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Cloning of PCP1, a member of a family of pollen coat protein (PCP) genes from Brassica oleracea encoding novel cysteine-rich proteins involved in pollen-stigma interactions
Authors:Borislav S. Stanchev   James Doughty  Charles P. Scutt  Hugh Dickinson   Ronald R.D. Croy
Affiliation:Department of Biological Sciences, University of Durham, South Road, Durham DH1 3LE, UK;Department of Plant Sciences, University of Oxford, South Parks Road, Oxford OX1 3RB, UK;Centre for Plant Biochemistry and Biotechnology, University of Leeds, Leeds LS2 9JT, UK
Abstract:The pollen coatings of both Brassica oleracea and Brassica napus contain a small family of basic 6–8 kDa proteins which are released on to the stigmatic surface on pollination. Following partial amino-acid sequencing of one of these pollen coat proteins (PCPs), PCR primers were constructed to isolate the PCP sequence from anther mRNA using RT-PCR. A cDNA was obtained which, in Northern hybridization experiments, revealed a characteristic pattern of expression during late stages of anther development. Interestingly, in situ hybridization revealed expression of this sequence to be confined to the cytoplasm of the trinucleate pollen grains: no signal was detected in the tapetum. Southern hybridization experiments have shown the gene ( PCP1 ) to be a member of a large family of between 30 and 40 PCP genes in the genome of Brassica oleracea , Surprisingly, RFLP experiments showed reduced copy number (one to two copies) in some of the F2 segregants, perhaps resulting from the clustering of PCP sequences. PCP1 contains a single intron and encodes a small, basic peptide 83 amino acids in length featuring a hydrophobic signal peptide sequence separated from the more hydrophilic, cysteine-rich mature protein. The central part and C-terminal region of the peptide contain a characteristic and invariant pattern of eight cysteines which show clear homology with a number of other anther-specific genes; the remainder of the sequence shows little similarity to other sequences on the data bases. The product of PCP1 is a member of a large family of similar proteins, some of which have been demonstrated to bind specifically to S-locus glycoproteins, but does not appear to be genetically linked to the S-locus .
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