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Plant Cell Advance Online Publication
Published on October 24, 2002; 10.1105/tpc.005009


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Received June 13, 2002
Accepted September 4, 2002

Redundant Proteolytic Mechanisms Process Seed Storage Proteins in the Absence of Seed-Type Members of the Vacuolar Processing Enzyme Family of Cysteine Proteases

Darren Gruis 1, David A. Selinger 1, Jill M. Curran 1, and Rudolf Jung 1*

1 Pioneer Hi-Bred International, a DuPont Company, 7300 NW 62nd Avenue, Johnston, Iowa 50131-1004

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: rudolf.jung{at}pioneer.com.

Seed-type vacuolar processing enzyme (VPE) activity is predicted to be essential for post-translational proteolysis of seed storage proteins in the protein storage vacuole of developing seeds. To test this hypothesis, we examined the protein profiles of developing and germinating seeds from Arabidopsis plants containing transposon-insertional knockout mutations in the genes that encode the two seed-type VPEs in Arabidopsis, ßVPE, which was identified previously, and {delta}VPE, which is described here. The effects of these mutations were studied individually in single mutants and together in a double mutant. Surprisingly, we found that most of the seed protein still was processed proteolytically in seed-type VPE mutants. The minor differences observed in polypeptide accumulation between wild-type and ßVPE mutant seeds were characterized using a two-dimensional gel/mass spectrometric analysis approach. The results showed increased amounts of propolypeptide forms of legumin-type globulins accumulating in mutant seeds. However, the majority of protein (>80%) still was processed to mature {alpha}- and ß-chains, as observed in wild-type seeds. Furthermore, we identified several legumin-type globulin polypeptides, not corresponding to pro or mature forms, that increased in accumulation in ßVPE mutant seeds compared with wild-type seeds. Together, these results indicate the existence of both redundant and alternative processing activities in seeds. The latter was substantiated by N-terminal sequencing of a napin-type albumin protein, indicating cleavage consistent with previous in vitro studies using purified aspartic protease. Analysis of genome-wide transcript profiling data sets identified six protease genes (including an aspartic protease gene and ßVPE) that shared spatial and temporal expression patterns with seed storage proteins. From these results, we conclude that seed-type VPEs constitute merely one pathway for processing seed storage protein and that other proteolytic enzymes also can process storage proteins into chains capable of stable accumulation in mature seeds.







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