Abstract
We transformed tobacco plants with a soybean beta-conglycinin gene that encodes the 1.7-kilobase beta-subunit mRNA. We showed that the beta-conglycinin mRNA accumulates and decays during tobacco seed development and that beta-conglycinin mRNA is undetectable in the tobacco leaf. We utilized in situ hybridization to localize beta-conglycinin mRNA within the tobacco seed. beta-Conglycinin mRNA is not detectable within the endosperm but is localized within specific embryonic cell types. The highest concentration of beta-conglycinin mRNA is found in cotyledon storage parenchyma cells. We conclude that sequences required for embryo expression, temporal control, and cell specificity are linked to the beta-conglycinin gene, and that factors regulating beta-conglycinin gene expression are compartmentalized within analogous soybean and tobacco seed regions.
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