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1.
Characterization of peroxidases in lignifying peach fruit endocarp   总被引:13,自引:2,他引:11       下载免费PDF全文
Developing peach (Prunus persica L. Batsch `Redskin') fruit were used to characterize the role of peroxidases in lignification. During development, the endocarp of these drupes becomes lignified while the mesocarp remains parenchymatous. Acidic peroxidase from lignifying endocarp were similar to those of the fleshy mesocarp. The endocarp had a larger amount and number of basic peroxidases than the mesocarp. Cultured peach leaf cells are thought to be lignified because their walls give a positive reaction with phloroglucinol-HCI. These cells also secreted a basic peroxidase. Peroxidases were difficult to extract from endocarp tissue as they lignified. This was also demonstrated by tissue printing on nitrocellulose. Flesh, but not endocarp peroxidase was evident in tissue prints. This suggests that tissue printing may fail to reveal the presence of enzymes which are firmly attached to the cell.  相似文献   

2.
The indole-3-acetic acid (IAA) content in peach pericarp (Prunus persica L. Batsch cv. Merry) was highest at early stage I of development (~200 ng/g fresh wt), decreased to the lowest level during stage II, and rose again at stage III to 60–70 ng/g fresh wt. High activity of glutamine synthetase was found in the pericarp during stage I. The soluble peroxidase activity was highest in the meso- and exocarp at stage II, and isoenzymatic changes in this fraction corresponded to the transition from cationic isoenzymes, predominant at stage I, to anionic isoenzymes at stage III. The ionically bound peroxidase activity in these tissues was highest at stage I. The three developmental stages showed marked differences in auxin content and enzyme activities; for peroxidases these changes reflect a developmental expression pattern for the isoenzymes.  相似文献   

3.
A thorough search for a soluble peroxidase in 31 different tissues of rat indicated the presence of a constitutive activity only in lacrimal, preputial and submaxillary gland. An induced soluble peroxidase activity was also detected in the lactating mammary gland and in the estrogen-induced uterine secretory fluid. The lacrimal gland was the richest source of the enzyme. No peroxidase activity was detected in the lactating mammary gland of mouse and hamster nor in the preputial gland of mouse and uterine fluid of hamster. The three constitutive and two induced soluble peroxidases of rat had a native molecular mass of 73 kDa by gel filtration and they showed a similar mobility in native PAGE. Lactoperoxidase of cow's milk and solubilized rat membrane-bound peroxidases of uterus, intestine and bone marrow showed in native PAGE a mobility which was distinctly different from that of rat soluble peroxidases. As the lacrimal gland of rat was the richest source of soluble peroxidase, the enzyme was purified from this gland to apparent homogeneity; SDS/PAGE then showed a single band of molecular mass 75 kDa which was similar to that obtained by gel filtration. Peroxidase also purified from preputial and submaxillary gland, as well as commercial lactoperoxidase, had a similar molecular mass on SDS/PAGE to purified lacrimal peroxidase. The visible spectrum of lacrimal peroxidase was similar to that of lactoperoxidase but different from membrane-bound peroxidase of rat neutrophils. On isoelectric focussing, purified lacrimal peroxidase resolved into about 14 multiple forms spanning a pI range of 6.5-3.5 while lactoperoxidase focussed at the cathode. Evidence presented suggests that the multiple forms are possibly due to differences in glycosylation. Immunodiffusion, immunoprecipitation and Western blot using antilacrimal peroxidase serum showed a similar interacting species for all five soluble peroxidases of rat while membrane-bound peroxidases showed no interaction. Although in immunodiffusion, the antiserum failed to cross-react with lactoperoxidase it did interact with lactoperoxidase on Western blot. The results indicate that the various constitutive and induced soluble peroxidases of rat tissues are similar to lacrimal peroxidase but are distinctly different from the known membrane-bound peroxidases of rat. However the lacrimal peroxidase shows both similarities as well as dissimilarities with bovine lactoperoxidase. This soluble peroxidase system of rat could be useful to study tissue-specific regulation of gene expression at the molecular level.  相似文献   

