|
Plant Physiol, May 2001, Vol. 126, pp. 167-175
The Internal Propeptide of the Ricin Precursor Carries a
Sequence-Specific Determinant for Vacuolar Sorting1
Lorenzo
Frigerio,*
Nicholas A.
Jolliffe,
Alessandra
Di Cola,
Doramys Hernández
Felipe,
Nadine
Paris,
Jean-Marc
Neuhaus,
J.
Michael
Lord,
Aldo
Ceriotti, and
Lynne M.
Roberts
Department of Biological Sciences, University of Warwick, Coventry
CV4 7AL, United Kingdom (L.F., N.A.J., A.D.C., J.M.L., L.M.R.);
Laboratorie de Biochimie, Université de Neuchâtel, rue
Émile-Argand 9, CH-2007 Neuchâtel 7, Switzerland (D.H.F.,
N.P., J.-M.N.); and Istituto Biosintesi Vegetali, Consiglio Nazionale
delle Ricerche, via Bassini 15, 20133 Milano, Italy (A.C.)
 |
ABSTRACT |
Ricin is a heterodimeric toxin that accumulates in the storage
vacuoles of castor bean (Ricinus communis) endosperm.
Proricin is synthesized as a single polypeptide precursor comprising
the catalytic A chain and the Gal-binding B chain joined by a 12-amino acid linker propeptide. Upon arrival in the vacuole, the linker is
removed. Here, we replicate these events in transfected tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum) leaf protoplasts. We show that the
internal linker propeptide is responsible for vacuolar sorting and is
sufficient to redirect the ricin heterodimer to the vacuole when fused
to the A or the B chain. This internal peptide can also target two different secretory protein reporters to the vacuole. Moreover, mutation of the isoleucine residue within an NPIR-like motif of the propeptide affects vacuolar sorting in proricin and in the reconstituted A-B heterodimer. This is the first reported example of a
sequence-specific vacuolar sorting signal located within an internal propeptide.
 |
INTRODUCTION |
Soluble proteins targeted to plant
vacuoles need specific signals to reach their destination. These
signals have been recently divided in three categories:
sequence-specific vacuolar sorting signals (ssVSS), C-terminal signals
(ctVSS), and physical structure signals (psVSS; Matsuoka and Neuhaus,
1999 ; Vitale and Raikhel, 1999 ). ssVSS are predominantly located at the
N terminus and present an NPIR-like motif, which is necessary
for sorting of sporamin (Matsuoka and Nakamura, 1991 ). The
NPIR-containing sporamin propeptide is sufficient to target a secreted
reporter protein to the vacuole (Matsuoka et al., 1995 ). Putative
sorting receptors that bind to NPIR-containing peptides have been
identified in pea (Kirsch et al., 1994 ), Arabidopsis (Ahmed et al.,
1997 , 2000 ), and pumpkin (Shimada et al., 1997 ). The presence of the
isoleucine residue in NPIR is essential for sorting and in vitro
binding to the putative receptors, suggesting that its large
hydrophobic side chain is crucially involved in the interaction
(Matsuoka and Nakamura, 1999 ; Cao et al., 2000 ).
ctVSS are extremely variable in size and amino acid composition and
although no consensus sequence has been identified, a common
requirement is the presence of a C-terminally exposed hydrophobic amino
acid patch (Matsuoka and Neuhaus, 1999 ; Vitale and Raikhel, 1999 ). The
third class of signals is rather ill defined at present. Internal
folded domains of proteins have been shown to be necessary for sorting,
for example in the case of phytohemagglutinin (von Schaewen and
Chrispeels, 1993 ) and in the case of the saposin-like insert of barley
phytepsin (Kervinen et al., 1999 ), but they have not yet been
characterized. The fact that these domains are part of the mature
protein has led to the hypothesis that interaction with a sorting
receptor requires particular structural features in the native domain
(Matsuoka and Neuhaus, 1999 ).
In the present work we report characterization of the internal sorting
signal of proricin, which is processed upon vacuolar delivery. We also
show that this internally cleaved propeptide is necessary and
sufficient for vacuolar sorting and that it is functionally similar to
a normally N-terminal ssVSS.
Ricin is a type II (heterodimeric) ribosome-inactivating
protein (RIP) that accumulates in the castor bean (Ricinus
communis) endosperm. Ricin is synthesized as a single precursor
protein (proricin) where the catalytically active A chain (RTA) is
joined to the sugar-binding B chain (RTB) by a 12-amino acid
"linker" peptide (Lamb et al., 1985 ). Preproricin is translocated
into the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) lumen via a 35-residue presequence, the first 26 residues of which represent an ER signal
peptide (Ferrini et al., 1995 ). The remaining nine residues, absent
from mature RTA, must therefore form an N-terminal propeptide (Lamb et
al., 1985 ). Within the ER, proricin is glycosylated and disulfide bonded within RTB and between the RTA and RTB regions. In castor bean
endosperm cells, proricin is then transported via the Golgi complex to
the periphery of precursor accumulating vesicles (PAC; Hara-Nishimura
et al., 1998 ), and eventually to protein storage vacuoles. There the
N-terminal and the linker propeptides are proteolytically cleaved,
releasing the mature, disulfide-linked heterodimeric toxin (Butterworth
and Lord, 1983 ; Lord, 1985 ; Hara-Nishimura et al., 1995 ).
We have recently demonstrated that it is possible to transiently
express the cytotoxic proricin in tobacco (Nicotiana
tabacum) leaf mesophyll protoplasts and that the intracellular
transport events normally occurring in castor bean are faithfully
reproduced in the heterologous system (Frigerio et al., 1998b ). That
is, preproricin reaches the vacuole through the Golgi complex and is
processed to its mature form. When we fused the single A and B chains,
engineered to lack the linker peptide, to signal peptides and
co-expressed them in protoplasts, RTA and RTB associated very rapidly
to form the disulfide-linked ricin heterodimer within the ER lumen.
However, unlike proricin, the heterodimer was quantitatively secreted
into the extracellular medium (Frigerio et al., 1998b ). This led us to
speculate whether the presence of the internal linker peptide could be
necessary for vacuolar sorting. Here we report that this is the case,
and we characterize the linker as a ssVSS of the sort more typically
found at the N terminus of vacuolar proproteins.
 |
RESULTS |
Preproricin Reaches the Vacuole via Vesicular Transport in Tobacco
Protoplasts
We characterized the intracellular fate of preproricin in tobacco
protoplasts. The preproricin sequence (ppricin) was placed downstream
of the cauliflower mosaic virus (CaMV) 35S promoter (Fig.
1) and transiently expressed in tobacco
protoplasts. Protoplasts transfected with the ppricin construct were
subjected to pulse-chase analysis and ricin polypeptides detected by
immunoprecipitation with anti-RTA antiserum, followed by 15%
(w/v) SDS-PAGE and fluorography (Fig.
2). At the end of the pulse, an
immunoreactive polypeptide of the size expected for preproricin was
detected (open arrowhead, Fig. 2, lane 1). This polypeptide disappeared
with time and was eventually converted into two polypeptides of the
sizes expected for mature glycosylated RTA and RTB (32 and 34 kD,
respectively, lanes 2 and 3). Such proteolytic processing normally
occurs within the storage protein vacuoles of castor bean endosperm
cells (Harley and Lord, 1985 ; Hara-Nishimura et al., 1995 ). The
appearance of processed subunits is therefore indicative of the arrival
of proricin within vacuolar compartments. By non-reducing PAGE analysis
we have previously shown that such processed polypeptides are linked by
a disulfide bond and are stored as heterodimeric ricin (Frigerio et
al., 1998b ). Because RTA and RTB are covalently linked by a disulfide
bridge, anti-RTA antiserum immunoselects the RTA-RTB heterodimer, which
is then reduced into its two components upon reducing SDS-PAGE
analysis. Treatment of cells with the fungal metabolite brefeldin A
(BFA) inhibited the formation of mature polypeptides and led to the
accumulation of intact proricin (Fig. 2, lanes 4-6). BFA has been
previously shown to inhibit Golgi-mediated transport to vacuoles in
plant cells (Gomez and Chrispeels, 1993 ; Pedrazzini et al., 1997 ). This
suggests that preproricin is being targeted to its site of processing
via Golgi-mediated transport. No extracellular secretion of preproricin
or mature ricin was detected (Fig. 1, lanes 7-12). Overall, therefore,
the sequence of events observed here is consistent to that occurring in
the endosperm cells of castor bean seeds.

