Plant Physiol, August 2002, Vol. 129, pp. 1686-1694
Linamarase Expression in Cassava Cultivars with Roots of Low- and
High-Cyanide Content1
María Angélica
Santana,*
Valeria
Vásquez,
Juan
Matehus, and
Rafael Rangel
Aldao
Departamento de Biología Celular, División de
Ciencias Biológicas, Universidad Simón Bolivar, Caracas,
Venezuela (M.A.S.); Instituto de Estudios Avanzados, Centro de
Biotecnología, Caracas, Venezuela (M.A.S., V.V., J.M., R.R.A.);
and Centro Tecnológico Polar, Empresas Polar, Caracas, Venezuela
(R.R.A.)
This paper reports the expression and localization of
linamarase in roots of two cassava (Manihot esculenta
Crantz) cultivars of low and high cyanide. Two different
patterns of linamarase activity were observed. In the low-cyanide type,
young leaves displayed very high enzyme activity during the early plant
growing stage (3 months), whereas in root peel, the activity increased progressively to reach a peak in 11-month-old plants. Conversely, in
the high-cyanide cultivar (HCV), root peel linamarase activity decreased during the growth cycle, whereas in expanded leaves linamarase activity peaked in 11-month-old plants. The accumulation of
linamarin showed a similar pattern in both cultivars, although a higher
concentration was always found in the HCV. Linamarase was found mainly
in laticifer cells of petioles and roots of both cultivars with no
significant differences between them. At the subcellular level, there
were sharp differences because linamarase was found mainly in the cell
walls of the HCV, whereas in the low-cyanide cultivar, the enzyme was
present in vacuoles and cell wall of laticifer cells. Reverse
transcriptase-PCR on cassava tissues showed no expression of linamarase
in cassava roots, thus, the transport of linamarase from shoots to
roots through laticifers is proposed.
1
This work was supported by Consejo Nacional de
Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas (grant no.
S1-97000558), by Instituto de Estudios Avanzados, and by Universidad
Simón Bolívar.
*
Corresponding author; e-mail msantana{at}usb.ve; fax
58-212-9063061/9621608.
© 2002 American Society of Plant Physiologists