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1.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 94(13): 7094-7, 1997 Jun 24.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9192697

ABSTRACT

The maize floury2 mutation results in the formation of a soft, starchy endosperm with a reduced amount of prolamin (zein) proteins and twice the lysine content of the wild type. The mutation is semidominant and is associated with small, irregularly shaped protein bodies, elevated levels of a 70-kDa chaperone in the endoplasmic reticulum, and a novel 24-kDa polypeptide in the zein fraction. The 24-kDa polypeptide is a precursor of a 22-kDa alpha-zein protein that is not properly processed. The defect is due to an alanine-to-valine substitution at the C-terminal position of the signal peptide, which causes the protein to be anchored to the endoplasmic reticulum. We postulated that the phenotype associated with the floury2 mutation is caused by the accumulation of the 24-kDa alpha-zein protein. To test this hypothesis, we created transgenic maize plants that produce the mutant protein. We found that endosperm in seeds of these plants manifests the floury2 phenotype, thereby confirming that the mutant alpha-zein is the molecular basis of this mutation.


Subject(s)
Mutation , Zea mays/genetics , Zein/genetics , Gene Expression , Genes, Plant , Phenotype , Plants, Genetically Modified , Seeds , Zea mays/ultrastructure , Zein/ultrastructure
2.
Plant Physiol ; 89(3): 768-75, 1989 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16666619

ABSTRACT

The maturation of soybean (Glycine max L. Merr.) somatic embryos was characterized. Maturation was assayed by evaluating the ability of somatic embryos to make the transition to a plantlet through a germination-like process. Somatic embryos were organized from cotyledons of immature soybean embryos. Maturation of somatic embryos occurred on a Murashige-Skoog basal medium supplemented with activated charcoal and 0.28 molar sucrose. After 8 weeks on this medium, somatic embryos exhibited vigorous, high frequency development to plantlets. The "germination" frequency (conversion) of somatic embryos, and plantlet recovery frequency varied concurrently with maturation period. Conversion and plant recovery required no exogenous growth regulators. Desiccation of immature somatic embryos under controlled humidity regimes resulted in increased frequency of conversion of immature somatic embryos. Morphological abnormalities appeared in the somatic embryos, but few were detrimental to conversion velocity. There was little effect of genotype on conversion velocity or frequency.

3.
Plant Physiol ; 71(1): 136-40, 1983 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16662772

ABSTRACT

Seventy-nine 5-methyltryptophan-resistant cell lines have been selected from haploid Datura innoxia Mill. cell cultures by plating suspensions in agar medium containing a growth inhibitory concentration of 5-methyltryptophan. Mutagen treatment increased the frequency of resistance. The eleven variants tested posses an altered anthranilate synthase less sensitive to feedback inhibition by tryptophan. All five of the variants which were analyzed for free amino acids contained elevated levels of free tryptophan (8 to 30 times the wild type level). None of the selected cell lines were auxin-autotrophic. Resistance to 5-methyltryptophan, altered anthranilate synthase, and high free tryptophan (4 to 44 times) were also expressed in leaves of plants regenerated from the variant lines and in cultures reinitiated from the resistant plants. These results show that the amino acid overproduction phenotype can be selected at the cellular level of organization and be expressed identically in whole plants regenerated from the selected cells.

4.
Plant Cell Rep ; 2(1): 15-8, 1983 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24257847

ABSTRACT

The growth of suspension cultured cells of Nicotiana tabacum (tobacco) was inhibited completely by 100 µM tungstate. Even though molybdate reversed the tungstate inactivation of nitrate reductase activity, the growth inhibition was not reversed. The growth inhibition of N. tabacum, Daucus carota, Glycine max and Solanum tuberosum suspension cultured cells by tungstate was similar in media with or without amino acids as a source of reduced nitrogen. Only in the case of G. max was a slight reversal caused by the amino acids. Tungstate was slightly less inhibitory to the growth of a nitrate reductase-lacking mutant N. tabacum line (nia-63) than to the line with nitrate reductase. These results indicate that tungstate must inhibit the cell growth of the four species used, predominantly, in some way other than by inhibiting nitrate reductase activity. Similar studies with molybdate, a sulfate analog which apparently competes with sulfate at the ATP sulfury-lase enzyme, showed that 1 mM concentrations were completely inhibitory to cell growth. The addition of sulfate or cysteine, as a source of reduced sulfur, and amino acids, as a source of reduced nitrogen, in most cases did not reverse the molybdate inhibition appreciably. Some reversal was seen only by sulfate with D. carota cells and by cysteine plus amino acids with D. carota and G. max. These results indicate that selection for tungstate or molybdate resistance will in general not select for higher levels or other alterations in the activity of nitrate reductase or ATP sulfurylase, respectively, since these ions do not inhibit growth by primarily affecting these enzymatic steps in cultured cells of the four species studied.

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