Plant Physiol. (1998) 118: 1015-1020
The Glycosylphosphatidylinositol-Anchored Phosphatase from
Spirodela oligorrhiza Is a Purple Acid
Phosphatase1
Hiroshi Nakazato,
Takashi Okamoto,
Miwa Nishikoori,
Kenji Washio,
Naoki Morita,
Kensaku Haraguchi,
Guy A. Thompson Jr., and
Hidetoshi Okuyama*
Laboratory of Environmental Molecular Biology, Graduate School of
Environmental Earth Science, Hokkaido University, Kita-ku, Sapporo
060-0810, Japan (H.N., T.O., M.N., K.W., H.O.); Hokkaido National
Industrial Research Institute, AIST, Toyohira-Ku, Sapporo
062-8517, Japan (N.M., K.H.); and Department of Botany,
University of Texas, Austin, Texas 78713 (G.A.T.)
 |
ABSTRACT |
We recently presented clear evidence
that the major low-phosphate-inducible phosphatase of the duckweed
Spirodela oligorrhiza is a glycosylphosphatidylinositol
(GPI)-anchored protein, and, to our knowledge, is the first described
from higher plants (N. Morita, H. Nakazato, H. Okuyama, Y. Kim, G.A.
Thompson, Jr. [1996] Biochim Biophys Acta 1290: 53-62). In this
report the purified 57-kD phosphatase is shown to be a
purple metalloenzyme containing Fe and Mn atoms and having an
absorption maximum at 556 nm. The phosphatase activity was only
slightly inhibited by tartrate, as expected for a purple acid
phosphatase (PAP). Furthermore, the protein cross-reacted with an
anti-Arabidopsis PAP antibody on immunoblots. The
N-terminal amino acid sequence of the phosphatase was very similar to
those of Arabidopsis, red kidney bean (Phaseolus vulgaris), and soybean (Glycine max) PAP.
Extracts of S. oligorrhiza plants incubated with the
GPI-specific precursor [3H]ethanolamine were treated with
antibodies raised against the purified S. oligorrhiza
phosphatase. Radioactivity from the resulting immunoprecipitates was
specifically associated with a 57-kD band on sodium dodecyl
sulfate-polyacrylamide gels. These results, together with previous
findings, strongly indicate that the GPI-anchored phosphatase of
S. oligorrhiza is a PAP.
 |
INTRODUCTION |
Animal and fungal cells contain a diverse assortment of membrane
proteins, which are anchored to the outside surface of the plasma
membrane solely by a covalently linked GPI moiety (Englund, 1993
).
Among the proteins anchored in this way by a GPI chain are protozoan
coat proteins, lymphoid antigens, hydrolytic enzymes, cell adhesion
molecules, receptors for small molecules, the scrapie prion
protein, and a wide variety of other functionally distinct proteins
(Low, 1989
).
In contrast to the more than 150 examples of GPI-anchored proteins now
known in animals and yeast, until recently, there have been no
indications that this type of protein anchorage occurs in algae or
higher plants. Reports of a GPI-anchored nitrate reductase in Chlorella saccharophila (Stöhr et al., 1995
)
and in sugar beet (Kunze et al., 1997
), a low-phosphate-inducible,
GPI-anchored alkaline phosphatase in the duckweed Spirodela
oligorrhiza (Morita et al., 1996
), and unidentified GPI-anchored
proteins in tobacco (Takos et al., 1997
) have appeared. In none of the
above instances has the reported GPI-anchored protein and its anchoring
structure been fully characterized.
The lipid moiety of the S. oligorrhiza phosphatase anchor
has been tentatively identified as a ceramide (Morita et al., 1996
). Following polypeptide synthesis, glycosylation, GPI anchor attachment, and transport to the cell surface, the terminal lipid is cleaved off in
vivo, leaving behind a cell wall-localized phosphatase still
linked to the ethanolamine-containing fragment of the GPI chain. This
GPI-anchored S. oligorrhiza phosphatase retaining part of
its GPI anchor is a 100-kD homodimer consisting of 57-kD subunits
(Nakazato et al., 1997a
). It is interesting that, whereas the enzyme's
pH optimum for catalysis was about 8.0 in crude extracts, it decreased
to about 7.0 during purification procedures (Nakazato et al., 1997a
),
bringing its original designation as an alkaline phosphatase into
question. In this paper we present convincing evidence that the major
low-phosphate-inducible phosphatase of S. oligorrhiza is a
GPI-anchored PAP. Nakazato et al. (1997b)
presented a preliminary
report expressing this conclusion, which was presented at the XIII
International Plant Nutrition Colloquium, September 13 to 19, 1997, in Tokyo, Japan.
