4.6 Article

The role of glycosylation in the function of a 48-kDa glycoprotein from carrot

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Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.bbrc.2004.12.166

Keywords

EDGP; protein inhibitor family; gene duplication; phosphorylation; N-linked glycosylation; glycan function

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Carrot extracellular dermal glycoprotein (EDGP) may play an important role in plant defense systems and in signal transduction. Our experiments show that differences in pI values of EDGP isoforms are caused by differences in amino acid sequence and not by heterogeneity in phosphorylation. The binding affinity of native EDGP for a 4-kDa hormone-like peptide from soybean was approximately one-third that of deglycosylated EDGP, and deglycosylation of EDGP caused complete loss of its ability to inhibit xyloglucan-specific endo-beta-1,4-glucanase. Experiments using tunicamycin-treated carrot cell cultures showed that glycosylation is essential for correct EDGP folding and secretion, and that tunicamycin does not affect EDGP gene transcription. (C) 2005 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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