Abstract

Purified fractions of soluble proteins from barley leaves have been shown to contain specific binding sites fortrans-zeatin, a natural cytokinin. Such binding is very strong in vitro in concentrated solutions of some salts (ammonium sulfate or potassium phosphate) with optimum at pH 7–8 and temperature within the range 0–20°C. The cytokinin-binding sites have high affinity for zeatin (Kd∼1.5·10−8 M) and low capacity corresponding to 1–1.5 pmol zeatin per milligram of initial soluble protein. Cytokinin binding is reversible; it is due to protein (or proteins) with molecular weight 40–45 kDa. This protein(s) does not bind3H-adenine and3H-abscisic acid. The ability of various compounds to displace3H-zeatin from its high-affinity binding sites is in strict accordance with their biological cytokinin activities. Other phytohormones as well as fusicoccin do not displace3H-zeatin from its binding sites. Specific zeatin binding is sensitive to heat, alkali, and pronase, but not to RNase treatment. The 150- to 200-fold purification of cytokinin-binding proteins was achieved by a combination of ammonium sulfate precipitation and Ultrogel AcA-54- and DEAE-cellulose chromatography. The zeatin-binding protein(s) from barley leaves is suggested to take part in cytokinin action in vivo.

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