View larger version (54K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 1.
Schematic diagram of the constructs used in this
work. All coding sequences were under the control of the CaMV 35S
promoter. SP, Preproricin signal peptide; sp, prephaseolin
signal peptide; sp, Arabidopsis basic chitinase signal peptide.
|
|

View larger version (60K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 2.
Transport of proricin to vacuoles is sensitive to
BFA in tobacco leaf protoplasts. A, Protoplasts from tobacco leaves
were transfected with the ppricin construct, pulse labeled for 1 h
in the presence (+) or in the absence (-) of 10 µg
mL 1 of BFA, and chased for the indicated
periods of time. Cell homogenates (lanes 1-6) and incubation media
(lanes 7-12) were subjected to immunoprecipitation with rabbit
anti-RTA antiserum and analyzed by SDS-PAGE and fluorography. White
arrowheads indicate the position of proricin and black arrowheads
indicate mature RTA and RTB. Numbers at right indicate molecular mass
markers in kilodaltons.
|
|
The Presence of the Linker Peptide Causes Vacuolar Sorting Even
When It Is Not in Peptide Continuity with Both Ricin
Subunits
So far we have shown that preproricin is transported via a
Golgi-mediated trafficking pathway to vacuoles in a BFA-sensitive fashion. Previous work suggested that the vacuolar sorting signal might
lay within the 12-aminoacyl residue linker that is localized between
the A and B chains of proricin (Frigerio et al., 1998b ). We next tested
whether peptide continuity of the subunits with the linker is required
for functional sorting to vacuoles. We cotransfected protoplasts with
RTA and RTB, or RTA-L and RTB, or RTA and L-RTB (Fig. 1), and then
subjected the cells to pulse-chase followed by immunoprecipitation with
anti-RTA antiserum. In this and other experiments (e.g. in Fig. 7B) the
amount of radiolabeled RTB coprecipitated with RTA somehow increased
during the chase. The reason for this increase was not investigated,
but it may be dependent on the kinetics of RTA-RTB assembly. As shown
in Figure 3A, most of the ricin made by
expressing pRTA and pRTB in the absence of the linker (Fig. 3A, lanes
1-3) was secreted after a 5-h chase period (lanes 4-6). During
secretion there was a clear increase in the mobility of RTB, which may
be due to oligosaccharide trimming (Lord, 1985 ). When the linker was
appended to the C terminus of RTA (Fig. 3B, lanes 1-3), the ricin
heterodimers were retained within the cells. The addition of the linker
peptide to the C terminus of RTA caused an observable decrease in
electrophoretic mobility at the 0-h chase (Fig. 3B, lane 1). During the
chase (lanes 2 and 3), this polypeptide showed a faster mobility
compatible with the removal of the linker and possible removal of the
N-terminal propeptide (as mentioned above). Likewise, addition of the
linker peptide to the N terminus of RTB (Fig. 3C, lanes 1-3) blocked secretion of the heterodimers (lanes 4-6). Moreover, RTA and RTB underwent processing during the chase (Fig. 3C, lanes 2 and 3).

