Literature DB >> 8000004

Avenacosidase from oat: purification, sequence analysis and biochemical characterization of a new member of the BGA family of beta-glucosidases.

S Gus-Mayer1, H Brunner, H A Schneider-Poetsch, W Rüdiger.   

Abstract

A protein consisting of 60 kDa subunits (As-P60) was isolated from etiolated oat seedlings (Avena sativa L.) and characterized as avenacosidase, a beta-glucosidase that belongs to a preformed defence system of oat against fungal infection. The enzyme is highly aggregated; it consists of 300-350 kDa aggregates and multimers thereof. Dissociation by freezing/thawing leads to complete loss of enzyme activity. The specificity of the enzyme was investigated with para-nitrophenyl derivatives which serve as substrates, in decreasing order beta-fucoside, beta-glucoside, beta-galactoside, beta-xyloside. The corresponding orthonitrophenyl glycosides are less well accepted. No hydrolysis was found with alpha-glycosides and beta-thioglucoside. An anti-As-P60 antiserum was prepared and used for isolation of a cDNA clone coding for As-P60. A presequence of 55 amino acid residues was deduced from comparison of the cDNA sequence with the N-terminal sequence determined by Edman degradation of the mature protein. The presequence has the characteristics of a stroma-directing signal peptide; localization of As-P60 in plastids of oat seedlings was confirmed by western blotting. The amino acid sequence revealed significant homology (> 39% sequence identity) to beta-glucosidases that are constituents of a defence mechanism in dicotyledonous plants. 34% sequence identity was even found with mammalian and bacterial beta-glucosidases of the BGA family. Avenacosidase extends the occurrence of this family of beta-glucosidases to monocotyledonous plants.

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Year:  1994        PMID: 8000004     DOI: 10.1007/BF00028858

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Plant Mol Biol        ISSN: 0167-4412            Impact factor:   4.076


  25 in total

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8.  Characterization of a Brassica napus myrosinase pseudogene: myrosinases are members of the BGA family of beta-glycosidases.

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9.  The stromacentre inAvena plastids: an aggregation ofβ-glucosidase responsible for the activation of oat-leaf saponins.

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7.  Functional diversity and interactions between the repeat domains of rat intestinal lactase.

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