1996
DOI: 10.1046/j.1365-313x.1996.09040477.x
|View full text |Cite
|
Sign up to set email alerts
|

Isolation of pl 4.6 extensin peroxidase from tomato cell suspension cultures and identification of Val—Tyr—Lys as putative intermolecular cross‐link site

Abstract: Extensins and kindred hydroxyproline-rich glycoproteins occur in dicot cell walls mainly as insoluble integral components that may form an intermolecularly cross-linked network interpenetrated by other polymers. Extensins also occur in muro as a small pool of soluble monomeric precursors to network extensin. These precursors were prepared in milligram quantities by salt elution from the surface of intact cells grown as tomato suspension cultures. Based on an FPLC (Superose-6) gel filtration assay of cross-link… Show more

Help me understand this report

Search citation statements

Order By: Relevance

Paper Sections

Select...
2
2

Citation Types

7
147
0
3

Year Published

1999
1999
2018
2018

Publication Types

Select...
5
3

Relationship

0
8

Authors

Journals

citations
Cited by 143 publications
(157 citation statements)
references
References 0 publications
7
147
0
3
Order By: Relevance
“…Significantly, extensin peroxidase did not cross-link extensins like the maize THRGP (Schnabelrauch et al, 1996), which lacked the putative VYK and YXYK cross-link motifs. Some extensins, like tomato P1, ap parently lacking Idt motifs (Smith et al, 1984(Smith et al, , 1986), were readily cross-linked, suggesting VYK as an intermolecular cross-link.…”
Section: The Extensin Superfamily Over 5 Decadesmentioning
confidence: 92%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Significantly, extensin peroxidase did not cross-link extensins like the maize THRGP (Schnabelrauch et al, 1996), which lacked the putative VYK and YXYK cross-link motifs. Some extensins, like tomato P1, ap parently lacking Idt motifs (Smith et al, 1984(Smith et al, , 1986), were readily cross-linked, suggesting VYK as an intermolecular cross-link.…”
Section: The Extensin Superfamily Over 5 Decadesmentioning
confidence: 92%
“…Meanwhile, the significance of putative cross-link motifs, VYK and Idt (YXY), became apparent with the availability of FPLC, notably Superose-6 columns that allowed the resolution of extensin monomers, oligomers, and polymers following in vitro enzymatic cross-linking of the monomers (Schnabelrauch et al, 1996), and led to the discovery of a specific extensin peroxidase.…”
Section: The Extensin Superfamily Over 5 Decadesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Tyr and Lys are an abundant amino acids in both PRPs and extensins (a second family of Hyp-rich structural cell wall proteins) and have been implicated as the substrate for the peroxidase-mediated insolubilization of PRPs in soybean (Kleis-San Francisco and Tierney, 1990;Bradley et al, 1992;Brisson et al, 1994) and in the cross-linking of extensins within the cell wall of suspension-cultured cells (Brady et al, 1996;Schnabelrauch et al, 1996). An extensinspecific peroxidase has been identified in tomato cell suspension cultures, and the substrate for this enzyme has tentatively been identified as Val-Tyr-Lys.…”
Section: Possible Functions For Atprps In Determining Cell Wall Strucmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…An extensinspecific peroxidase has been identified in tomato cell suspension cultures, and the substrate for this enzyme has tentatively been identified as Val-Tyr-Lys. Interestingly, two soybean PRPs containing this motif were not substrates for this enzyme in vitro (Schnabelrauch et al, 1996). Pectin/extensin cross-links have been identified in cotton cell walls (Qi et al, 1995) and are thought to occur through either a 3,6-linked galactan or a ferulated sugar/amino acid cross-link (Keegstra et al, 1973;Brownleader and Dey, 1993).…”
Section: Possible Functions For Atprps In Determining Cell Wall Strucmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Experiments involving complementation of the lrx1 mutant (Baumberger et al, 2001) by chimeric AtLRX constructs containing different extensin domains will address this question. It is interesting to note that none of the LRXs contains the motif VYK, thought to be important for intermolecular crosslinking (Schnabelrauch et al, 1996). Because protein immobilization in the cell wall was demonstrated for AtLRX1 and ZmPEX1 (Baumberger et al, 2001;Rubinstein et al, 1995b), it is likely that this process is mediated by other motifs than those so far identified in extensins.…”
mentioning
confidence: 98%