4.
The indole-3-acetic acid (IAA) content in peach pericarp (Prunus persica L. Batsch cv. Merry) was highest at early stage I of development (200 ng/g fresh wt), decreased to the lowest level during stage II, and rose again at stage III to 60–70 ng/g fresh wt. High activity of glutamine synthetase was found in the pericarp during stage I. The soluble peroxidase activity was highest in the meso- and exocarp at stage II, and isoenzymatic changes in this fraction corresponded to the transition from cationic isoenzymes, predominant at stage I, to anionic isoenzymes at stage III. The ionically bound peroxidase activity in these tissues was highest at stage I. The three developmental stages showed marked differences in auxin content and enzyme activities; for peroxidases these changes reflect a developmental expression pattern for the isoenzymes.  相似文献   

5.
Changes in apoplastic peroxidases during auxin-induced in vitro rooting of cultured grapevine (Vitis vinifera L. cv. Touriga) stems have been studied. The largest increase in peroxidase activity (EC 1.11.1.7) was associated with the early stages of root initiation and could be attributed to an increase in activity of an apoplastic 36 kDa cationic peroxidase (PxB2). Relative to other peroxidases, PxB2 demonstrated high indole-3-acetic acid (IAA) oxidase activity and apparently contributed the majority of potential IAA oxidase activity in rooting tissues. The distribution of this peroxidase in developing roots additionally associates it with early phases of growth restriction. PxB2 was purified from cell wall extracts prepared from the basal 1 cm of rooting stems. Microsequencing and subsequent cloning of its corresponding 3' truncated cDNA (encoding 255 amino acids of the mature protein) revealed it to have a typical class III peroxidase structure. The results suggest that this class III peroxidase with IAA oxidase activity is important for the control of IAA levels during root initiation and development.  相似文献   

6.
Activity of a number of enzymes related to lignin formation was measured in a Picea abies (L) Karsten suspension culture that is able to produce native-like lignin into the nutrient medium. This cell culture is an attractive model for studying lignin formation, as the process takes place independently of the complex macromolecular matrix of the native apoplast. Suspension culture proteins were fractionated into soluble cellular proteins, ionically and covalently bound cell wall proteins and nutrient medium proteins. The nutrient medium contained up to 5.3% of total coniferyl alcohol peroxidase (EC 1.11.1.7) activity and a significant NADH oxidase activity that is suggested to be responsible for hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) production. There also existed some malate dehydrogenase (EC 1.1.1.37) activity in the apoplast of suspension culture cells (in ionically and covalently bound cell wall protein fractions), possibly for the regeneration of NADH that is needed for peroxidase-catalysed H2O2 production. However, there is no proof of the existence of NADH in the apoplast. Nutrient medium peroxidases could be classified into acidic, slightly basic and highly basic isoenzyme groups by isoelectric focusing. Only acidic peroxidases were found in the covalently bound cell wall protein fraction. Several peroxidase isoenzymes across the whole pI range were detected in the protein fraction ionically bound to cell walls and in the soluble cellular protein fraction. One laccase-like isoenzyme with pI of approximately 8.5 was found in the nutrient medium that was able to form dehydrogenation polymer from coniferyl alcohol in the absence of H2O2. The total activity of this oxidase towards coniferyl alcohol was, however, several orders of magnitude smaller than that of peroxidases in vitro. According to 2D 1H-13C correlation NMR spectra, most of the abundant structural units of native lignin and released suspension culture lignin are present in the oxidase produced dehydrogenation polymer but in somewhat different amounts compared to peroxidase derived synthetic lignin preparations. A coniferin beta-glucosidase (EC 3.2.1.21) was observed to be secreted into the culture medium.  相似文献   

