Abstract

The monoclonal antibody MPM-2, which interacts with a mitosis-specific phosphorylated epitope, has been used to study phosphorylation of proteins in microspores and pollen ofBrassica napus. One- (1-D) and two-dimensional (2-D) immunoblots revealed that MPM-2 recognized a family of phosphorylated proteins in freshly isolated microspores and pollen. The same set of phosphorylated proteins was found after 8 h of culture at embryogenie (32 °C) and non-embryogenic (18 °C) conditions. Two major spots were observed on 2-D immunoblots, one of which (Mr≈75 kDa, pI≈5.1) co-localized with the 70 kDa heat shock protein. Immunolabelling of sectioned microspores and pollen showed that MPM-2 reactive epitopes were predominantly observed in the nucleoplasm from G1 until G2-phase, and in the cytoplasm during mitosis. This may be due to a cell cycle related translocation of phosphoproteins from the nucleus to the cytoplasm, or alternate phosphorylation and dephosphorylation in nucleus and cytoplasm. Detectability of epitopes on sections depended on the embedding procedure. Cryo processing revealed epitope reactivity in all stages of the cell cycle whereas polyethylene glycol embedded material showed no labelling in the cytoplasm during mitosis. Processing might reduce the antigenicity of cytoplasmic MPM-2 detectable proteins, probably due to dephosphorylation. The MPM-2 detectable epitope was observed in all cells investigated, irrespective of culture conditions, and its intracellular distribution depended on the cell cycle stage and was not related to the developmental fate of the microspores and pollen.

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