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Plant Physiology 99:1619-1625 (1992)
© 1992 American Society of Plant Biologists

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Metabolism and Enzymology

Aberrant Processing of Polyphenol Oxidase in a Variegated Grapevine Mutant 1

Anne H. Rathjen and Simon P. Robinson

Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organization Division of Horticulture, GPO Box 350, Adelaide, South Australia 5001 Australia

Bruce's Sport is a mutant grapevine (Vitis vinifera L.) with green and white variegated fruit derived from the Sultana variety. The white regions of tissue have decreased polyphenol oxidase (PPO) activity resulting in a reduced capacity for browning. Active PPO from Sultana grapes was purified and had an apparent molecular weight of 40,000 on sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Western blots indicated that mature Sultana grapes contained a single 40-kilodalton PPO, and young Sultana berries also had small quantities of a 60-kilodalton protein. Bruce's Sport grapes had much less of the 40-kilodalton PPO and greater amounts of the 60-kilodalton band. Protease digestion of Bruce's Sport extracts decreased the proportion of the 60-kilodalton protein and increased the 40-kilodalton band. A cDNA clone of grape PPO was used to probe a northern blot of Sultana and Bruce's Sport RNA and hybridized to a 2.2-kilobase transcript in both grapevines. The level of PPO mRNA was high in the early stages of berry development but then declined. The results suggest that in grapevine the active 40-kilodalton form of PPO is synthesized as a precursor protein of at least 60 kilodaltons, and normal processing is interrupted in Bruce's Sport resulting in the accumulation of the 60-kilodalton inactive preform of PPO.


1 This work was supported by a grant from the Australian Dried Fruits Research Council.




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T. Chevalier, D. de Rigal, D. Mbéguié-A-Mbéguié, F. Gauillard, F. Richard-Forget, and B. R. Fils-Lycaon
Molecular Cloning and Characterization of Apricot Fruit Polyphenol Oxidase
Plant Physiology, April 1, 1999; 119(4): 1261 - 1270.
[Abstract] [Full Text]




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Copyright © 1992 by the American Society of Plant Biologists