7.
A cDNA clone encoding an ascorbate peroxidase was isolated from the cDNA library from halotolerant Chlamydomonas W80 by a simple screening method based on the bacterial expression system. The cDNA clone contained an open reading frame encoding a mature protein of 282 amino acids with a calculated molecular mass of 30,031 Da, preceded by the chloroplast transit peptide consisting of 37 amino acids. In fact, ascorbate peroxidase was localized in the chloroplasts of Chlamydomonas W80 cells; the activity was detected in the stromal fraction but not in the thylakoid membrane. The deduced amino acid sequence of the cDNA showed 54 and 49% homology to chloroplastic and cytosolic ascorbate peroxidase isoenzymes of spinach leaves, respectively. The enzyme from Chlamydomonas W80 cells was purified to electrophoretic homogeneity. The molecular properties of the purified enzyme were similar to those of the other algal ascorbate peroxidases rather than those of ascorbate peroxidases from higher plants. The enzyme was relatively stable in ascorbate-depleted medium compared with the chloroplastic ascorbate peroxidase isoenzymes of higher plants. The presence of NaCl (3%) as well as of beta-d-thiogalactopyranoside was needed for the expression of Chlamydomonas W80 ascorbate peroxidase in Escherichia coli.  相似文献   

8.
Parthenocarpic peach fruit (Prunus persica L. Batsch., cv. Redhaven) were induced with 1-(3-chlorophthalimide)-cyclohexane carboxamide (AC 94377). The activities of soluble, and ionically and covalently bound peroxidase and indole-3-acetic acid (IAA) oxidase in the pericarp of both seeded and parthenocarpic fruit were determined from 21–43 days after anthesis. Seedless fruit grew faster during early stage I and ceased growth earlier than seeded fruit. Total peroxidase and IAA oxidase activities increased with development on both types of fruit, but higher values were found in seedless fruit. The ionic fraction showed the greatest increase for both enzyme activities. Isoperoxidase profile showed new cationic isoenzymes and higher levels of the less anionic isoenzymes in the pericarp of seedless fruit, whereas the seeded fruit contained higher levels of the more acidic isoperoxidases.  相似文献   

9.
Filtration stress, consisting in the rapid filtration of Acer pseudoplatanus L. cell suspension cultures, resulted in significant differences between the peroxidases (EC 1.11.1.7) released during cell growth and those released after filtered cells were resuspended in fresh medium (recovery medium). These differences concerned mainly modifications of (i) the pH optimum of peroxidase activity (guaiacol as electron donor), (ii) the number and the pI values of the peroxidase isoenzymes as shown by isoelectric focusing, and (iii) the molecular weights of the different peroxidase fractions determined by gel filtration chromatography. The presence of 1 m M Li+ in the recovery medium inhibited the release of peroxidase and this effect was partially reversed by K+. The release of peroxidase by stressed cells was also strongly inhibited by Na2CO3 in the recovery medium. The results presented are consistent with the proposal that the characteristic isoperoxidase patterns induced by filtration stress might be used as a model to study the response of plant cells to stress.  相似文献   

10.
In a culture system in which single cells isolated from the mesophyll of Zinnia elegans L. differentiate to tracheary elements (TEs), two inhibitors of phenylalanine ammonia-lyase (EC 4.3.1.5), L-α-aminooxy-β-phenylpropionic acid (AOPP) at 10 μM inhibited lignification without reducing the number of TEs formed. These inhibitors caused intracellular changes in peroxidase (EC 1.11.1.7) activities. The inhibitors increased the activity of peroxidases bound to the cell walls and especially the activity of peroxidase bound ionically to the cell walls. In contrast, the activity of extracellular peroxidase decreased. There were five isoenzymes, P1-P5, in the ionically bound peroxidase of cultured Zinnia cells. Among the isoenzymes, P4 and P5 appeared to be specific for TE differentation. Treatment with AOPP and AIP resulted in increases in the activities of P2, P4 and P5 isoenzymes, with the most prominent increase in P5 activity. The addition of lignin precursors, including coniferyl alcohol, to the AOPP-treated cells restored lignification, and suppressed the alteration of peroxidase isoenzyme patterns caused by AOPP. The relationship between the wall-bound peroxidases and lignification during TE differentiation is discussed in the light of these results.  相似文献   

