Abstract:
l,3-/3-D-glucan synthase (UDP-glucose : 1,3-0-D-glucan 3-/3 -Dglucosyltransferase,
EC 2.4.1.34) is a plasma membrane localized
enzyme which catalyzes the synthesis of callose (1,3- /3-D-glucan)
from UDP-glucose in higher plants. In this study two forms of
1,3-/3-D-glucan synthase (GS-IIA and GS-IIB) have been separated
from a plasma membrane fraction from the 7-day old germinating
peanut cotyledons using selective solubilization of the enzymes
with 0.5% digitonin at a protein-to-detergent ratio of 1:6,
sucrose density gradient centrifugation and chromatography on
hydroxylapatite column. Both forms were subsequently purified to
apparent homogeneity by chromatography on hydroxylapatite (second
column) followed by chromatography on DEAE-sephadex A-50. The
specific activity of the purified GS-IIA and GS-IIB was increased
about 636- and 64-fold, respectively, relative to the crude
microsomal membrane fraction. On sodium dodecylsulfate
polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis GS-IIA and GS- IIB migrated as
a single protein band with molecular masses of 48K and 57K,
respectively. Determination of the H2N-terminal amino acid by
Edman degradation gave phenylthiohydantoin derivatives of Lleucine
for GS-IIA and L-lysine for GS-IIB, indicating the
presence of single polypeptides in both enzyme forms.
The purified GS-IIA and GS-IIB were found to be quite specific
2 + for UDP-glucose as the glucosyl donor and required Ca , at an
optimum concentration of 2-5mM, for activity. The activity of
both enzymes was inhibited by nucleotides (ATP, GTP, CTP, UDP and
UMP). The enzyme activity was also inhibited by the addition of
(i)
EDTA or EGTA to the enzyme, but this inhibition was fully
reversible by the adition of Ca2+. The reaction product formed
during incubation of UDP-[14C] glucose and cellobiose with the
purified enzymes was susceptible to digestion by exo-(l,3) -/3-Dglucanase,
but was resistant to a- and /3-amylases and to
periodate oxidation, indicating that polymer formed was l,3-/3-Dglucan
and /3-l,4 and /3-1, 6 linkages were absent.
Polyclonal monospecific antibodies against GS-IIA and GS-IIB were
raised in rabbits. The immune serum obtained with GS-IIA
inhibited the enzyme activity and reacted specifically with GSIIA
on immunodiffusion plates. The GS-IIA immune serum also did
not cross-react with GS-IIB. These results further confirmed the
homogeneity of the GS-IIA preparation. The immune serum made
with GS-IIB was found to be completely inactive against both GSIIB
and GS-IIA, indicating that the two enzyme forms were
immunologically different.