Transcriptional regulation of a patatin-1 gene in potato
β Scribed by Richard Jefferson; Andrew Goldsbrough; Michael Bevan
- Book ID
- 104615320
- Publisher
- Springer
- Year
- 1990
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 934 KB
- Volume
- 14
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0167-4412
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β¦ Synopsis
Patatin is an abundant glycoprotein in the tubers of potato plants that has a lipid acyl hydrolase activity. Fusions of the promoter of patatin genes that are highly expressed in tubers with the reporter gene encoding fl-glucuronidase (GUS) have shown that patatin transcription has a high degree of tuber specificity. Patatin transcription was also inducible in other organs of transgenic potato by growth on high concentrations of sucrose. Experiments were conducted to defme regions of the patatin promoter that confered tuber specific expression and sucrose inducibility. Sequences between -40 and -400 bp and between -4 0 0 and -9 5 7 bp of the transcriptional start site were able to confer tuber-specific expression on a heterologous truncated promoter. The cell specificity of GUS transcription in the transformants indicated that organ specificity was possibly determined by source-sink relationships of sucrose, or a metabolite of sucrose, in the whole plant.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
In whole intact potato (Solanum tuberosum L.) plants, the gene families of class-I patatin and proteinase inhibitor II (Pin 2) are constitutively expressed in the tubers. However, they are also induced in detached potato leaves in the presence of light. To further characterize this light action, the
Patatin is a family of glycoproteins that contributes about 40 ~ of the total soluble protein in tubers of potato (Solanum tuberosum L.). The protein is encoded by a multigene family of 50-70 genes which have been divided into classes I and II on the basis of sequence homology. The promoters of two
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