11.
Glutathione peroxidases (GPOXs) and glutathione transferases, also termed glutathione S-transferases (GST, EC 2.5.1.18), with activities toward a range of xenobiotic substrates including herbicides, have been characterized in etiolated pea (Pisum sativum L. cv. Feltham's First) seedlings. Crude extracts showed high activity toward a range of GST substrates including 1-chloro-2,4-dinitrobenzene (GSTC activity) and the herbicide fluorodifen (GSTF) but low activities toward chloroacetanilides and atrazine. Treatment of the pea seedlings with the herbicide safener dichlormid selectively increased the activity of GSTC and the GST which detoxified atrazine. This induction was restricted to the roots and was not observed with any of the other GST or GPOX activities. In contrast, treatment with CuCl2 increased GPOX activity in the root but had no effect on any GST activity, while treatment of epicotyls with elicitors of the phytoalexin response increased GST activity toward ethacrynic acid, but had no effect on other GST or GPOX activities. The major enzymes with GSTC, GSTF and GPOX activities were purified from pea epicotyls 3609-fold, 1431-fold and 1554-fold, respectively. During purification by hydrophobic interaction chromatography and affinity chromatography using S-hexyl-glutathione as ligand all three activities co-eluted but could be partially resolved by anion exchange chromatography and gel filtration chromatography. Both GSTC and GPOX had a molecular mass of 48 kDa and their activities were associated with a similar 27.5-kDa subunit but distinct 29-kDa subunits. GSTF could be resolved into two isoenzymes with molecular masses of 49.5 and 54 kDa. GSTF activity was associated with a unique 30-kDa subunit in addition to 27.5- and 29-kDa peptides, suggesting that the two isoenzymes were composed of differing subunits. These results demonstrate that peas contain multiple GST isoenzymes some of which have GPOX activity and that the various activities are differentially responsive to biotic and abiotic stress.  相似文献   

12.
The activity and composition of leafhopper saliva are important in interactions with the host rice plant, and it may play a physiological role in detoxifying toxic plant substances or ingesting sap. We have characterized diphenoloxidase in the salivary glands of Nephotettix cincticeps, its activity as a laccase, and its presence in the watery saliva with the objective of understanding its function in feeding on rice plants. Nonreducing SDS-PAGE of salivary gland homogenates with staining by the typical laccase substrate 2,2'-azino-bis (3-ethylbenzthiazoline-6-sulfonic acid) (ABTS), hydroquinone or syringaldazine revealed a band at a molecular mass of approximately 85 kDa at pH 5. A band also appeared at a molecular mass of approximately 200 kDa when the gels were treated with dopamine, L-3,4-dihydroxyphenylalanine (DOPA) or catechol at pH 7. The ABTS-oxidizing activity of the homogenates was drastically inhibited by N-hydroxyglycine, a specific inhibitor of laccase. However, the dopamine-oxidizing activity was not inhibited by N-hydroxyglycine, while it was inhibited by phenylthiourea (PTU). Thus, the salivary glands of N. cincticeps contain two types of phenoloxidases: a laccase (85 kDa) and a phenoloxidase (200 kDa). Laccase activity was detected in a holidic sucrose diet that was fed on for 16 h by two females, but only a trace of catechol oxidase activity was observed, suggesting that the laccase-type phenoloxidase was the predominant phenoloxidase secreted in watery saliva. The laccase exhibited an optimum pH of 4.75-5 in McIlvaine buffer and had a PI of 4.8. Enzyme activity was histochemically localized in V cells of the posterior lobe of the salivary glands. It remained at the same level throughout the adult stage from 2 days after eclosion. A possible function of N. cincticeps salivary laccase may be rapid oxidization of potentially toxic monolignols to nontoxic polymers during feeding on the rice plant. This is the first report proving that laccase occurs in the salivary glands of Hemiptera species and is secreted in the watery saliva.  相似文献   