View larger version (31K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 3.
The presence of the linker peptide causes vacuolar
sorting even when it is not in peptide continuity with both ricin
subunits. A through C, Cells were transfected with the indicated
constructs, pulse-labeled for 1 h, and chased for the indicated
periods of time. Cell homogenates and incubation media were
immunoprecipitated with anti-RTA antiserum and analyzed by SDS-PAGE and
fluorography. Numbers at right indicate molecular mass markers in
kilodaltons. D, Cells were transfected with the indicated constructs
and subjected to pulse labeling for 5 h. Total cell homogenates or
purified vacuoles were immunoprecipitated with anti-RTA antiserum and
subjected to SDS-PAGE and fluorography.
|
|
To verify whether this processing was effectively occurring in
vacuoles, we cotransfected cells with pRTA-L and pRTB or with pL-RTB
and pRTA and subjected them to pulse labeling for 5 h. Vacuoles
were then purified and the ricin polypeptides immunoselected with
anti-RTA antiserum (Fig. 3D). In all cases the final mobilities of the
two cotransfected subunits were indistinguishable from the mobilities
of mature RTA and RTB generated from proricin (compare lane 1 with
lanes 2 and 3). The mature subunits were recovered from within purified
vacuoles (Fig. 3D, lanes 4-6). Thus, we conclude that the linker does
not have to covalently bridge both subunits to direct ricin to the
vacuole, where the linker is proteolytically removed.
The Linker Peptide Is Sufficient to Redirect Reporter Proteins to
Vacuoles
The results shown so far demonstrate that the linker peptide is
necessary for vacuolar sorting of ricin, but they do not allow us to
conclude that the linker is also sufficient; other domains present on
RTA or RTB could contribute to a complete sorting signal. It is,
therefore, necessary to examine whether the ricin linker peptide alone
can redirect secreted reporter proteins to the vacuole. We, therefore,
studied the fate of two reporter proteins: green fluorescent protein
(GFP) and a secreted mutant of the storage protein phaseolin, 418
(Frigerio et al., 1998a ). GFP has been recently used with success as a
reporter for vacuolar targeting in vivo in tobacco protoplasts (Di
Sansebastiano et al., 1998 ). We fused the 12-residue ricin linker to
the C terminus of mGFP5 (a secretory version of GFP) to yield mGFP5-L
(Fig. 1). As an expression system, we used protoplasts prepared from a
suspension cell culture of Arabidopsis (Axelos et al., 1992 ). The
advantage of these cells over tobacco leaf protoplasts is the
homogeneity of the cell population, which seems to present only one
type of large central vacuole, whereas tobacco protoplasts contain a
mixed population of cells presenting different vacuolar structures that are, at present, difficult to characterize (Di Sansebastiano et al.,
1998 ). In addition, leaf protoplasts contain chloroplasts whose
autofluorescence interferes with the detection of GFP. We transfected
Arabidopsis protoplasts with mGFP5 and mGFP5-L (Fig. 4A). Twenty-four hours after
transfection, cells expressing mGFP5-L show strong fluorescence in
their central vacuoles (Fig. 4A, note the absence of signal from the
adjacent, non-transfected cells).

View larger version (90K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 4.
The linker peptide is sufficient to redirect GFP
to the vacuole. A, Protoplasts from Arabidopsis suspension-cultured
cells were transfected with mGFP5-L and analyzed by bright
field (left) or fluorescence confocal microscopy (right) 24 h
after transfection. Bar: 10 µm. B, Tobacco leaf protoplasts were
transfected with mGFP5 or mGFP5-L, pulse labeled for 1 h, and chased for the indicated periods of time. Cell homogenates and
incubation media were immunoprecipitated with anti-GFP antiserum and
analyzed by SDS-PAGE and fluorography. The number at right indicates
molecular mass marker in kilodaltons.
|
|
In a converse manner, cells expressing mGFP5 did not show any
fluorescence with the same laser intensity settings (not shown), suggesting that the protein was secreted as expected (Boevink et al.,
1999 ). We confirmed this evidence biochemically by transfecting tobacco
protoplasts and subjecting them to pulse-chase, followed by
immunoprecipitation with anti-GFP antiserum. Figure 4B shows that after
24 h, most mGFP5 is recovered in the extracellular medium (Fig. 4B, lanes 1-6). A proportion of mGFP5 molecules is still
detectable intracellularly, and it has greater mobility than the
extracellular GFP. However, tobacco protoplasts transfected with
mGFP5-L do not secrete the reporter at all (Fig. 4B, lanes 7-12).
Rather, GFP-L is converted with time to a faster migrating species,
identical to the faster migrating form detectable intracellularly for
mGFP5 (Fig. 4B, compare lanes 2 and 3 with lanes 8 and 9). This shows
that addition of the linker peptide causes efficient intracellular
retention of GFP. GFP undergoes intracellular proteolytic trimming at
its C or N terminus, probably within vacuoles (Fig. 4A). The precise
intracellular location and the sequence-specificity of this processing
are at present unknown and their analysis is beyond the scope of this work.
In a further demonstration we showed that the ricin-linker peptide
redirects a second reporter protein to vacuoles in tobacco protoplasts.
In this case the linker was fused to phaseolin 418, a secretory
mutant of the vacuolar storage glycoprotein phaseolin (Frigerio et al.,
1998a ). Figure 5 shows that the 46-kD
wild-type phaseolin (T343F; Pedrazzini et al., 1997 ) disappears during
the chase period with the concomitant appearance of faster migrating polypeptides (Fig. 5, lane 2). These are known to represent proteolytic fragments of phaseolin that arise within heterologous storage vacuoles
(Bagga et al., 1992 ; Pedrazzini et al., 1997 ). By contrast, a phaseolin
mutant in which the four C-terminal amino acid residues (AFVY) were
removed (phaseolin 418) did not generate such fragments internally,
but was instead secreted into the extracellular medium (Frigerio et
al., 1998a ; Fig. 5, lanes 5, 6, 11, and 12). When this secretory
phaseolin was tagged with the ricin linker to yield 418-L, it was
efficiently retained within the cells (Fig. 5A, lanes 3, 4, 9, and 10).
The appearance of proteolytic fragments, diagnostic of successful
targeting to the vacuoles (Fig. 5, lane 4), confirms that the ricin
linker is not only necessary for proricin vacuolar targeting, but also
sufficient to redirect to the vacuole an otherwise secreted phaseolin
mutant. A proportion of wild-type, as well as of 418-linker,
phaseolin was also recovered in the medium (Fig. 5, lanes 7-10). We
have previously demonstrated that this is due to saturation of the
vacuolar targeting machinery during the burst of protein synthesis
following transient expression (Frigerio et al., 1998a ). The amount of
vacuolar fragments observed for wild-type and for 418-linker
phaseolin is comparable (Fig. 5, compare fragments in lanes 2 and 4),
suggesting that 418-linker phaseolin is also saturating the
targeting machinery. The lower amount of secreted 418-linker
compared with wild-type phaseolin (Fig. 5, compare lanes 7 and 10)
likely reflects its lower overall expression levels (compare lane 1 with lane 3).