 |
MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Materials
Spirodela oligorrhiza plants were grown in modified
Hoagland medium (Posner, 1967
) containing either 1.5 (+P plants) or 0 (
P plants) mM
KH2PO4 for 2 to 3 weeks at
25°C under a 16-h daylength with illumination from fluorescent lamps
(80 µE m
2 s
1).
Harvested plants were stored at
30°C until use. Wheat germ and
bovine alkaline phosphatases were purchased from Sigma.
[1,2-3H]Ethanolamine hydrochloride (15 Ci/mmol)
was obtained from Moravek Biochemicals (Brea, CA).
Purification of the Phosphatase from S. oligorrhiza
Purification of the S. oligorrhiza phosphatase
was carried out as described previously (Nakazato et al., 1997a
).
Phosphatase enzymatic activity was assayed as described by Nakazato et
al. (1997a)
. The electrophoretically purified phosphatase was used as
the experimental material.
Electrophoresis
Proteins were analyzed by SDS-PAGE according to the method of
Laemmli (1970)
, using gels with either 5% polyacrylamide (type NPU-5L,
Atto, Tokyo, Japan) or a linear gradient of 5% to 20% polyacrylamide
(type NPG-520L, Atto). Samples were applied to the gels in 10 mM Tris-HCl, pH 6.8, containing 20% glycerol, 1% SDS, and
0.02% bromphenol blue. For denaturing conditions, 5% 2-mercaptoethanol was added and the samples were boiled for 5 min.
The proteins were detected by silver staining. The images shown in
Figures 2 and 4 were scanned and uniformly enhanced to provide better
definition.

View larger version (50K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
| Figure 2.
Immunoblot analysis of the S. oligorrhiza phosphatase and other phosphatases using an
anti-S. oligorrhiza phosphatase antibody (lanes 1-4)
and an anti-Arabidopsis PAP antibody (lanes 5-8). Lanes 1 and 5, 2 µg of purified S. oligorrhiza phosphatase; lanes 2 and
6, 2 µg of bovine alkaline phosphatase; lanes 3 and 7, 2 µg of
wheat germ acid phosphatase; and lanes 4 and 8, 2 µg of potato acid
phosphatase. The arrow indicates the position of the S. oligorrhiza PAP band.
|
|

View larger version (53K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
| Figure 4.
Association of [3H]ethanolamine with
S. oligorrhiza proteins immunoprecipitated by
anti-N-terminal peptide antibodies. Right, SDS-PAGE gel. Immunoblots of
2 µg of purified S. oligorrhiza PAP (lane 1) and 2 µg of solubilized immunoprecipitate from protein extract of
[3H]ethanolamine-labeled S. oligorrhiza
(lane 2). Lane 3 shows the banding pattern of a Coomassie blue-stained
gel lane containing 2 µg of the same solubilized immunoprecipitate
used for lane 2. Left, The tracing indicates the radioactivity
recovered in 1-mm slices of lane 3.
|
|
Amino Acid Sequencing
Five milligrams of the purified phosphatase was electrophoresed as
described above and transferred onto a PVDF membrane. Bands corresponding to the 57-kD protein were excised from the membrane. The
protein was sequenced by the Hokkaido University Analytical Center
(Sapporo, Japan) on an automatic gas-phase sequencer (model 477A/120A,
Applied Biosystems).
Metal Analysis
To determine the content of metals, the purified phosphatase
(0.37-1.37 mg in 10 mM Tris-HCl buffer, pH 6.8) was
dialyzed overnight against distilled water. The concentration of the
enzyme was adjusted to 0.15 mg/mL with 1 N
HNO3. The contents of Fe, Mn, Zn, Cu, Tl, Pb, Ni,
and Co were determined on triplicate samples by microwave-induced
plasma/quadrupole MS (Douglas and French, 1981
). As a control, a
solution of 10 mM Tris-HCl containing no phosphatase
protein was analyzed.
