Role of extensin peroxidase in tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum Mill.) seedling growth

被引:0
|
作者
M. D. Brownleader
J. Hopkins
A. Mobasheri
P. M. Dey
P. Jackson
M. Trevan
机构
[1] School of Biosciences,
[2] University of Westminster,undefined
[3] 115 New Cavendish St.,undefined
[4] London W1 M 8JS,undefined
[5] UK,undefined
[6] Division of Biochemistry,undefined
[7] Royal Holloway,undefined
[8] University of London,undefined
[9] Egham,undefined
[10] Surrey TW20 OEX,undefined
[11] UK,undefined
[12] Instituto de Tecnologia,undefined
[13] Química e Biológica (II),undefined
[14] Apartado 127,undefined
[15] Oeiras 2780,undefined
[16] Portugal,undefined
来源
Planta | 2000年 / 210卷
关键词
Keywords: Cell wall (extensin) – Cell expansion – Extensin peroxidase – Inhibitor – Hypocotyl growth –Lycopersicon (extensin);
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摘要
 It is proposed that inhibition of extensin peroxidase activity leads to a less rigid cell wall and thus promotes cell expansion and plant growth. A low-molecular-weight inhibitor derived from the cell walls of suspension-cultured tomato cells was found to completely inhibit extensin peroxidase-mediated extensin cross-linking in vitro at a concentration of 260 μg/ml. The inhibitor had no effect upon guaiacol oxidation catalyzed by extensin peroxidase or horseradish peroxidase. We have demonstrated that the light-irradiated inhibition of plant growth may be partially offset by inhibition of endogenous extensin peroxidase activity. Overall plant growth was enhanced by up to 15% in the presence of inhibitor relative to control plants. Inhibitor-treated and illuminated tomato hypocotyls grew up to 15% taller than untreated controls. The inhibitor had no effect upon etiolated plants over a 15-d period, suggesting that only low levels of peroxidase-mediated cross-linking can be found in the cell walls of etiolated plants. SDS-PAGE/Western blots of ionically bound protein from both etiolated and illuminated hypocotyls identified a doublet at 57/58.5 kDa which is immuno-reactive with antibodies raised to tomato extensin peroxidase. Levels of the 58.5-kDa protein, determined by SDS-PAGE, were at least threefold higher in illuminated tomato hypocotyls than in etiolated hypocotyls. Three fold higher levels of extensin peroxidase, elevated in-vitro extensin cross-linking activity and 15% higher levels of cross-linked, non-extractable extensin were observed in illuminated tomato hypocotyls compared with etiolated tomato hypocotyls. This suggests that white-light inhibition of tomato hypocotyl growth appears to be mediated, at least partially, by deposition of cell wall extensin, a process regulated by Mr-58,500 extensin peroxidase. Our results indicate that the contribution of peroxidase-mediated extensin deposition to plant cell wall architecture may have an important role in plant growth.
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页码:668 / 676
页数:8
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