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In Vitro Processing of Tomato Proteinase Inhibitor I by Barley Microsomal Membranes
Author(s) -
Katherine W. Osteryoung,
Liliane Sticher,
Russell L. Jones,
A. B. Bennett
Publication year - 1992
Publication title -
plant physiology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.554
H-Index - 312
eISSN - 1532-2548
pISSN - 0032-0889
DOI - 10.1104/pp.99.2.378
Subject(s) - endomembrane system , biochemistry , signal peptide , biology , microsome , aleurone , hordeum vulgare , signal peptidase , microbiology and biotechnology , in vitro , membrane , vesicle , peptide sequence , botany , endosperm , gene , poaceae
A plant-derived in vitro system for the study of cotranslational processing of plant endomembrane proteins has been developed and used to investigate cotranslational proteolytic processing of tomato proteinase inhibitor I. Translation of the inhibitor I precursor in wheat germ lysate supplemented with barley aleurone microsomal membranes resulted in cotranslational import of the protein into microsomal vesicles and cleavage of the signal sequence. NH(2)-terminal sequence analysis of the translocated inhibitor I processing intermediate showed that the signal sequence was cleaved between Ala(23) and Arg(24) of the precursor protein. Parallel experiments using dog pancreas microsomal membranes indicated an identical site of cleavage, suggesting that the substrate determinants for signal sequence processing are conserved across kingdoms. The plant-derived processing system used for this study may be valuable for analysis of cotranslational processing of other plant preproteins and for characterizing the components of the cotranslational import machinery in plants.

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