Immunological and Blotting Methods
Immunoblotting was performed using anti-S. oligorrhiza
phosphatase and anti-Arabidopsis PAP antibodies (a generous gift from Thomas D. McKnight, Texas A & M University, College Station). Two
micrograms of the purified phosphatase was electrophoresed under
denaturing conditions and transferred onto a PVDF membrane. Immunological detection by immunoblotting was carried out with the
purified rabbit anti-PAP IgG, followed by goat anti-rabbit IgG
conjugated to horseradish peroxidase (Bio-Rad). Biotinylated Mr standards (Bio-Rad) were visualized after
they were coupled to avidin-linked horseradish peroxidase.
Affinity Purification of the Anti-S. oligorrhiza
Phosphatase Antibody
Antiserum to the S. oligorrhiza-purified
phosphatase was obtained as previously described (Nakazato et al.,
1997a
). Purification of the anti-S. oligorrhiza antibody
was carried out with a HiTrap-affinity column (Pharmacia). Seven
milligrams of the 19-amino acid N-terminal peptide from the S. oligorrhiza phosphatase was coupled to beads for the column.
Then, the anti-S. oligorrhiza phosphatase serum was
loaded onto the column, and the purified antibodies were eluted with 50 mM Gly, pH 2.5. The eluted fraction (6 mL) was concentrated to 1 mL with a Molcut LGC ultrafiltration device (Millipore). This
affinity-purified antibody was designated "anti-N-terminal peptide
antibody."
Radioisotope Labeling and Immunoprecipitation
About 500 mg of
P plants was floated on two 5-mL aliquots of
P
medium containing 0.75 mCi of
[3H]ethanolamine. After the samples were
exposed to 18 h of continuous light, proteins were extracted from
labeled plants. Proteins were precipitated from the crude extract with
cold acetone for 3 h at
30°C and then redissolved and
reprecipitated with acetone to remove traces of
[3H]ethanolamine. The proteins were spun
down and resuspended in 1 mL of buffer (50 mM Tris, pH 7.4, 150 mM NaCl, 1% Triton X-100, 5 mM EDTA, 0.2%
SDS, and 1 mM PMSF). Proteins were precipitated with cold
acetone, redissolved in buffer, and again precipitated with cold
acetone. Five microliters of the anti-N-terminal peptide antibody was
added, and the mixture was incubated at 4°C for 16 h with
agitation. Immune complexes were precipitated by the addition of 50 µL of 10% protein A-Sepharose (Sigma) and incubated at 4°C for
3 h. The supernatant after centrifugation was subjected to a
second round of immunoprecipitation. The combined precipitates were
resuspended in 50 µL of SDS-sample buffer and boiled for 4 min to
disrupt the complexes.
Measurement of Radioactivity
The immunoprecipitated proteins were separated by SDS-PAGE on 5%
polyacrylamide gels. For measurement of radioactivity, the gel was
dried, and then the lane containing radioactive proteins was sliced
into 1-mm sections with a cutting device. The gel slices were each put
into a vial and dissolved with 2 mL of 30%
H2O2. Radioactivity was
measured in a scintillation counter.
 |
RESULTS |
Amino Acid Sequence
Following purification of the phosphatase (Nakazato et al.,
1997a
), the first 19 amino acids of its N terminus were sequenced. The
sequence A-V-D-M-P-L-N-A-D-V-F-R-V-P-P-G-Y-N-A is very similar to that
of the PAPs of red kidney bean (Phaseolus vulgaris; Klabunde et al., 1994
), Arabidopsis (accession no. U48448), and soybean (Glycine max; LeBansky et al., 1991
; Fig.
1). The identities to the red kidney
bean, Arabidopsis, and soybean phosphatase domains were 79%,
63%, and 69%, respectively. This finding tentatively identified the
S. oligorrhiza phosphatase as a PAP.

View larger version (16K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
| Figure 1.
Comparison of the 19-amino acid N-terminal
sequence of S. oligorrhiza PAP with equivalent domains
of other plant PAPs. Asterisks indicate amino acids identical to those
in S. oligorrhiza.
|
|
Immunoblotting
Immunoblotting of the purified phosphatase was performed using an
affinity-purified anti-S. oligorrhiza phosphatase antiserum and an anti-Arabidopsis PAP antiserum. As shown in Figure
2, the Arabidopsis PAP antiserum
cross-reacted strongly with the S. oligorrhiza phosphatase.