View larger version (73K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 5.
The linker peptide is sufficient to redirect
phaseolin 418 to the vacuole. Tobacco leaf protoplasts were
transfected with the indicated phaseolin constructs, pulse-labeled for
1 h, and chased for the indicated periods of time. Cell
homogenates (lanes 1-6) and incubation media (lanes 7-12) were
immunoprecipitated with anti-phaseolin antiserum and analyzed by
SDS-PAGE and fluorography. The white arrowhead indicates intact
phaseolin. Numbers at right indicate molecular mass markers in
kilodaltons.
|
|
An Isoleucine Residue in the NPIR-Like Motif of the Linker Peptide
Is Essential for Its Targeting Function
To determine whether the linker contains an ssVSS, or whether it
is more typical of a ctVSS or psVSS we studied the primary sequence of
the ricin-linker peptide. All type II RIPs contain a catalytic A
subunit disulfide bonded to a Gal-specific lectin (B subunit).
Therefore, we analyzed the primary sequence of the propeptides in
several proricin-related proteins (Fig.
6): castor bean agglutinin, proabrin A
from the abrin protein family of Abrus precatorius (Hung et
al., 1993 ), two members of a group of type II RIPs isolated from
elderberry (Van Damme et al., 1996 ), cinnamomin from
Cinnamomum camphora, and a novel RIP recently isolated from Polygonatum multiflorum (Van Damme et al., 2000 ). Alignment
of the linker peptides of these proproteins shows that an Ile residue, as well as the following Arg, are highly conserved. In ricin these residues exist within a sequence, LLIRP (Figs. 1 and 6), that resembles
what is now regarded as the "canonic" consensus for an ssVSS.
Matsuoka and Nakamura (1999) recently performed an extensive analysis
of the sporamin ssVSS, NPIRL, which emphasized the importance of the
Ile residue. The possibility that the Ile residue could be involved in
the sorting of proricin was, therefore, investigated. We generated a
mutant of preproricin where Ile 271 is changed to Gly (ppricin I271G,
Fig. 1) and expressed I271G preproricin in tobacco protoplasts. Figure
7A clearly shows that the mutant proricin
is secreted into the medium (Fig. 7A, lanes 10-12), in contrast to the
wild-type toxin that remains intracellular and becomes processed to
generate ricin subunits within the vacuoles (Fig. 7A, lanes 1-3).
Thus, the Ile residue in the linker is essential for correct vacuolar
targeting of proricin. A small proportion of secreted proricin I271G
appeared to undergo fragmentation (Fig. 7A, lanes 11 and 12); this
extracellular trimming could be due to hydrolases that are secreted by
the protoplasts, as we have previously shown for a different reporter
protein (Frigerio et al., 1998a ).

View larger version (17K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 6.
A conserved isoleucine residue in the linker
peptides of proricin and proricin-related proteins. Amino acid sequence
alignment was generated using the MegAlign program (DNAstar, Madison,
WI). Identical amino acid residues are boxed. The conserved isoleucine
residue is shown by an white arrowhead.
|
|

