Abstract
Evidence is presented that although many proteins from the fronds of Lemna minor L. undergo enhanced degradation during osmotic stress, ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase (RuBPCase) is not degraded. Instead RuBPCase is converted in a series of steps to a very high-molecular-weight form. The first step involves the induction of an oxidase system which after 24 h of stress converts RuBPCase to an acidic and catalytically inactive form. Subsequently, the oxidised RuBPCase protein is gradually polymerized to a number of very large aggregates (molecular weight of several million).The conversion of RuBPCase to a high-molecular-weight form appears to be correlated with (i) a reduction in the number of-SH residues and (ii) the susceptibility to in-vitro proteolysis. Indeed, the number of-SH groups per RuBPCase molecule decreases from 89 in the native enzyme to 54 and 22 in the oxidised and polymerized forms, respectively. On the other hand, the oxidised enzyme is more susceptible to in-vitro proteolysis than the native form. However, it is the polymerized form of RuBPCase which is particularly susceptible to in-vitro proteolysis.Western-blotting experiments and anti-ubiquitin antibodies were used to detect the presence of ubiquitin conjugates in extracts from osmotically stressed Lemna fronds. The possible involvement of ubiquitin in the formation of the aggregates is discussed.
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