A Homolog of the Substrate Adhesion Molecule Vitronectin Occurs in Four Species of Flowering Plants.

  • Sanders L
  • Wang C
  • Walling L
  • et al.
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Abstract

The extracellular matrix (ECM) has been implicated in the primary developmental processes of many organisms. A family of secretory adhesive glycoproteins called substrate adhesion molecules (SAMs) is believed to confer these dynamic capabilities to the ECM in animals. In this paper, we report the existence of SAM-like genes and gene products in flowering plants. Hybridizations with a human vitronectin cDNA probe and genomic DNA from broad bean, soybean, and tomato revealed vitronectin-like sequences. Human vitronectin antibodies cross-react with a 55-kilodalton protein in leaf and root protein extracts from lily, broad bean, soybean, and tomato. In addition, immunocytochemical staining of frozen sections of lily leaf and broad bean gynoecium demonstrated that vitronectin-like proteins were localized to the ECM on the cell surface, with the most intense labeling residing in the transmitting tract of broad bean gynoecium.

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Sanders, L. C., Wang, C. S., Walling, L. L., & Lord, E. M. (1991). A Homolog of the Substrate Adhesion Molecule Vitronectin Occurs in Four Species of Flowering Plants. The Plant Cell, 629–635. https://doi.org/10.1105/tpc.3.6.629

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