View larger version (81K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 7.
The isoleucine residue in the linker peptide is
required for vacuolar sorting. A, Effect of the I271G on the
intracellular fate of proricin. Cells were transfected with ppricin or
ppricin I271G, pulse labeled for 1 h, and chased for the indicated
periods of time. Cell homogenates and incubation media were
immunoprecipitated with anti-RTA antiserum and analyzed by SDS-PAGE and
fluorography. White arrowheads indicate the position of proricin and
black arrowheads indicate mature RTA and RTB. Numbers at right indicate
molecular mass markers in kilodaltons. B, Effect of the I271G mutation
on the intracellular fate of the RTA-L/RTB heterodimer. Cells were
transfected with the indicated constructs, pulse labeled for 1 h,
and chased for the indicated periods of time. Cell homogenates and
incubation media were immunoprecipitated with anti-RTA antiserum and
analyzed by SDS-PAGE and fluorography.
|
|
When we introduced the same mutation into the linker fused to the C
terminus of RTA (pRTA-L I271G), we observed secretion of the RTA-RTB
heterodimer during the chase (Fig. 7B, lanes 7 and 8). Note that the
secreted pRTA-L I271G did not undergo vacuolar processing and the
presence of the linker on RTA caused it to comigrate with RTB. However,
a proportion of the heterodimers was apparently vacuolar since we
observed some intracellular processing (Fig. 7B, lane 4). Therefore,
when the linker was positioned at the C terminus of RTA, mutation of
the Ile did not completely abolish vacuolar sorting. This could mean
that in this particular context, the two Leu residues adjacent to the
mutated Ile are now playing a crucial role in receptor binding. In an
alternate manner, it is possible that the proricin linker peptide is
now being recognized by the vacuolar sorting machinery as a signal of
the C-terminal type (ctVSS).
 |
DISCUSSION |
An Internal, Processed Vacuolar Sorting Signal
We present evidence for a processed vacuolar-sorting signal that
is located internally to a vacuolar proprotein. We have previously shown that the absence of the linker propeptide caused the mature ricin
heterodimer to be secreted (Frigerio et al., 1998b ). Here we show that
the linker is able to redirect the dimer to the vacuole even when it is
not in peptide continuity with RTA and RTB. This indicates that
secretion of RTA-RTB dimers is not due to an indirect effect of the
interruption in polypeptide continuity, but rather suggests that the
linker itself contains vacuolar sorting information. The linker peptide
proved sufficient to target two different reporter proteins to the
vacuole. In the case of phaseolin 418, Figure 5 shows clearly that
the linker can restore the efficiency of vacuolar sorting to wild-type
levels. Moreover, the size of the vacuolar fragments is identical to
those observed in the wild type, suggesting that as in the case of
proricin and single ricin chain-linker fusions, the linker is
ultimately removed. Likewise, when fused to GFP, the linker is
efficient in abolishing secretion of the protein in tobacco
protoplasts, and GFP-L accumulates in the large central vacuole of
Arabidopsis protoplasts. A proportion of the secretory GFP (mGFP5)
appears to be retained inside the cell and to undergo what resembles
vacuolar processing (Fig. 4B, lanes 1-3); however, no fluorescence was
detectable in Arabidopsis protoplasts expressing mGFP5. One possible
explanation is that a proportion of mGFP5, which is not a natural
secretory protein, may fold incorrectly (and therefore be incapable of
fluorescing) to be eventually targeted to the vacuole by quality
control mechanisms. We have recently demonstrated that when a hybrid
immunoglobulin A/G (a secretory antibody) is expressed in transgenic
tobacco, a large proportion of the molecules is delivered to the
vacuole (Frigerio et al., 2000 ) instead of being secreted. Thus, the
clear difference in GFP signal when protoplasts are transfected with mGFP5 or mGFP-L might be due to the accumulation of correctly folded
protein in the vacuolar compartments only in the latter case.
The Isoleucine Is Essential for Targeting
The sequence of the linker peptide contains a motif (LLIRP) that
resembles NPIRL. According to the consensus proposed by Matsuoka and
Nakamura (1999) based on mutational analysis of the sporamin NPIRL
sequence, the context for the Ile residue in the linker is by no means
ideal, although it is worthy of note that the motif in the aleurain
propeptide also contains Pro in position X4 (Holwerda et al., 1992 ).
Nevertheless, exchanging the iso-Leu for Gly causes secretion of
proricin, demonstrating that the Ile is critical for targeting, even in
this theoretically not-ideal context. Our work has the advantage of
demonstrating the sequence specificity feature of the proricin linker
in vivo and in a native context. To our knowledge, this is the first
example of a ssVSS located in an internal position.
It is interesting that when the I271G mutation was introduced into the
C-terminal fusion of the linker with RTA, the phenotype was not one of
complete secretion, and a proportion of the protein was still targeted
to vacuoles. Similar results were obtained with the phaseolin-linker
fusion (data not shown). One possible explanation is that the two Leu
residues that are present immediately before I271 could, in the absence
of the native proricin structural context, become exposed and
substitute the Ile in binding to a sorting receptor. Another
possibility is that the linker peptide, when present at the C terminus
of the protein, behaves partially as a ctVSS. This would not be
surprising, as a similar phenotype was previously observed when the
sporamin propeptide containing the corresponding I to G mutation was
appended to the C terminus of sporamin (Koide et al., 1999 ).
Implications for Trafficking
We present evidence for a ssVSS that resides internally to a
proprotein destined to storage vacuoles. NPIR-like motifs have been
shown in vitro to be ligands for the putative sorting receptor BP-80/AtELP. The ssVSS-BP-80 interaction is believed to sort proteins into clathrin-coated vesicles for transport to the lytic vacuole via
the pre-vacuolar compartment (Vitale and Raikhel, 1999 ). Proteins destined to the storage vacuole are believed to enter dense vesicles at
the trans-Golgi; these vesicles do not contain BP-80 (Hinz et al.,
1999 ) and this transport pathway appears to be more sensitive to
treatment with wortmannin in tobacco bright yellow 2 cells (Matsuoka
and Neuhaus, 1999 ), although it is not clear at present whether the
dense vesicle pathway and the wortmannin-sensitive pathway coincide.
The proricin linker peptide has the features of a potential BP-80
ligand, but ricin is a vacuolar storage protein. How do we interpret
these apparently conflicting findings?
Hara-Nishimura and coworkers (1998) recently provided evidence that in
pumpkin and castor bean endosperm, storage 2S albumins travel from the
ER to the storage vacuole in large PAC. Terminally glycosylated storage
proteins are found at the periphery of the PAC around the 2S albumin
core. The authors detected these glycoproteins, which are believed to
include ricin and castor bean agglutinin, using an antiserum raised
against complex glycans (Hara-Nishimura et al., 1998 ). This is also
