Purification and characterization of a novel aminopeptidase, plastidial alanine-aminopeptidase, from the cotyledons of etiolated sugar beet seedlings

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Abstract

During prolonged dark growth of sugar beet (Beta vulgaris L.) seedlings, etioplasts, rapidly after the proplastid-etioplast transition, undergo a degenerative process characterized by ultrastructural modifications, protein loss, and the decrease of carotenoid and chlorophyll accumulation upon illumination. Two plastidial aminopeptidase activities were identified as early markers of this degenerative process (A. El Amrani, I. Couée, J.-P. Carde, J.-P. Gaudillère, P. Raymond [1994] Plant Physiology 106: 1555-1565). The present study focuses on one of these markers and describes the purification to homogeneity and characterization of plastidial alanine-aminopeptidase. This novel aminopeptidase was found to be a metallotype naphthylamidase particularly active with alanyl, arginyl, and leucyl substrates. Its plastidial location was confirmed by immunofluorescence with polyclonal antibodies against the purified enzyme. Its physico-chemical and enzymic properties are discussed with respect to other higher plant aminopeptidases and to its potential functions during prolonged dark growth.

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El Amrani, A., Suire, C., Camara, B., Gaudillère, J. P., & Couée, I. (1995). Purification and characterization of a novel aminopeptidase, plastidial alanine-aminopeptidase, from the cotyledons of etiolated sugar beet seedlings. Plant Physiology, 109(1), 87–94. https://doi.org/10.1104/pp.109.1.87

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