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Plant Physiol, March 2003, Vol. 131, pp. 1283-1293
Isolation and Properties of Floral Defensins from Ornamental
Tobacco and Petunia1
Fung T.
Lay,
Filippa
Brugliera, and
Marilyn A.
Anderson*
Department of Biochemistry, La Trobe University, Bundoora,
Victoria, 3086, Australia (F.T.L., M.A.A.); and Florigene Ltd.,
Collingwood, Victoria, 3066, Australia (F.B.)
The flowers of the solanaceous plants ornamental tobacco
(Nicotiana alata) and petunia (Petunia
hybrida) produce high levels of defensins during the early
stages of development. In contrast to the well-described seed
defensins, these floral defensins are produced as precursors with
C-terminal prodomains of 27 to 33 amino acids in addition to a typical
secretion signal peptide and central defensin domain of 47 or 49 amino
acids. Defensins isolated from N. alata and petunia
flowers lack the C-terminal domain, suggesting that it is removed
during or after transit through the secretory pathway. Immunogold
electron microscopy has been used to demonstrate that the N.
alata defensin is deposited in the vacuole. In addition to the
eight canonical cysteine residues that define the plant defensin
family, the two petunia defensins have an extra pair of cysteines that
form a fifth disulfide bond and hence define a new subclass of this
family of proteins. Expression of the N. alata defensin
NaD1 is predominantly flower specific and is most active
during the early stages of flower development. NaD1
transcripts accumulate in the outermost cell layers of petals, sepals,
anthers, and styles, consistent with a role in protection of the
reproductive organs against potential pathogens. The floral defensins
inhibit the growth of Botrytis cinerea and
Fusarium oxysporum in vitro, providing further support
for a role in protection of floral tissues against pathogen invasion.
1
This work was supported by the Australian
Research Council (grant to M.A.A.) and an Australian Postgraduate Award
(to F.T.L.).
*
Corresponding author; e-mail M.Anderson{at}latrobe.edu.au; fax
61-3-9479-2467.
© 2003 American Society of Plant Biologists
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