• Title of article

    Purification and cloning of two high molecular mass isoforms of peanut seed oleosin encoded by cDNAs of equal sizes

  • Author/Authors

    Pons، نويسنده , , Laurent and Chéry، نويسنده , , Céline and Mrabet، نويسنده , , Nadir and Schohn، نويسنده , , Hervé and Lapicque، نويسنده , , Françoise and Guéant، نويسنده , , Jean-Louis، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2005
  • Pages
    10
  • From page
    659
  • To page
    668
  • Abstract
    Oleosins are small plant proteins characterized by a long hydrophobic core flanked by amphipathic N- and C-terminal domains, which act as emulsifiers for the storage of lipids in seeds. They have been sequenced in a number of oilseeds important for the food industry but not in peanuts. We purified the major isoform of peanut oleosin by preparative electrophoresis with continuous elution, in sufficient amounts to raise specific antibodies, perform circular dichroism and N-sequence tryptic fragments. The structure of the purified oleosin was dominated by α-helix that may be assigned to the SDS-resistant central hydrophobic stretch. A two-step RT-PCR strategy was developed to determine the cDNA sequence of this oleosin. Two cDNA variants of equal sizes encoding for isoforms of 176 amino acids each were identified. The isoforms differed by seven amino acids mainly located in the N- and C-terminal domains. The corresponding mRNAs were estimated at 0.9 kb by Northern blot and were transcribed from genes without introns. Immunoprecipitation of the in vitro-translated peanut oleosin labeled with [14C]leucine or [35S]methionine produced the full-length protein (17 kDa) and a 6-kDa peptide corresponding to the N/C-terminal domains. This peptide was able to form SDS-PAGE stable oligomers by interacting with the full-length protein. A similar peptide was released after [125I]iodination of the purified oleosin that generated intermediate-sized oligomers also visible by Western blot on a crude oleosin extract. Oligomers reflect the natural ability of oleosins to strongly interact with each other via not only their central domains but also their N- and C-terminal domains.
  • Keywords
    oleosin , Preparative electrophoresis , race , Arachis hypogaea , oleosome , oligomerization , Radiolabeling
  • Journal title
    Plant Physiology and Biochemistry
  • Serial Year
    2005
  • Journal title
    Plant Physiology and Biochemistry
  • Record number

    2121253