fractions of β-amylase with estimated molecular weights ranging from 30,000 to 4,000. These fractions are not observed electrophoretically.  相似文献   

20.
α-Amylase levels in intact seeds of barley (Hordeum vulgare L. cv. Himalaya) reach a maximum at 3 to 4 days of germination while gibberellin levels continue to increase beyond 6 days of germination. In contrast to its effect on half seeds, gibberellic acid does not increase the total amount of α-amylase produced in germinating seeds. The inability of gibberellic acid to stimulate α-amylase production is not related to its availability; rather, evidence suggests that a factor(s) in whole seeds prevents further enhancement of α-amylase formation and accumulation. Hydrolysis products accumulate in the subaleurone space of the endosperm of germinating seeds up to concentrations of 570 milliosmolar. Chromatography of these hydrolysis products indicate the presence of maltose and glucose. Calculations based on reducing sugar determinations show that glucose accounts for as much as 57% of the solutes present in the endosperm fluid. Both maltose and glucose in the range of 0.2 to 0.4 M effectively inhibit the production of α-amylase by isolated barley aleurone layers. This inhibition is quantitatively similar to that brought about by solutions of polyethylene glycol and mannitol. On the basis of these data we propose that hydrolysis products which accumulate in the starchy endosperm of germinating seeds function to regulate the production of hydrolytic enzymes by the aleurone layer.  相似文献   

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