Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0277787 (
stigma
)
13,352
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
In plants, the pollen coat covers the exine wall of the pollen and is the outermost layer that makes the initial contact with the
stigma
surface during sexual reproduction. Little is known about the constituents of the pollen coat, especially in wind-pollinated species. The pollen coat was extracted with diethyl ether from the pollen of maize (Zea mays L.), and a predominant protein of 35 kDa was identified. On the basis of the N-terminal sequence of this protein, a cDNA clone of the Xyl gene was obtained by reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction. The deduced amino acid sequence of the 35-kDa protein shared similarities with the sequences of many microbial xylanases and a barley aleurone-layer
xylanase
. The 35-kDa protein in the pollen-coat extract was purified to homogeneity by fast protein liquid chromatography and determined to be an acidic endoxylanase that was most active on oat spelt xylan. Northern and in situ hybridization showed that Xyl was specifically expressed in the tapetum of the anther after the tetrad microspores had become individual microspores. Southern hybridization and gene-copy reconstruction studies showed only one copy of the Xyl gene per haploid genome. Analyses of the genomic DNA sequence of Xyl and RNase protection studies with the transcript revealed many regulatory motifs at the promoter region and an intron at the 5' leader region of the transcript. The Xyl transcript had a 562-nucleotide (nt) 5' leader, a 54-nt sequence encoding a putative signal peptide, a 933-nt coding sequence, and a 420-nt 3'-untranslated sequence. The unusually long 5' leader had an open reading frame encoding a putative 175-residue protein whose sequence was most similar to that of a microbial arabinosidase. The maize
xylanase
is the first enzyme documented to be present in the pollen coat. Its possible role in the hydrolysis of the maize type II primary cell wall (having xylose, glucose, and arabinose as the major moieties) of the tapetum cells and the
stigma
surface is discussed.
...
PMID:The predominant protein on the surface of maize pollen is an endoxylanase synthesized by a tapetum mRNA with a long 5' leader. 1042 75
Pollen coat contains ingredients that interact with the
stigma
surface during sexual reproduction. In maize (Zea mays L.) pollen coat, the predominant protein is a 35-kDa endoxylanase, whose mRNA is located in the tapetum cells enclosing the maturing pollen in the anthers. This 2.0-kb mRNA was found to have an open reading frame of 1,635 nucleotides encoding a 60-kDa pre-
xylanase
. In developing anthers, the pre-
xylanase
protein appeared prior to the 35-kDa
xylanase
protein and enzyme activity and then peaked and declined, whereas the 35-kDa
xylanase
protein and activity continued to increase until anther maturation. An acid protease in the anther extract converted the inactive pre-
xylanase
to the active 35-kDa
xylanase
in vitro. The protease activity was inhibited by inhibitors of serine proteases but unaffected by inhibitors of cysteine, aspartic, or metallic proteases. Sequence analysis revealed that the 60-kDa pre-
xylanase
was converted to the 35-kDa
xylanase
with the removal of 198 and 48 residues from the N and C termini, respectively. During in vitro and in vivo conversions, no intermediates of 60-35 kDa were observed, and the 35-kDa
xylanase
was highly stable. The pre-
xylanase
was localized in the tapetum-containing anther wall, whereas the 35-kDa
xylanase
was found in the pollen coat. The significance of having a large non-active pre-
xylanase
and the mode of transfer of the
xylanase
to the pollen coat are discussed. A gene encoding the barley (Hordeum vulgare L.) tapetum
xylanase
was cloned; this gene and the gene encoding the seed aleurone-layer
xylanase
had strict tissue-specific expressions.
...
PMID:Maize tapetum xylanase is synthesized as a precursor, processed and activated by a serine protease, and deposited on the pollen. 1236 81
The surface of a pollen grain consists of an outermost coat and an underlying wall. In maize (Zea mays L.), the pollen coat contains two major proteins derived from the adjacent tapetum cells in the anthers. One of the proteins is a 35-kDa endoxylanase (Wu, S. S. H., Suen, D. F., Chang, H. C., and Huang, A. H. C. (2002) J. Biol. Chem. 277, 49055-49064). The other protein of 70 kDa was purified to homogeneity and shown to be a beta-glucanase. Its gene sequence and the developmental pattern of its mRNA differ from those of the known beta-glucanases that hydrolyze the callose wall of the microspore tetrad. Mature pollen placed in a liquid medium released about nine major proteins. These proteins were partially sequenced and identified via GenBank trade mark data bases, and some had not been previously reported to be in pollen. They appear to have wall-loosening, structural, and enzymatic functions. A novel pollen wall-bound protein of 17 kDa has a unique pattern of cysteine distribution in its sequence (six tandem repeats of CX3CX10-15) that could chelate cations and form signal-receiving finger motifs. These pollen-released proteins were synthesized in the pollen interior, and their mRNA increased during pollen maturation and germination. They were localized mainly in the pollen tube wall. The pollen shell was isolated and found to contain no detectable proteins. We suggest that the pollen-coat beta-glucanase and
xylanase
hydrolyze the
stigma
wall for pollen tube entry and that the pollen secrete proteins to loosen or become new wall constituents of the tube and to break the wall of the transmitting track for tube advance.
...
PMID:Cell wall reactive proteins in the coat and wall of maize pollen: potential role in pollen tube growth on the stigma and through the style. 1293 Aug 26
Cell wall hydrolases are well documented to be present on pollen, but their roles on the
stigma
during sexual reproduction have not been previously demonstrated. We explored the function of the tapetum-synthesized
xylanase
, ZmXYN1, on maize (Zea mays L.) pollen. Transgenic lines (xyl-less) containing little or no
xylanase
in the pollen coat were generated with use of an antisense construct of the
xylanase
gene-coding region driven by the XYN1 gene promoter. Xyl-less and wild-type plants had similar vegetative growth. Electron microscopy revealed no appreciable morphological difference in anther cells and pollen between xyl-less lines and the wild type, whereas immunofluorescence microscopy and biochemical analyses indicated an absence of
xylanase
on xyl-less pollen. Xyl-less pollen germinated as efficiently as wild-type pollen in vitro in a liquid medium but less so on gel media of increasing solidity or on silk, which is indicative of partial impaired water uptake. Once germinated in vitro or on silk, the xyl-less and wild-type pollen tubes elongated at comparable rates. Tubes of germinated xyl-less pollen on silk did not penetrate into the silk as efficiently as tubes of wild-type pollen, and this lower efficiency could be overcome by the addition of
xylanase
to the silk. For wild-type pollen, coat
xylanase
activity on oat spelled xylan in vitro and tube penetration into silk were inhibited by xylose but not glucose. The overall findings indicate that maize pollen coat
xylanase
facilitates pollen tube penetration into silk via enzymatic xylan hydrolysis.
...
PMID:Maize pollen coat xylanase facilitates pollen tube penetration into silk during sexual reproduction. 1706 71