As controls, wheat germ and bovine alkaline phosphatases did not
cross-react with either of the antisera.
Metal Content
When calculating the metal content, a phosphatase molecular mass
of 57 kD was used. However, a significant but unquantified proportion
of this mass is known to be carbohydrate. The metal content was
determined on triplicate samples. As shown in Table I, Fe and Mn were detected at 0.3 and
0.25 mol mol
1 phosphatase
subunit, respectively, whereas Zn was
detected at 0.10 mol mol
1 phosphatase subunit. Levels of
Ni, Co, Cu, Tl, and Pb were negligible (data not shown).
Absorption Spectra
As analyzed by Beck et al. (1986)
, the red kidney bean PAP
contained one atom of Fe and one atom of Zn per subunit, and its absorption spectrum showed a maximum at 560 nm. Solutions of the purified S. oligorrhiza phosphatase were distinctly purple.
The visible absorption spectrum of the protein dissolved in 50 mM Tris-maleic acid buffer, pH 8.5, at 0.08 mg/mL is shown
in Figure 3. The absorption maximum was
approximately 556 nm. Although A556 persisted in the presence of sodium dithionite, the intensity of
absorbance was significantly decreased, and the absorption maximum
shifted to lower wavelengths as expected for reduced metal ions.

View larger version (31K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
| Figure 3.
Top, Absorption spectrum of purified S. oligorrhiza phosphatase (0.08 mg/mL) in 50 mM
Tris-maleic acid buffer, pH 8.5. Bottom, Absorption spectrum of above
preparation after 10 mM sodium dithionite was added.
|
|
Insensitivity to Tartrate Inhibition
Of all of the animal acid phosphatases, only the PAPs are
resistant to inhibition by tartrate (Vincent and Averill, 1990
). Plant
PAPs, although sharing little structural homology with the animal
enzymes (Vincent and Averill, 1990
), are also only slightly inhibited
by tartrate (Sugiura et al., 1981
). The S. oligorrhiza acid
phosphatase was inhibited by 15% in the presence of 50 mM tartrate, and inhibition increased only slowly with increasing tartrate
concentrations (Table II). If a
phosphatase is tartrate sensitive, 10 mM of the inhibitor
is generally enough to cause a much larger loss of activity (Cashikar
et al., 1997
).
View this table:
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Table II.
Effect of different concentrations (mM)
of sodium-potassium tartrate on phosphatase activity
The activity was assayed using p-nitrophenylphosphate as a
substrate at pH 8.0.
|
|
[3H]Ethanolamine Labeling
About 500 mg of
P plants was labeled with
[3H]ethanolamine, a universal precursor of the
GPI anchor, following the general procedure used previously (Morita et
al., 1996
). After 18 h of labeling, proteins were extracted from
labeled plants and immunoprecipitated with anti-N-terminal peptide
antibody.
After the samples were boiled to separate the immune complexes, the
resulting radiolabeled samples were separated by SDS-PAGE on a 5% gel.
The presence of PAP was detected by immunoblot analysis. As shown in
Figure 4, a 57-kD band was detected by
the antibodies. Radioactivity recovered in 1-mm slices from a separate,
Coomassie blue-stained gel lane was associated only with the same 57-kD band, indicating that the phosphatase contained covalently bound [3H]ethanolamine. A second independent
experiment gave similar results.
 |
DISCUSSION |
One of the most widespread and extensively studied GPI-anchored
proteins of animals is alkaline phosphatase (Low, 1989
). When the major
inducible phosphatase of S. oligorrhiza was first found to
contain a GPI anchor and to have a pH optimum of 7.0 to 8.0 (Morita et
al., 1996
), it was assumed to be structurally similar to animal
alkaline phosphatase. However, upon purification certain properties of
the S. oligorrhiza phosphatase, such as a shift downward in
its pH optimum to 7.0 (Nakazato et al., 1997a
), suggested that it may
be a different enzyme. Additional data confirm that the S. oligorrhiza enzyme is a PAP closely resembling the PAPs of kidney
bean (Klabunde et al., 1994
), Arabidopsis (accession no. U48448), and
soybean (LeBansky et al., 1991
). Clear evidence for this comes from the
strong similarity of the 19 N-terminal amino acids of the purified
S. oligorrhiza phosphatase to the N-terminal domains of the
red kidney bean and Arabidopsis PAP genes. The S. oligorrhiza N terminus is also very similar to a shorter soybean
PAP domain. Preliminary findings indicate that the deduced amino acid
sequence of the S. oligorrhiza clone is strikingly similar
to the Arabidopsis PAP gene throughout (Nakazato et al., 1997b
).
