|
|
||||||||
|
Plant Physiology 96:656-659 (1991) © 1991 American Society of Plant Biologists Peptidyl Proline Hydroxylation and the Growth of a Soybean Cell Culture 1Institute for Cancer Research, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19111, Fox Chase Cancer Center, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19111
Peptidyl proline hydroxylase inhibitors block the growth of cultured soybean (Glycine max) cells and bring about the disappearance of the major salt-extractable hydroxyproline-rich protein, the 33 kilodalton repetitive proline-rich protein (RPRP2). Three polypeptides of 28, 20, and 14 kilodalton that cross-react with an antibody to RPRP2 accumulate in the culture during steady-state growth. In the presence of the proline hydroxylase inhibitors, all of these repetitive proline-rich proteins disappear. These results indicate that the hydroxyproline-rich proteins play a role in cell growth, and that hydroxylation may regulate the steady-state level of at least one of these proteins by influencing its turnover.
1 These studies were supported by grants CA-06927 and RR-05539 to the Institute for Cancer Research from the National Institutes of Health, and by an appropriation from the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania.
|
| HOME | HELP | FEEDBACK | SUBSCRIPTIONS | ARCHIVE | SEARCH | TABLE OF CONTENTS |
| ASPB Publications | PLANT PHYSIOLOGY | THE PLANT CELL | |
|---|---|---|---|