Plant cystatins, similar to other defense proteins, include hypervariable, positively selected amino acid sites presumably impacting their biological activity. Using 29 single mutants of the eighth domain of tomato (Solanum lycopersicum) multicystatin, SlCYS8, we assessed here the potential of site-directed mutagenesis at positively selected amino acid sites to generate cystatin variants with improved inhibitory potency and specificity toward herbivorous insect digestive cysteine (Cys) proteases. Compared to SlCYS8, several mutants (22 out of 29) exhibited either improved or lowered potency against different model Cys proteases, strongly suggesting the potential of positively selected amino acids as target sites to modulate the inhibitory specificity of the cystatin toward Cys proteases of agronomic significance. Accordingly, mutations at positively selected sites strongly influenced the inhibitory potency of SlCYS8 against digestive Cys proteases of the insect herbivore Colorado potato beetle (Leptinotarsa decemlineata). In particular, several variants exhibited improved potency against both cystatin-sensitive and cystatininsensitive digestive Cys proteases of this insect. Of these, some variants also showed weaker activity against leaf Cys proteases of the host plant (potato [Solanum tuberosum]) and against a major digestive Cys protease of the two-spotted stinkbug Perillus bioculatus, an insect predator of Colorado potato beetle showing potential for biological control. Overall, these observations suggest the usefulness of site-directed mutagenesis at positively selected amino acid sites for the engineering of recombinant cystatins with both improved inhibitory potency toward the digestive proteases of target herbivores and weaker potency against nontarget Cys proteases in the host plant or the environment.
We describe a SELDI-TOF MS procedure for the rapid detection and quantitation of low-molecular-weight recombinant proteins expressed in plants. Transgenic lines of potato (Solanum tuberosum L.) expressing the clinically useful protein bovine aprotinin or the cysteine protease inhibitor corn cystatin II were generated by Agrobacterium tumefaciens-mediated transformation, and then used as test material for the analyses. Real-time RT-PCR amplifications and detection of the recombinant proteins by immunoblotting were first conducted for transformed potato lines accumulating the proteins in different cell compartments. Both proteins were found at varying levels in leaves, depending on their final cellular destination and transgene expression rate. These conclusions drawn from standard immunodetection assays were easily confirmed by SELDI-TOF MS comparative profiling, after immobilizing the leaf proteins of control and transformed lines on protein biochips for weak cationic exchange. This procedure, carried out in less than 2 h, allows for the rapid comparison of recombinant protein levels in transgenic plant lines. The molecular weight of immobilized proteins can also be determined directly from the MS spectra, thus providing a simple way to assess the structural integrity and homogeneity of recombinant proteins in planta, and to identify the most suitable cellular compartments for their heterologous production.
BackgroundStudies reported unintended pleiotropic effects for a number of pesticidal proteins ectopically expressed in transgenic crops, but the nature and significance of such effects in planta remain poorly understood. Here we assessed the effects of corn cystatin II (CCII), a potent inhibitor of C1A cysteine (Cys) proteases considered for insect and pathogen control, on the leaf proteome and pathogen resistance status of potato lines constitutively expressing this protein.ResultsThe leaf proteome of lines accumulating CCII at different levels was resolved by 2-dimensional gel electrophoresis and compared with the leaf proteome of a control (parental) line. Out of ca. 700 proteins monitored on 2-D gels, 23 were significantly up- or downregulated in CCII-expressing leaves, including 14 proteins detected de novo or up-regulated by more than five-fold compared to the control. Most up-regulated proteins were abiotic or biotic stress-responsive proteins, including different secretory peroxidases, wound inducible protease inhibitors and pathogenesis-related proteins. Accordingly, infection of leaf tissues by the fungal necrotroph Botryris cinerea was prevented in CCII-expressing plants, despite a null impact of CCII on growth of this pathogen and the absence of extracellular Cys protease targets for the inhibitor.ConclusionsThese data point to the onset of pleiotropic effects altering the leaf proteome in transgenic plants expressing recombinant protease inhibitors. They also show the potential of these proteins as ectopic modulators of stress responses in planta, useful to engineer biotic or abiotic stress tolerance in crop plants of economic significance.
This chapter presents a general procedure for the on-chip detection and quantitation of low-molecular-weight recombinant proteins in transgenic plant crude extracts by surface-enhanced laser desorption ionization time-of-flight mass spectrometry (SELDI-TOF MS). A protocol is first described to detect the protein of interest in crude protein extracts of transgenic plant lines, by differential protein mapping against similar extracts from a control, nontransgenic line. A complementary protocol is then presented to generate a standard curve with the SELDI system, allowing the protein to be quantified in different transgenic lines. Overall, this procedure may be carried out within a few hours, without the need for prior purification or enrichment of the recombinant protein.
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