In contrast, the S. oligorrhiza N-terminal peptide showed no
homology with PAP from animal sources. This is not surprising, since
the animal and plant PAPs, although functionally and spectroscopically similar and known to have similar secondary structure (Klabunde et al.,
1994
), have distinctly different primary structures (Vincent and
Averill, 1990
).
An anti-Arabidopsis PAP antibody and the anti-S. oligorrhiza
antiserum both cross-reacted with the S. oligorrhiza
phosphatase but not with wheat germ phosphatase (an Mn-containing acid
phosphatase), potato acid phosphatase, or bovine alkaline phosphatase
(Fig. 2). These results, together with the other findings described above, leave no doubt that the S. oligorrhiza phosphatase is
a PAP.
Metal analysis of the S. oligorrhiza phosphatase gave values
of 0.3 mol of Fe, 0.25 mol of Mn, and 0.1 mol of Zn per mol of subunit
(Table I). These absolute values may be misleading because the S. oligorrhiza phosphatase contains an undetermined quantity of
covalently bound carbohydrate, but the relative proportions of metals
are interesting. According to Beck et al. (1986)
, the red kidney bean
PAP contains one atom of Fe and one atom of Zn per subunit, giving it
an absorption maximum of 560 nm. The slightly lower 556 nm absorption
maximum of the S. oligorrhiza enzyme may reflect its mixed
metal content. As in the red kidney bean PAP, sodium dithionite caused
a partial bleaching of the S. oligorrhiza PAP absorbance and
shifted its absorption maximum to lower wavelengths (Fig. 3).
Metals contained in PAPs vary from species to species. Sugiura et al.
(1980)
found a PAP from sweet potato tubers that contained Mn, giving
that enzyme maximal absorbance at 515 nm. Subsequent analyses of the
sweet potato phosphatase showed that the native enzyme contains traces
of Fe as well as Mn (Kawabe et al., 1984
). More detailed studies will
be necessary to determine the precise metal stoichiometry in the
S. oligorrhiza phosphatase.
Radiolabeling with specific precursors of the GPI anchor has been a
common approach to the identification of GPI-anchored proteins of
animals (Englund, 1993
) and, more recently, of two of the few plants
examined (Stöhr et al., 1995
; Morita et al., 1996
). For the
present study we incubated S. oligorrhiza with [3H]ethanolamine as described previously in
characterization studies (Morita et al., 1996
), but we used the
resulting extracts for radioimmunoprecipitation of the phosphatase. As
previously observed (Morita et al., 1996
), most of the cellular
radioactivity was present in phosphatidylethanolamine, a major membrane
phospholipid, or as unincorporated ethanolamine. The immunopurified
protein accounted for 6% of the total phosphatase activity and 1.6%
of protein radioactivity. SDS-PAGE and immunoblot analysis (Fig. 4)
showed clearly that the immunoprecipitated protein was indeed the 57-kD
phosphatase and that it was radiolabeled. Our previous work with
S. oligorrhiza (Morita et al., 1996
) demonstrated that radioactivity incorporated into proteins from added
[3H]ethanolamine is not randomized into other
metabolites. This result supports our previous conclusion that
ethanolamine is covalently bound to the phosphatase.