compatible with the direct labeling of ricin subunits with tritiated
Fuc in cell fractions corresponding to the Golgi apparatus (Lord,
1985 ). Together, this evidence suggests that these proteins have
traveled through the Golgi complex where glycan processing occurs,
before joining the PACs. Nothing is known about the mechanisms that
sort such glycoproteins from the trans-Golgi to the periphery of the
PAC. Nevertheless, it would be plausible to postulate the existence of
a sorting receptor with similar specificities to those of BP-80 that
captures glycoproteins at the trans-Golgi level and sorts them into the
PAC, rather than into clathrin-coated vesicles. We speculate that
proricin could be recognized by a BP-80-like receptor for sorting to
PAC. In pumpkin seeds the PAC themselves have been shown to contain two proteins, PV72 and PV82, functionally similar to BP-80 (Shimada et al.,
1997 ), which might be the endogenous receptors for 2S albumins. In a
similar manner, proteins presenting a high degree of homology to the
BP-80 lumenal, ligand-binding domain have recently been identified in
dark intrinsic protein bodies, the likely precursors to the
protein storage vacuole crystalloid in root tip cells and developing
seeds (Jiang et al., 2000 ). Dark intrinsic protein bodies
contain proteins whose glycans have undergone modification in the Golgi
and could represent a form of multivesicular body that is functionally
similar to the PAC (Jiang et al., 2000 ). Since it is well established
that BP-80 orthologs can bind ssVSS regardless of their position in the
polypeptide (Kirsch et al., 1996 ; Saalbach et al., 1996 ; Matsuoka and
Neuhaus, 1999 ; Matsuoka, 2000 ), the internal location of the proricin
ssVSS would not preclude it from being a ligand for BP-80 or a
BP-80-like molecule.
 |
MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Recombinant DNA
All constructs used in this work are shown in Figure 1. All
protein-coding sequences were fused downstream to the CaMV 35S promoter
in expression vector pDHA (Tabe et al., 1995 ). The
preparation of constructs for the expression of ppricin, pRTA, and pRTB
has been described previously (Frigerio et al., 1998b ). The C-terminal RTA-linker fusion was generated from the ppricin-coding sequence by PCR
using the oligonucleotides 5'-TCTAGAATGAAACCGGGAGGAAATACTATT -3' and
5'-CTGCAGTCAATTAAAATTTGGTACC3-'. The fusion between the signal peptide
and the mature coding sequence of pRTB was generated by PCR using the
oligonucleotides 5'-TCTGCCTCATTTGCCTCTTTGCTTATAAGG-3' and
5'-CCTTATAAGCAAAGAGGCAAATGAGGCAGA-3'. mGFP5 was amplified from plasmid pGFP5-ER (a gift from J. Haseloff), and the linker peptide-coding region fused to the 3' of GFP by PCR with the
oligonucleotide 5'-CTGCAGCTAATTAAAATTTGGTACCACTGGCCTTATAAGCAAAGATTATTTGTATAGTTC-3'. The oligonucleotide
5'-CTGCAGCTAATTAAAATTTGGTACCACTGGCCTTATAAGCAAAGAACCCTTTCTTCCCTTTGC-3' was used to fuse the ricin linker to phaseolin 418 (Frigerio et al.,
1998b ).
The Ile 271 to Gly mutation was introduced into the linker sequence of
ppricin, pRTA-L, and 418-L by using the oligonucleotides 5'-TCTTTGCTTGGAAGGCCAGT-3' and
5'-ACTGGCCTTCCAAGCAAAGA-3' and the QuickChange
in vitro mutagenesis system (Stratagene, La Jolla, CA), following the
manufacturer's instructions.
Protoplast Transfection
Protoplasts were prepared from axenic leaves (4-7 cm long) of
tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum cv Petit Havana SR1.) or from
cultured suspension cells of Arabidopsis (Axelos et al., 1992 ).
Protoplasts were subjected to polyethylene glycol-mediated transfection
as described by Pedrazzini et al. (1997) and were incubated overnight at 25°C in the dark before pulse labeling or for 24 h at 25°C in the dark before microscopical observation.
In Vivo Labeling of Protoplasts and Analysis of Expressed
Polypeptides
Pulse-chase labeling of protoplasts using Pro-Mix (a mixture of
35S-Met and 35S-Cys; Amersham, Buckinghamshire,
UK) was performed as described (Pedrazzini et al., 1997 ). Where
indicated cells were pre-incubated with 10 µg mL 1 of
brefeldin A (Boehringer Mannheim, Basel) for 1 h before labeling. Homogenization of protoplasts and incubation media was performed by
adding to the frozen samples 2 volumes of ice-cold homogenization buffer (150 mM Tris-Cl, 150 mM NaCl, 1.5 mM EDTA, and 1.5% [w/v] Triton X-100, pH 7.5)
supplemented with complete protease inhibitor cocktail (Boehringer
Mannheim). Immunoprecipitation of expressed polypeptides was performed
as described previously (Frigerio et al., 1998a ) using rabbit
polyclonal antisera raised against RTA, RTB, GFP (Molecular Probes,
Eugene, OR), or phaseolin. Immunoselected proteins were analyzed by
15% (w/v) reducing SDS-PAGE and fluorography.
Vacuole purification was performed as described (Frigerio et al.,
2000 ). The recovery of vacuoles in the vacuolar fraction was around
15% based on -mannosidase activity; the vacuolar fraction contained
less than 1% of the total cellular amount of the ER resident chaperone
binding protein, indicating very low contamination by other
compartments of the secretory pathway (data not shown)
Confocal Microscopy
Arabidopsis protoplasts were transfected with GFP constructs as
described (Di Sansebastiano et al., 1998 ). Cells were incubated in the
dark for 24 h at 25°C before observation. Images were collected with a confocal laser-microscope (DMR, Leica Microsystems, Wetzlar, Germany) using an operating system (TCS 4D, Leica) with a 40× objective. A fluorescein isothiocyanate filter set was used to detect
GFP fluorescence from living protoplasts. An image with transmitted
light was also collected using the confocal microscope. Images were
assembled with Adobe Photoshop (Adobe Systems, Mountain View, CA).
 |
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
We thank Alessandro Vitale, Ombretta Foresti, and Aniello
Santoro for critical reading of the manuscript.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Received December 27, 2000; accepted January 12, 2001.
1
This work was supported in part by the European
Union (grant no. CHRX-CT94-0590), by the Biotechnology and Biological
Science Research Council (grant no. 88/C08612), by the British
Council/Ministero dell'Universita'e della Ricerca Scientifica e
Tecnologica (grant no. ROM/889/99/10), and by the Swiss National
Science Foundation (grant no. 31-46926.96).
*
Corresponding author; e-mail l.frigerio{at}warwick.ac.uk; fax
44-2476-523701.
 |
LITERATURE CITED |
-
Ahmed SU, Bar-Peled M, Raikhel NV
(1997)
Cloning and subcellular location of an Arabidopsis receptor-like protein that shares common features with protein-sorting receptors of eukaryotic cells.
Plant Physiol
114: 325-336[Abstract]
-
Ahmed SU, Rojo E, Kovaleva V, Venkataraman S, Dombrowski KE, Matsuoka K, Raikhel NV
(2000)
The plant vacuolar sorting receptor AtELP is involved in transport of NH2-terminal propeptide-containing vacuolar proteins in Arabidopsis thaliana.
J Cell Biol
149: 1335-1344[Abstract/Free Full Text]
-
Axelos M, Curie C, Mazzolini L, Bardet C, Lescure B
(1992)
A protocol for transient gene expression in Arabidopsis thaliana protoplasts isolated from cell suspension cultures.
Plant Physiol Biochem
30: 123-128
-
Bagga S, Sutton D, Kemp JD, Sengupta-Gopalan C
(1992)
Constitutive expression of the
-phaseolin gene in different tissues of transgenic alfalfa does not ensure phaseolin accumulation in non-seed tissue.