13.
Changes of soluble and ionically bound peroxidase and indoleacetic acid (IAA) oxidase activities were followed during peach seed development. Soluble peroxidase activity was located mainly in the embryo plus endosperm tissue, whereas wall ionically bound activities were found predominantly in the integument tissue. The different peroxidase isoenzymes present in the extracts were characterized by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and isoelectric focusing; the main soluble isoenzyme of embryo plus endosperm tissue was an anionic isoperoxidase of R F 0.07. Basic ionically bound isoenzymes were located only in the integument tissue, but two soluble anionic isoenzymes of R F 0.23 and 0.51 were also present in this tissue. In parallel, peroxidase protein content was estimated specifically using polyclonal antibodies. The kinetic data and the changes of seed IAA oxidase activity during fruit development suggested that basic peroxidase isoenzymes from ionically bound extracts of integument might be involved in IAA degradation. Received September 11, 1997; accepted October 21, 1997  相似文献   

14.
A peroxidase (EC 1.11.1.7) has been isolated and purified from Senna angustifolia. The enzyme was purified by ion-exchange chromatography on high Q and high S columns. SDS-PAGE electrophoresis showed that the protein has a molecular mass of approximately 70 kDa. Hydroxy-anthraquinones and hydroxy-anthracenones were evaluated as substrate of S. angustifolia and horseradish peroxidases. Both peroxidases catalyzed the oxidation of alizarin and purpurin anthraquinones to the corresponding 3,3'-bializarin and the new compound 3,3'-bipurpurin, respectively, as well as the formation of 2,2'-biquinizarin from quinizarin anthracenone. The K(Mapp) and V(max) values for alizarin and purpurin were 97 and 95 microM, and 1.5 and 2.1 microM min(-1) mg prot(-1), respectively. The results suggest that peroxidase may participate in the biogenesis of anthraquinones.  相似文献   

15.
A basic peroxidase from wheat kernel with antifungal activity.   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
A basic heme-peroxidase (WP1) was purified to homogeneity from wheat (Triticum aestivum) kernels. The protein was not glycosylated and exhibited a molecular mass of 36 kDa and a pI of 8.0. The N-terminal amino acid sequence revealed a very high similarity with a wheat flour peroxidase allergen associated with baker's asthma. WPI showed indole-3-acetic acid oxidase activity in the presence of Mn2+ and phenolic cofactors. Antifungal assays performed in vitro towards phytopathogenic fungi indicated that WP1 was active in inhibiting germ tube elongation. This first report on antifungal properties of a heme-peroxidase gives experimental support to the idea that peroxidases play a defensive role against invading pathogens.  相似文献   

16.
The subcellular localization of leaf peroxidases (EC 1.11.1.7)and their expression in vegetative and flowered plants has beenstudied in Capsicum annuum (var. annuum) in order to assesswhether the expression of new peroxidase isoenzymes can characterizethe floral state which determines the beginning of reproductivedevelopment. The results showed that floral development is accompaniedby a significant increase in the level of soluble (non-sedimentable)leaf peroxidase, independently of leaf position along the internodes,and therefore independently of the leaf age. An analysis ofthe leaf peroxidase isoenzyme patterns along the internodesfor vegetative and flowered plants shows that the increase inperoxidase activity is due to a general increase in the activityof all the pre-existing peroxidase isoenzymes, although isoenzymeB2 and, especially, isoenzyme A1 showed a distinctive and majorincrease in activity. These two isoenzymes are mainly ionically-boundto cell walls, probably in equilibrium with the same isoenzymesmoving freely in the cell-wall free spaces. The differs fromother peroxidase isoenzymes, such as isoperoxidase B6, whichis mainly located in the covalently-bound cell-wall fractionand in mesophyll vacuoles. These results are discussed in thelight of a possible role of cell wall peroxidases as markersof the floral state in Capsicum annuum morphogenesis.Copyright1993, 1999 Academic Press Capsicum, floral state, leaf peroxidases, subcellular localization, vegetative state  相似文献   

