Plant Physiol. Drug Metab Dispos
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Plant Physiol, July 2000, Vol. 123, pp. 1097-1108

Isolation and Characterization of Plant N-Acetyl Glucosaminyltransferase I (GntI) cDNA Sequences. Functional Analyses in the Arabidopsis cgl Mutant and in Antisense Plants1

Irina Wenderoth2 and Antje von Schaewen*

Pflanzenphysiologie, FB 5 Biologie/Chemie, Universität Osnabrück, D-49069 Osnabrück, Germany

We report on the isolation and characterization of full-length cDNA sequences coding for N-acetylglucosaminyltransferase I (GnTI) from potato (Solanum tuberosum L.), tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum L.), and Arabidopsis. The deduced polypeptide sequences show highest homology among the solanaceous species (93% identity between potato and tobacco compared with about 75% with Arabidopsis) but share only weak homology with human GnTI (35% identity). In contrast to the corresponding enzymes from animals, all plant GnTI sequences identified are characterized by a much shorter hydrophobic membrane anchor and contain one putative N-glycosylation site that is conserved in potato and tobacco, but differs in Arabidopsis. Southern-blot analyses revealed that GntI behaves as a single-copy gene. Northern-blot analyses showed that GntI-mRNA expression is largely constitutive. Arabidopsis cgl mutants deficient in GnTI activity also possess GntI mRNA, indicating that they result from point mutations. GntI-expression constructs were tested for the ability to relieve the GnTI block in protoplasts of the Arabidopsis cgl mutant and used to obtain transgenic potato and tobacco plants that display a substantial reduction of complex glycan patterns. The latter observation indicates that production of heterologous glycoproteins with little or no antigenic glycans can be achieved in whole plants, and not in just Arabidopsis, using antisense technology.


1 This work was financially supported by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (Scha 541/4).

2 Present address: Molecular Plant and Protein Biotechnology Cologne, Neurather Ring 1, 51063 Köln, Germany.

* Corresponding author; e-mail Schaewen{at}biologie.uni-osnabrueck.de; fax 49-541-969-2870.

© 2000 American Society of Plant Physiologists



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