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Functional Plant Biology Functional Plant Biology Society
Plant function and evolutionary biology
RESEARCH ARTICLE

Serpins in fruit and vegetative tissues of apple (Malus domestica): expression of four serpins with distinct reactive centres and characterisation of a major inhibitory seed form, MdZ1b

Jørn Hejgaard A E , William A. Laing B , Salla Marttila C , Andrew P. Gleave B and Thomas H. Roberts D
+ Author Affiliations
- Author Affiliations

A Biochemistry and Nutrition Group, BioCentrum, Building 224, Technical University of Denmark, DK-2800 Lyngby, Denmark.

B Horticulture and Food Research Institute of New Zealand, PB 92169, Auckland, New Zealand.

C Department of Crop Science, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, PO Box 44, SE-23053 Alnarp, Sweden.

D Department of Chemistry and Biomolecular Sciences, Macquarie University, NSW 2109, Australia.

E Corresponding author. Email: jh@biocentrum.dtu.dk

Functional Plant Biology 32(6) 517-527 https://doi.org/10.1071/FP04220
Submitted: 19 November 2004  Accepted: 12 April 2005   Published: 15 June 2005

Abstract

Most serpins irreversibly inhibit serine proteinases of the chymotrypsin family using a suicide-substrate-based mechanism. Serpins are present in all domains of life, but physiological functions in the plant kingdom are yet to be elucidated. Inhibitory properties of many abundant cereal grain serpins are well characterised, but serpins have not been identified in eudicot seeds. In apple (Malus domestica Borkh.), the origin of 88 serpin expressed sequence tags (ESTs) identified among 160 000 ESTs from 30 cultivar-, tissue- and time-specific libraries showed that serpin genes are expressed in a wide variety of tissues, including developing and mature fruits, seeds and vegetative buds as well as developing, mature and senescing leaves. Analysis of 46 sequences, most full-length, identified serpins with four distinct reactive centres belonging to two subfamilies (MdZ1 and MdZ2) with ~85% amino acid sequence identity. MdZ1 included three molecular forms with identical reactive centre loop (RCL) sequences except for three different, but related, residues at P2 (Asp, Asn or Glu). A major seed serpin, MdZ1b, with P2–P1′ Glu–Arg–Arg was purified from decorticated seeds and characterised kinetically. MdZ1b was a fast inhibitor of bovine and porcine trypsin (second-order association rate constant k a ~4 × 106 m –1 s–1 and stoichiometry of inhibition SI = 1). Human plasmin and urokinase-type plasminogen activator (u-PA), but not thrombin, were inhibited at lower rates (k a ~104 m –1 s–1). Chymotrypsin was inhibited at the same site (ka~4 × 103 m –1 s–1), but a significant part of MdZ1b was cleaved as substrate (SI > 2). Unexpectedly, the MdZ1b-trypsin complex was relatively short-lived with a first-order dissociation rate constant k d in the order of 10−4 s–1. The bulk of mature seed MdZ1b was localised to the cotyledons. The content of MdZ1b in ripe apples was 5–26 µg per seed, whereas MdZ1b could not be detected in the cortex or skin. Localisation and inhibitory specificity of serpins in monocot and eudicot plants are compared and putative functions are discussed.

Keywords: apple, EST, proteinase inhibitor, seed, serpin, tissue expression.


Acknowledgments

The excellent technical assistance of Susanne Blume, Mette U. Madsen, Anne Blicher, Bhawana Nain and Kim Jamieson is gratefully acknowledged. We also thank Professor Mark Westoby (Macquarie University, Sydney) for conducting the EST statistical analysis.


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