Plant Physiol, November 2002, Vol. 130, pp. 1254-1262
Variation in Its C-Terminal Amino Acids Determines Whether
Endo-
-Mannanase Is Active or Inactive in Ripening Tomato Fruits
of Different Cultivars1
Richard
Bourgault and
J. Derek
Bewley*
Department of Botany, University of Guelph, Guelph, Ontario, Canada
N1G 2W1
Endo-
-mannanase cDNAs were cloned and characterized from
ripening tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum Mill. cv Trust)
fruit, which produces an active enzyme, and from the tomato cv Walter, which produces an inactive enzyme. There is a two-nucleotide deletion in the gene from tomato cv Walter, which results in a frame shift and
the deletion of four amino acids at the C terminus of the full-length
protein. Other cultivars that produce either active or inactive enzyme
show the same absence or presence of the two-nucleotide deletion. The
endo-
-mannanase enzyme protein was purified and characterized from
ripe fruit to ensure that cDNA codes for the enzyme from fruit.
Immunoblot analysis demonstrated that non-ripening mutants, which also
fail to exhibit endo-
-mannanase activity, do so because they fail to
express the protein. In a two-way genetic cross between tomato cvs
Walter and Trust, all F1 progeny from both crosses produced
fruit with active enzyme, suggesting that this form is dominant and
homozygous in tomato cv Trust. Self-pollination of a plant from the
heterozygous F1 generation yielded F2 plants that bear fruit with and without active enzyme at a ratio appropriate to Mendelian genetic segregation of alleles. Heterologous expression of
the two endo-
-mannanase genes in Escherichia coli
resulted in active enzyme being produced from cultures containing the
tomato cv Trust gene and inactive enzyme being produced from those
containing the tomato cv Walter gene. Site-directed mutagenesis was
used to establish key elements in the C terminus of the
endo-
-mannanase protein that are essential for full enzyme activity.
1
This work was supported by the Natural Sciences
and Engineering Research Council of Canada (grant no. A2210 to
J.D.B.).
*
Corresponding author; e-mail dbewley{at}uoguelph.ca; fax
519-767-1991.
© 2002 American Society of Plant Biologists