A 24-kD vacuolar protein (VP24) accumulates abundantly in intravacuolar pigmented globules in anthocyanin-containing sweet potato (Ipomoea batatas) cells in suspension culture. A cDNA clone encoding VP24 was isolated from a cDNA library constructed from light-irradiated suspension-cultured cells. Sequence analysis revealed that a 2.9-kbp VP24 cDNA encodes a protein of 893 amino acid residues with a molecular mass of 96.3 kD. According to the deduced amino acid sequence of VP24 cDNA, VP24 is probably synthesized as a large precursor protein with an N-terminal extension composed of a signal peptide and a propeptide, plus the polypeptide of the mature VP24 and its C-terminal propeptide, which contains the multiple transmembrane domains. A search in the ProDom database revealed the mature VP24 domain belongs to the zinc metalloprotease family. Northern analysis revealed that the single 2.9-kb VP24 mRNA increases rapidly after light irradiation, whereas VP24 mRNA was undetectable in the dark-cultured cells or in the presence of a high concentration of 2,4-dichlorophenoxyacetic acid. Light-induced VP24 gene expression closely correlated with the accumulation of anthocyanin in the vacuoles. These results suggested that proteins derived from the VP24 precursor protein may be involved in vacuolar transport and/or accumulation of anthocyanin synthesized in the cytosol.
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