The Tub alpha 3 gene from Zea mays: structure and expression in dividing plant tissues.
Mots clés
Abstrait
A gene (Tub alpha 3) coding for an alpha-Tub, expressed in dividing tissues, has been cloned from Zea mays. The deduced amino acid (aa) sequence, 450 aa long, is very similar to the other plant alpha-Tub (85-89% homology) so far reported, and in particular to the other two aa sequences (alpha 1-Tub and alpha 2-Tub) already published from the same species (93% homology). The genomic structure is also very similar, having three introns located at the same positions as in the Tub alpha 1 and Tub alpha 2 genes, one of them placed at the same position in the homologous genes from Arabidopsis thaliana. Nevertheless, the noncoding sequences are very different from the two other maize genomic sequences. In particular, no homology has been found either in the 5' upstream or in the 3'-untranslated sequences. Using specific 3' probes, it has been possible to detect the mRNA coded by this gene in many of the plant organs measured, but its highest abundance is observed in the organs rich in dividing cells, a pattern correlated with that of the histone H4-encoding gene. A cDNA clone has been identified in maize coleoptiles and sequenced, confirming the expression of the Tub alpha 3 in this organ. No preferential accumulation in any organ of the plant was found, in contrast with what was observed in the Tub alpha 1 and Tub alpha 2 genes already described. The Tub alpha gene family seems to consist in maize by at least two groups of homologous sequences, each one including a maximum of two or three coding units.