19 research outputs found

    Influence of auxin and its polar transport inhibitor on the development of somatic embryos in Digitalis trojana

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    The present study reports the role of auxin and its transport inhibitor during the establishment of an efficient and optimized protocol for the somatic embryogenesis in Digitalis trojana Ivan. Hypocotyl segments (5 mm long) were placed vertically in the Murashige and Skoog medium supplemented with three sets [indole-3-acetic acid (IAA) alone or 2,3,5-triiodobenzoic acid (TIBA) alone or IAA-TIBA combination] of formulations of plant growth regulators, to assess their differential influence on induction and proliferation of somatic embryos (SEs). IAA alone was found to be the most effective, at a concentration of 0.5 mg/l, inducing similar to 10 SEs per explant with 52% induction frequency. On the other hand, the combination of 0.5 mg/l of IAA and 1 mg/l of TIBA produced significantly fewer (similar to 3.6 SEs) and abnormal (enlarged, oblong, jar and cup-shaped) SEs per explant with 24% induction frequency in comparison to that in the IAA alone. The explants treated with IAA-TIBA exhibited a delayed response along with the formation of abnormal SEs. Our study revealed that IAA induces high-frequency SE formation when used singly, but the frequency gradually declines when IAA was coupled with increasing levels of TIBA. Eventually, our findings bring new insights into the roles of auxin and its polar transport in somatic embryogenesis of D. trojana

    Steroid 5ÎČ-reductase from leaves of Vitis vinifera: molecular cloning, expression and modelling

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    A steroid 5ÎČ-reductase gene corresponding to the hypothetical protein of LOC100247199 from leaves of Vitis vinifera (var. ‘Chardonnay’) was cloned and overexpressed in E. coli. The recombinant protein showed 5ÎČ-reductase activity when progesterone was used as a substrate. The reaction was stereo-selective, producing only 5ÎČ-products such as 5ÎČ-pregnane-3,20-dione. Other small substrates (terpenoids and enones) were also accepted as substrates, indicating the highly promiscuous character of the enzyme class. Our results show that the steroid 5ÎČ-reductase gene, encoding an orthologous enzyme described as a key enzyme in cardenolide biosynthesis, is also expressed in leaves of the cardenolide-free plant Vitis vinifera. We emphasize the fact that, on some occasions, different reductases (e.g., progesterone 5ÎČ-reductase and monoterpenoid reductase) can also use molecules that are similar to the final products as a substrate. Therefore, in planta, the different reductases may contribute to the immense number of diverse small natural products finally leading to the flavor of wine. KEYWORDS: Vitis vinifera, enone 5ÎČ-reductase, secondary metabolites, biosynthesis, gene evolutio
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