Browsing by Author "Ricardo, C. P. P."
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- Expression of Lupinus albus PR-10 proteins during root and leaf developmentPublication . Pinto, Paula; Ribeiro, A.; Regalado, A. P.; Rodrigues-Pousada, C.; Ricardo, C. P. P.Based on the NH2-terminal sequence of three PR-10 isoforms previously identified in Lupinus albus leaves and a conserved amino-acid region in the PR-10 proteins from leguminosae, a pair of oligonucleotides was designed and used to amplify the corresponding cDNA fragment from a L. albus leaves cDNA library. A fragment of DNA of 200 bp was isolated from the polymerase chain reaction (PCR) mixture and subsequently used to screen the cDNA library. A cDNA coding for a PR-10 protein of 158 amino acid residues was cloned and sequenced. Subsequent studies involving Northern and Western blot analysis have shown that the PR-10 protein isoforms are differentially expressed during the development of the healthy lupin plant. High mRNA and protein contents were detected in roots and hypocotyls of both 7- and 20-d-old plants. In young leaves, the mRNA and protein contents were low and increasead in mature leaves. Tissue printing experiments with root sections suggest that the proteins are extracellular and are mainly associated with the vascular tissues in mature roots.
- Lupinus albus L. pathogenesis-related proteins that show similarity to PR-10 proteinsPublication . Pinto, Paula; Ricardo, C. P. P.We describe a group of three acidic proteins, pathogenesis-related (PR)-p16.5a, PR-p16.5b, and PR-p16.5c, that accumulate in the leaves of Lupinus albus L. cv Rio Maior plants when infected with the fungus Colletotrichum gloeosporioides Penz. These proteins co-migrate in sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gels as a single band of 16.5 kD, behaving as charge isomers, and are related to several members of the defense-related PR-10 protein family. Localization of the proteins was investigated by techniques of tissue printing and immunogold electron microscopy; they are predominantly associated with the vascular system and are localized extra-cellularly. The accumulation of PR-p16.5a, PR-p16.5b, and PR-p16.5c also seems to be induced by cucumber mosaic virus and by two forms of abiotic stress, salicylic acid and ultraviolet, suggesting a general defense role for these proteins.