Abstract

Membrane preparations from suspension-cultured cells of French bean (Phaseolus vulgaris L.) contained callose synthase (EC 2.4.1.34) activity which was preserved upon solubilisation. Following elicitor treatment of cell cultures, increased activity could be extracted and this increase was maintained during purification. The enzyme was purified by high-pressure liquid chromatography and active fractions showed a variable association of two polypeptides of relative molecular masses (M(r)) 55,000 and 65,000, the latter being in excess. The M(r)-65,000 polypeptide was purified to homogeneity and an antibody raised to it. This antibody showed complex effects on callose synthase activity when incubated with membrane and soluble extracts. In comparison with other systems, the M(r)-55,000 subunit is likely to represent the catalytic subunit while the M(r)-65,000 polypeptide is a possible regulatory subunit. The M(r)-65,000 polypeptide was immunolocated in membranes at sites of callose synthesis in the plant, in cell plates, in sieve plates, at the plasma membrane-wall interface of wounded cells and in papillae in infected cells.

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