Plant Physiol, November 2001, Vol. 127, pp. 1065-1076
Rapid Deposition of Extensin during the Elicitation of Grapevine
Callus Cultures Is Specifically Catalyzed by a 40-Kilodalton
Peroxidase1
Phil A.P.
Jackson,*
Carla I.R.
Galinha,
Cristina S.
Pereira,
Ana
Fortunato,
Nelson C.
Soares,
Sara B.Q.
Amâncio, and
Cândido P. Pinto
Ricardo
Instituto de Tecnologia Química e Biológica, Apartado
127, 2781-901 Oeiras, Portugal (P.A.P.J., C.I.R.G., C.S.P., A.F.,
N.C.S., C.P.P.R.); and Instituto Superior de Agronomia, Tapada da
Ajuda, 1349-017 Lisboa, Portugal (S.B.Q.A., C.P.P.R.)
Elicitation or peroxide stimulation of grape (Vitis
vinifera L. cv Touriga) vine callus cultures results in the
rapid and selective in situ insolubilization of an abundant and
ionically bound cell wall protein-denominated GvP1. Surface-enhanced
laser desorption/ionization/time of flight-mass spectrometry
analysis, the amino acid composition, and the N-terminal sequence of
purified GvP1 identified it as an 89.9-kD extensin. Analysis of cell
walls following the in situ insolubilization of GvP1 indicates large and specific increases in the major amino acids of GvP1 as compared with the amino acids present in salt-eluted cell walls. We calculate that following deposition, covalently bound GvP1 contributes up to 4%
to 5% of the cell wall dry weight. The deposition of GvP1 in situ
requires peroxide and endogenous peroxidase activity. Isoelectric
focusing of saline eluates of callus revealed only a few basic
peroxidases that were all isolated or purified to electrophoretic
homogeneity. In vitro and in situ assays of extensin cross-linking
activity using GvP1 and peroxidases showed that a 40-kD peroxidase
cross-linked GvP1 within minutes, whereas other grapevine peroxidases
had no significant activity with GvP1. Internal peptide sequences
indicated this extensin peroxidase (EP) is a member of the class III
peroxidases. We conclude that we have identified and purified an EP
from grapevine callus that is responsible for the catalysis of GvP1
deposition in situ during elicitation. Our results suggest that GvP1
and this EP play an important combined role in grapevine cell wall defense.
1
The research was supported by the
Fundação de Ciência e Tecnologia (PRAXIS/XXI;
grants to P.A.P.J., C.S.P., and A.F.; project no.
PRAXIS/2/2.1/BIO/1146/95).
*
Corresponding author; e-mail Phil{at}itqb.unl.pt; fax
00351-21- 4433644.
© 2001 American Society of Plant Physiologists