Abstract
A gene (pMON9617; Chi2;l) identified by screening a tomato pistil cDNA library has been found to encode a protein similar in sequence to class II chitinases. Using a baculovirus expression system we show that the Chi2;l protein is an active endochitinase. The Chi2;l protein is most similar in sequence to a previously described stylar chitinase (SK2) isolated from potato. Both proteins lack the diagnostic N-terminal cysteine-rich regions and the C-terminal vacuolar targeting signals of class I chitinases and appear to define a novel type of class II endochitinases associated with flowers. Chi2;l is expressed predominantly in floral organs and its expression within these organs is temporally regulated. The highest level of expression is found in the transmitting tissue of the style where CM2;1 mRNA begins to accumulate just prior to anthesis. In vegetative tissue, low levels of Chi2;l mRNA were detected, and these levels did not increase in response to wounding or treatment with ethephon. mRNA from Chi2;l orthologs was not detected in most other angiosperms tested, even including some members of the Solanaceae, and it is therefore unlikely that Chi2;l is essential for stylar function. A fragment containing 1.4 kilobase pairs of 5'-flanking DNA from the Chi2;l gene was shown to drive high-level expression of an attached reporter gene in the styles of transgenic tomatoes. This fragment has utility for engineering expression of other coding regions in styles. © 1996 Kluwer Academic Publishers.
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Harikrishna, K., Jampates-Beale, R., Milligan, S. B., & Gasser, C. S. (1996). An endochitinase gene expressed at high levels in the stylar transmitting tissue of tomatoes. Plant Molecular Biology, 30(5), 899–911. https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00020802
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