17.
The occurrence of three plasma membrane-bound class III peroxidases has been demonstrated for maize (Zea mays L.) roots [Mika and Lüthje (2003) Plant Physiol. 132:1489-1498]. In the present work a novel PM-bound peroxidase (pmPOX3) was partially purified. The experimental molecular mass of the heme protein was 38 kDa after size exclusion, and 57 kDa in non-reducing SDS-PAGE stained with the peroxidase substrates tetramethylbenzidine and H(2)O(2). The glycosylation of pmPOX1, pmPOX2b and pmPOX3 was shown by different approaches. The full length sequences of pmPOX1, pmPOX2b and pmPOX3 were identified by ESI-MS/MS and MALDI-TOF MS analysis in combination with in silico and in vivo cloning. Thus, we report the first sequence analysis of membrane-bound class III peroxidases. A partial gene analysis revealed two or three introns. Experimental and theoretical isoelectric points and molecular masses were compared. Targeting signals, the putative protein structures and the localization of the active center of the enzymes on the outside of the plasma membrane were deduced of the amino acid sequences. In contrast to other class III peroxidases, pmPOX1 seems to have a dimeric structure. Predictions of hydrophobic domains in comparison with solubilization experiments suggest an N-terminal transmembrane domain for the isoenzymes.  相似文献   

18.
A 42 kDa anionic peroxidase (EC 1.11.1.7) having a pl of 3.6 was purified from suspension cultures of cells of sycamore maple ( Acer pseudoplatanus L.) grown in the dark by a combination of lectin-affinity, anion-exchange and gel permeation chromatography. The enzyme had an amino acid composition similar to that found for other anionic plant peroxidases, but the protein was blocked to amino-terminal protein sequencing. Commercially available antibodies against horseradish peroxidase were shown to cross-react with the sycamore maple enzyme on immunoblots. The purified peroxidase displayed differences in its affinity for each of the three monolignols, and these differences were compared to those found for a commercial preparation of horseradish peroxidase, as well as a laccase ( p -diphenol:O2 oxidoreductase: EC 1.10.3.1) purified from sycamore maple cell suspension cultures. These results are discussed with respect to the role played by peroxidases in lignin deposition and host-pathogen response.  相似文献   

19.
Hairy roots cultures derived from leaf explants ofBrassica napus L. produced and secreted peroxidases. The enzyme activity in the medium increased with growth but it remained nearly constant in the tissue. The changes in extracellular peroxidase activity seemed to be correlated with the increase in a basic peroxidase of pI: 9.6. Four isoenzymes with pI in the range 8.5–9.6 and a neutral peroxidase of pI 6.3 were the most important peroxidases detected in cell extracts. Ca2+ addition at the beginning of the culture stimulated both the excretion of peroxidase to the medium and the enzyme activity in hairy roots but the isoenzyme profiles did not show qualitative changes during the growth cycle for both culture conditions.  相似文献   

20.
S. C. Gupta  L. Beevers 《Planta》1985,166(1):89-95
The cellular location of three peroxidase isoenzymes (PRX) in mature leaf tissue of Petunia and their affinity for Concanavalin A-Sepharose were investigated. The isoenzymes PRXa, PRXb and PRXc were identified by their positions in starch-gel zymograms. The fast-moving anodic and cathodic peroxidase bands, the isoenzymes PRXa and PRXc respectively, were the most active peroxidases in extracellular extracts. The molecular forms of PRXa showed a tissue-specific distribution between midrib and remaining leaf tissue. An intermediate-moving anodic peroxidase band, the isoenzyme PRXb, was the most active peroxidase released after extraction of isolated mesophyll protoplasts. Small amounts of the peroxidase isoenzymes were present in cell-wall-bound fractions. Incubation of a crude protein fraction with Concanavalin A-Sepharose showed that the isoenzyme PRXb bound more firmly to Concanavalin A-Sepharose than the isoenzymes PRXa and PRXc, of which only one molecular form bound partly. The results are discussed with respect to a possible function of one of the peroxidase isoenzymes, and a possible role of oligosaccharide chains in determining the cellular location of plant peroxidases is suggested.Abbreviations Con A Concanavalin A - PRX peroxidase (isoenzyme)  相似文献   

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