Two Gramineae species, oat and maize, are compared with wheat and barley to see if they contain lectins which are structurally and functionally similar to the Hordeae lectins. Four distinct criteria were examined: localisation of lectin activity in the seed, ability to agglutinate a defined type of erythrocyte in a reaction reversed by monomers or oligomers of N-acetyl-D-glucosamine, ability to bind to the affinity matrix p-aminobenzyl-1-thio-2-acetamido-2-deoxy-β-D-glucopyranoside-substituted Sepharose, and cross-reactivity with monospecific antisera raised to wheat-germ agglutinin. Results indicate that the very close relationship found between the lectins of wheat, barley and rye cannot be extended to those species of Gramineae outside the tribe Hordeae.
Wheat-germ agglutinin is located only in the embryo of a dry wheat seed and not in the endosperm tissue. This distribution remains unaltered for up to 96 h of germination and growth. The lectin is found not only in a freely soluble form but also in reversible association with particulate subcellular components. There appear to be no poly-peptides that can be solubilized with sonication and aqueous buffers from the embryo tissue that can interact with the agglutinin. This suggests that in vivo the lectin remains uncomplexed to endogenous glycoconjugates or is only able to bind to glycosylated integral membrane polypeptides. Alternatively the potential endogenous receptor(s) to wheat-germ agglutinin may not contain a polypeptide. Although the lectin is not present in the endosperm, seven polypeptides able to interact in a reversible way with wheat-germ agglutinin could be purified from that tissue.
Field-grown wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) has been used as a developmental system to study the appearance of wheat-germ agglutinin during grain maturation. The lectin appears at the mid-grain growth period (30-34 days post-anthesis) and continues to be synthesised throughout the late stages of maturation and desiccation. An acidic endopeptidase activity, inhibited by pepstatin-phenanthroline is present in extracts of embryo and endosperm throughout maturation. After in-vivo labelling of immature embryos with [(35)S]methionine for 3 h and extraction in the presence of proteinase inhibitors, immunoprecipitates with anti-wheat-germ agglutinin were analysed by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and fluorography, and found to contain three (35)S-labelled polypeptides of Mr 46000, 18000 and 13000. Comparison of two-dimensional tryptic maps of (125)I-labelled peptides indicate the three polypeptides are closely related.
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