Plant Mol Biol
19: 951-958[Medline] -
Boevink P, Martin B, Oparka K, Santa Cruz S, Hawes C
(1999)
Transport of virally expressed green fluorescent protein through the secretory pathway in tobacco leaves is inhibited by cold shock and brefeldin A.
Planta
208: 392-400[CrossRef]
-
Butterworth AG, Lord JM
(1983)
Ricin and Ricinus communis agglutinin subunits are all derived from a single-size polypeptide precursor.
Eur J Biochem
137: 57-65[Medline]
-
Cao X, Rogers SW, Butler J, Beevers L, Rogers JC
(2000)
Structural requirements for ligand binding by a probable plant vacuolar sorting receptor.
Plant Cell
12: 493-506[Abstract/Free Full Text]
-
Di Sansebastiano G-P, Paris N, Marc-Martin S, Neuhaus J-M
(1998)
Specific accumulation of GFP in a non-acidic vacuolar compartment via a C-terminal propeptide-mediated sorting pathway.
Plant J
15: 449-457[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline]
-
Ferrini JB, Martin M, Taupiac MP, Beaumelle B
(1995)
Expression of functional ricin B chain using the baculovirus system.
Eur J Biochem
233: 772-777[Medline]
-
Frigerio L, de Virgilio M, Prada A, Faoro F, Vitale A
(1998a)
Sorting of phaseolin to the vacuole is saturable and requires a short C-terminal peptide.
Plant Cell
10: 1031-1042[Abstract/Free Full Text]
-
Frigerio L, Vine ND, Pedrazzini E, Hein MB, Wang F, Ma JK-C, Vitale A
(2000)
Assembly, secretion and vacuolar delivery of a hybrid immunoglobulin in plants.
Plant Physiol
123: 1483-1493[Abstract/Free Full Text]
-
Frigerio L, Vitale A, Lord JM, Ceriotti A, Roberts LM
(1998b)
Free ricin A chain, proricin and native toxin have different cellular fates when expressed in tobacco protoplasts.
J Biol Chem
273: 14194-14199[Abstract/Free Full Text]
-
Gomez L, Chrispeels MJ
(1993)
Tonoplast and soluble vacuolar proteins are targeted by different mechanisms.
Plant Cell
5: 1113-1124[Abstract/Free Full Text]
-
Hara-Nishimura I, Shimada T, Hatano K, Takeuchi Y, Nishimura M
(1998)
Transport of storage proteins to protein storage vacuoles is mediated by large precursor-accumulating vesicles.
Plant Cell
10: 825-836[Abstract/Free Full Text]
-
Hara-Nishimura I, Shimada T, Hiraiwa N, Nishimura M
(1995)
Vacuolar processing enzyme responsible for the maturation of seed proteins.
J Plant Physiol
145: 632-640
-
Harley SM, Lord JM
(1985)
In vitro endoproteolytic cleavage of castor bean lectin precursors.
Plant Sci
41: 111-116
-
Hinz G, Hillmer S, Bäumer M, Hohl I
(1999)
Vacuolar storage proteins and the putative vacuolar sorting receptor BP-80 exit the Golgi apparatus of developing pea cotyledons in different transport vesicles.
Plant Cell
11: 1509-1524[Abstract/Free Full Text]
-
Holwerda BC, Padgett HS, Rogers JC
(1992)
Proaleurain vacuolar targeting is mediated by short contiguous peptide interactions.
Plant Cell
4: 307-318[Abstract/Free Full Text]
-
Hung C-H, Lee M-C, Lee T, Lin J-Y
(1993)
Primary structure of three distinct isoabrins determined by cDNA sequencing: conservation and significance.
J Mol Biol
229: 263-267[CrossRef][Medline]
-
Jiang L, Phillips TE, Rogers SW, Rogers JC
(2000)
Biogenesis of the protein storage vacuole crystalloid.
J Cell Biol
150: 755-769[Abstract/Free Full Text]
-
Kervinen J, Tobin GJ, Costa J, Waugh DS, Wlodaver A, Zdanov A
(1999)
Crystal structure of plant aspartic proteinase prophytepsin: inactivation and vacuolar targeting.
EMBO J
18: 3947-3955[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline]
-
Kirsch T, Paris N, Butler JM, Beevers L, Rogers JC
(1994)
Purification and initial characterization of a potential plant vacuolar targeting receptor.
Proc Natl Acad Sci USA
91: 3403-3407[Abstract/Free Full Text]
-
Kirsch T, Saalbach G, Raikhel NV, Beevers L
(1996)
Interaction of a potential vacuolar targeting receptor with amino- and carboxyl-terminal targeting determinants.
Plant Physiol
111: 469-474[Abstract]
-
Koide Y, Matsuoka K, Ohto M, Nakamura K
(1999)
The N-terminal propeptide and the C-terminus of the precursor to 20-kilodalton potato tuber protein can function as different types of vacuolar sorting signals.
Plant Cell Physiol
40: 1152-1159[Abstract/Free Full Text]
-
Lamb FI, Roberts LM, Lord JM
(1985)
Nucleotide sequence of cloned cDNA coding for preproricin.
Eur J Biochem
148: 265-270[Web of Science][Medline]
-
Lord JM
(1985)
Precursors of ricin and Ricinus communis agglutinin: glycosylation and processing during synthesis and intracellular transport.
Eur J Biochem
146: 411-416[Medline]
-
Matsuoka K
(2000)
C-terminal propeptides and vacuolar sorting by BP-80-type proteins: not all C-terminal propeptides are equal.
Plant Cell
12: 181-182[Free Full Text]
-
Matsuoka K, Bassham DC, Raikhel NV, Nakamura K
(1995)
Different sensitivity to wortmannin of two vacuolar sorting signals indicates the presence of distinct sorting machineries in tobacco cells.
J Cell Biol
130: 1307-1318[Abstract/Free Full Text]
-
Matsuoka K, Nakamura K
(1991)
Propeptide of a precur sor to a plant vacuolar protein required for vacuolar targeting.
Proc Natl Acad Sci USA
88: 834-838[Abstract/Free Full Text]
-
Matsuoka K, Nakamura K
(1999)
Large alkyl side-chains of isoleucine and leucine in the NPIRL region constitute the core of the vacuolar sorting determinant of sporamin precursor.
Plant Mol Biol
41: 825-835[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline]
-
Matsuoka K, Neuhaus J-M
(1999)
Cis-elements of protein transport to the plant vacuoles.
J Exp Bot
50: 165-174[Abstract/Free Full Text]
-
Pedrazzini E, Giovinazzo G, Bielli A, de Virgilio M, Frigerio L, Pesca M, Faoro F, Bollini R, Ceriotti A, Vitale A
(1997)
Protein quality control along the route to the plant vacuole.
Plant Cell
9: 1869-1880[Abstract]
-
Saalbach G, Rosso M, Schumann U
(1996)
The vacuolar targeting signal of the 2s albumin from Brazil nut resides at the C-terminus and involves the C-terminal propeptide as an essential element.
Plant Physiol
112: 975-985[Abstract]
-
Shimada T, Kuroyanagi M, Nishimura M, Hara-Nishimura I
(1997)
Pumpkin 72-kDa membrane protein of precursor accumulating vesicles have characteristics for a vacuolar sorting receptor.
Plant Cell Physiol
38: 1414-1420[Abstract/Free Full Text]
-
Tabe LM, Wardley-Richardson T, Ceriotti A, Aryan A, McNabb W, Moore A, Higgins TJV
(1995)
A biotechnological approach to improving the nutritive value of alfalfa.
J Anim Sci
73: 2752-2759[Abstract]
-
Van Damme EJ, Hao Q, Charels D, Barre A, Rouge P, Van Leuven F, Peumans WJ
(2000)
Characterization and molecular cloning of two different type 2 ribosome-inactivating proteins from the monocotyledonous plant Polygonatum multiflorum.
Eur J Biochem
267: 2746-2759[Medline]
-
Van Damme EJM, Barre A, Rougé P, van Leuven F, Peumans WJ
(1996)
The NeuAc(alpha-2, 6)-Gal/GalNac-binding lectin from elderberry (Sambucus nigra) bark, a type-2 ribosome-inactivating protein with an unusual specificity and structure.
Eur J Biochem
235: 128-137[Web of Science][Medline]
-
Vitale A, Raikhel NV
(1999)
What do proteins need to reach different vacuoles?
Trends Plant Sci
4: 149-155[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline]
-
von Schaewen A, Chrispeels MJ
(1993)
Identification of vacuolar sorting information in phytohemagglutinin, an unprocessed vacuolar protein.
J Exp Bot
44: 339-342
© 2001 American Society of Plant Physiologists
This article has been cited by other articles:

|
 |

|
 |
 
K. L. Chamberlain, R. S. Marshall, N. A. Jolliffe, L. Frigerio, A. Ceriotti, J. M. Lord, and L. M. Roberts
Ricin B Chain Targeted to the Endoplasmic Reticulum of Tobacco Protoplasts Is Degraded by a CDC48- and Vacuole-independent Mechanism
J. Biol. Chem.,
November 28, 2008;
283(48):
33276 - 33286.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
[PDF]
|
 |
|

|
 |

|
 |
 
I. Hwang
Sorting and Anterograde Trafficking at the Golgi Apparatus
Plant Physiology,
October 1, 2008;
148(2):
673 - 683.
[Full Text]
[PDF]
|
 |
|

|
 |

|
 |
 
G. Y. Busot, B. McClure, C. P. Ibarra-Sanchez, K. Jimenez-Duran, S. Vazquez-Santana, and F. Cruz-Garcia
Pollination in Nicotiana alata stimulates synthesis and transfer to the stigmatic surface of NaStEP, a vacuolar Kunitz proteinase inhibitor homologue
J. Exp. Bot.,
August 1, 2008;
59(11):
3187 - 3201.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
[PDF]
|
 |
|

|
 |

|
 |
 
P. R. Hunter, C. P. Craddock, S. Di Benedetto, L. M. Roberts, and L. Frigerio
Fluorescent Reporter Proteins for the Tonoplast and the Vacuolar Lumen Identify a Single Vacuolar Compartment in Arabidopsis Cells
Plant Physiology,
December 1, 2007;
145(4):
1371 - 1382.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
[PDF]
|
 |
|

|
 |

|
 |
 
K. Fuji, T. Shimada, H. Takahashi, K. Tamura, Y. Koumoto, S. Utsumi, K. Nishizawa, N. Maruyama, and I. Hara-Nishimura
Arabidopsis Vacuolar Sorting Mutants (green fluorescent seed) Can Be Identified Efficiently by Secretion of Vacuole-Targeted Green Fluorescent Protein in Their Seeds
PLANT CELL,
February 1, 2007;
19(2):
597 - 609.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
[PDF]
|
 |
|

|
 |

|
 |
 
N. A. Jolliffe, A. Di Cola, C. J. Marsden, J. M. Lord, A. Ceriotti, L. Frigerio, and L. M. Roberts
The N-terminal Ricin Propeptide Influences the Fate of Ricin A-chain in Tobacco Protoplasts
J. Biol. Chem.,
August 18, 2006;
281(33):
23377 - 23385.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
[PDF]
|
 |
|

|
 |

|
 |
 
S.-J.-D. Claude, G. Marie-Agnes, R. Catalina, P. Nadine, K.-M. Marie-Christine, N. Jean-Marc, F. Loic, and G. Veronique
Targeting of proConA to the Plant Vacuole depends on its Nine Amino-acid C-terminal Propeptide
Plant Cell Physiol.,
October 1, 2005;
46(10):
1603 - 1612.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
[PDF]
|
 |
|

|
 |

|
 |
 
A. Di Cola, L. Frigerio, J. M. Lord, L. M. Roberts, and A. Ceriotti
Endoplasmic Reticulum-Associated Degradation of Ricin A Chain Has Unique and Plant-Specific Features
Plant Physiology,
January 1, 2005;
137(1):
287 - 296.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
[PDF]
|
 |
|

|
 |

|
 |
 
C. Carter, S. Pan, J. Zouhar, E. L. Avila, T. Girke, and N. V. Raikhel
The Vegetative Vacuole Proteome of Arabidopsis thaliana Reveals Predicted and Unexpected Proteins
PLANT CELL,
December 1, 2004;
16(12):
3285 - 3303.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
[PDF]
|
 |
|

|
 |

|
 |
 
E. Watanabe, T. Shimada, K. Tamura, R. Matsushima, Y. Koumoto, M. Nishimura, and I. Hara-Nishimura
An ER-Localized Form of PV72, a Seed-Specific Vacuolar Sorting Receptor, Interferes the Transport of an NPIR-Containing Proteinase in Arabidopsis Leaves
Plant Cell Physiol.,
January 15, 2004;
45(1):
9 - 17.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
[PDF]
|
 |
|

|
 |

|
 |
 
T. Shimada, K. Fuji, K. Tamura, M. Kondo, M. Nishimura, and I. Hara-Nishimura
Vacuolar sorting receptor for seed storage proteins in Arabidopsis thaliana
PNAS,
December 23, 2003;
100(26):
16095 - 16100.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
[PDF]
|
 |
|

|
 |

|
 |
 
T. Shimada, E. Watanabe, K. Tamura, Y. Hayashi, M. Nishimura, and I. Hara-Nishimura
A Vacuolar Sorting Receptor PV72 on the Membrane of Vesicles that Accumulate Precursors of Seed Storage Proteins (PAC Vesicles)
Plant Cell Physiol.,
October 15, 2002;
43(10):
1086 - 1095.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
[PDF]
|
 |
|

|
 |

|
 |
 
A. Di Cola, L. Frigerio, J. M. Lord, A. Ceriotti, and L. M. Roberts
Ricin A chain without its partner B chain is degraded after retrotranslocation from the endoplasmic reticulum to the cytosol in plant cells
PNAS,
December 4, 2001;
98(25):
14726 - 14731.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
[PDF]
|
 |
|
|
|