Estonian
Albanian
Arabic
Armenian
Azerbaijani
Belarusian
Bengali
Bosnian
Catalan
Czech
Danish
Deutsch
Dutch
English
Estonian
Finnish
Français
Greek
Haitian Creole
Hebrew
Hindi
Hungarian
Icelandic
Indonesian
Irish
Italian
Japanese
Korean
Latvian
Lithuanian
Macedonian
Mongolian
Norwegian
Persian
Polish
Portuguese
Romanian
Russian
Serbian
Slovak
Slovenian
Spanish
Swahili
Swedish
Turkish
Ukrainian
Vietnamese
Български
中文(简体)
中文(繁體)
Plant Molecular Biology 1996-Jun

A wound-inducible gene from Salix viminalis coding for a trypsin inhibitor.

Ainult registreeritud kasutajad saavad artikleid tõlkida
Logi sisse
Link salvestatakse lõikelauale
P Saarikoski
D Clapham
S von Arnold

Märksõnad

Abstraktne

A gene designated swin1.1 has been isolated by screening a Salix viminalis genomic library with a heterologous probe, win3 from Populus. The region sequenced included the entire coding sequence for a protein with 199 amino acids plus the promoter and terminator. At the 5' end of the coding region is a sequence that encodes a hydrophobic region of 25-30 amino acids, that could form a signal peptide. A putative TATAA box and polyadenylator sequence were identified. Introns were absent. The gene product showed similarities with serine protease inhibitors from the Kunitz family and especially with win3 from wounded leaves of Populus. Southern blot analysis indicated that swin1.1 is a member of a clustered gene family, swin1. An oligonucleotide corresponding to the putative hypervariable region towards the carboxyl end when used as a probe in Southern hybridization showed high specificity for swin1.1. Expression of the swin1.1 gene was enhanced in wounded leaves. The swin1.1 coding region without the signal sequence was highly expressed in Escherichia coli and the protein showed inhibitory activity against trypsin but at most slight activity against the other proteases tested. A systemically induced protein, SVTI, with inhibitor activity against trypsin, was isolated from Salix leaves by affinity chromatography on a column of trypsin-Sepharose 4B and N-terminal sequenced. It corresponded with the translated swin1.1 gene at 16 of the 19 amino acid sites, suggesting that SVTI is encoded by another member of the swin1 gene family.

Liitu meie
facebooki lehega

Kõige täiuslikum ravimtaimede andmebaas, mida toetab teadus

  • Töötab 55 keeles
  • Taimsed ravimid, mida toetab teadus
  • Maitsetaimede äratundmine pildi järgi
  • Interaktiivne GPS-kaart - märgistage ürdid asukohas (varsti)
  • Lugege oma otsinguga seotud teaduspublikatsioone
  • Otsige ravimtaimi nende mõju järgi
  • Korraldage oma huvisid ja hoidke end kursis uudisteuuringute, kliiniliste uuringute ja patentidega

Sisestage sümptom või haigus ja lugege ravimtaimede kohta, mis võivad aidata, tippige ürdi ja vaadake haigusi ja sümptomeid, mille vastu seda kasutatakse.
* Kogu teave põhineb avaldatud teaduslikel uuringutel

Google Play badgeApp Store badge