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Delay of Iris flower senescence by protease inhibitors

Authors :
Caroline Pak
Wouter G. van Doorn
Source :
New Phytologist 165 (2005) 2, New Phytologist, 165(2), 473-480
Publication Year :
2005

Abstract

asterisk inside a circle sign Visible senescence of the flag tepals in Iris x hollandica (cv. Blue Magic) was preceded by a large increase in endoprotease activity. Just before visible senescence about half of total endoprotease activity was apparently due to cysteine proteases, somewhat less than half to serine proteases, with a minor role of metalloproteases. asterisk inside a circle sign Treatment of isolated tepals with the purported serine protease inhibitors AEBSF [4-(2-aminoethyl)-benzenesulfonyl fluoride] or DFP (diisopropyl-fluorophosphate) prevented the increase in endoprotease activity and considerably delayed or prevented the normal senescence symptoms. asterisk inside a circle sign The specific cysteine protease-specific E-64d reduced maximum endoprotease activity by 30%, but had no effect on the time to visible senescence. Zinc chloride and aprotinin reduced maximum endoprotease activity by c. 50 and 40%, respectively, and slightly delayed visible senescence. A proteasome inhibitor (Z-leu-leu-Nva-H) slightly delayed tepal senescence, which indicates that protein degradation in the proteasome may play a role in induction of the visible senescence symptoms. asterisk inside a circle sign It is concluded that visible senescence is preceded by large-scale protein degradation, which is apparently mainly due to cysteine- and serine protease activity, and that two (unspecific) inhibitors of serine proteases considerably delay the senescence symptoms.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
0028646X
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
New Phytologist 165 (2005) 2, New Phytologist, 165(2), 473-480
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....0f4677ef616699db189c14dd551765d2