With only a limited number of partially complete characterizations of
plant GPI-anchored proteins currently available, the field is in its
infancy. PAPs of the type described here are widely distributed plant
proteins that are localized on the cell surface and in the cell wall
(Cashikar et al., 1997
), as would be expected of a GPI-anchored
protein. Although the synthesis of plant PAP is markedly induced in
phosphate-deficient environments, these conditions also favor the
turnover of PAP (Cashikar and Rao, 1996
) and possibly the rapid
cleavage of its GPI anchor (Morita et al., 1996
). PAP stability is
greatly enhanced by its enzymatic reaction product, Pi (Cashikar and
Rao, 1996
). Because of the newly recognized role of the GPI anchor in
signal transduction (Robinson, 1997
) and receptor cycling (Maxfield and
Mayor, 1997
), it is important to continue exploring how this protein
modification may contribute to the regulation of metabolism in plant
tissues.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
1
This work was supported in part by grants from
the U.S. Department of Agriculture (nos. 93-37304-9228 and
96-35304-3629 to G.A.T.).
*
Corresponding author; e-mail hoku{at}bio.sci.hokudai.ac.jp; fax
81-11-757-5994.
Received March 13, 1998;
accepted August 14, 1998.
 |
ABBREVIATIONS |
Abbreviations:
GPI, glycosylphosphatidylinositol.
PAP, purple
acid phosphatase.
 |
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
We are grateful to Dr. T. D. McKnight (Texas A & M
University, College Station) for providing the antiserum against
Arabidopsis PAP and the cDNA clone of Arabidopsis PAP. We also
appreciate the synthesis and provision of the N-terminal oligopeptide
of S. oligorrhiza PAP by Drs. C. Mazur and L. Wolfe (U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency, Athens, GA).
 |
LITERATURE CITED |
Beck J,
McConachie LA,
Summors AC,
Arnold WN,
De Jersey J,
Zerner B
(1986)
Properties of a purple phosphatase from red kidney bean: a zinc-iron metalloenzyme.
Biochim Biophys Acta
869:
61-68
Cashikar AG,
Kumaresan R,
Rao NM
(1997)
Biochemical characterization and subcellular localization of the red kidney bean purple acid phosphatase.
Plant Physiol
114:
907-915
[Abstract]
Cashikar AG,
Rao NM
(1996)
Unfolding pathway in red kidney bean acid phosphatase is dependent on ligand binding.
J Biol Chem
271:
4741-4746
[Abstract/Free Full Text]
Douglas DJ,
French JB
(1981)
Elemental analysis with a microwave-induced plasma/quadrupole mass spectrometer system.
Anal Chem
53:
37-41
Englund PT
(1993)
The structure and biosynthesis of glycosyl phosphatidylinositol protein anchors.
Annu Rev Biochem
62:
121-138
[CrossRef][ISI][Medline]
Kawabe H,
Sugiura Y,
Terauchi M,
Tanaka H
(1984)
Mn(III)-containing acid phosphatase. Properties of Fe(III)-substituted enzyme and function of Mn(III) and Fe(III) in plant and mammalian acid phosphatases.
Biochim Biophys Acta
784:
81-89
[CrossRef][Medline]
Klabunde T,
Stahl B,
Suerbaum H,
Hahner S,
Karas M,
Hillenkamp F,
Krebs B,
Witzel H
(1994)
The amino acid sequence of the red kidney bean Fe(III)-Zn(II) purple acid phosphatase.
Eur J Biochem
226:
369-375
[Medline]
Kunze M,
Riedel J,
Lange U,
Hurwitz R,
Tischner R
(1997)
Evidence for the presence of GPI-anchored PM-NR in leaves of Beta vulgaris and for PM-NR in barley leaves.
Plant Physiol Biochem
35:
507-512
Laemmli UK
(1970)
Cleavage of structural proteins during the assembly of the head of bacteriophage T4.
Nature
227:
680-685
[CrossRef][Medline]
LeBansky BR,
McKnight TD,
Griffing LR
(1991)
Purification and characterization of a secreted purple phosphatase from soybean suspension cultures.
Plant Physiol
99:
391-395
Low MG
(1989)
The glycosyl-phosphatidylinositol anchor of membrane proteins.
Biochim Biophys Acta
988:
427-454
[Medline]
Maxfield FR, Mayor S (1997) Cell surface dynamics of GPI-anchored
proteins. In F Haag, F Koch-Nolte, eds, ADP-Ribosylation in
Animal Tissues. Plenum Press, New York, pp 365-370
Morita N,
Nakazato H,
Okuyama H,
Kim Y,
Thompson GA Jr
(1996)
Evidence for a glycosylinositolphospholipid-anchored alkaline phosphatase in the aquatic plant Spirodela oligorrhiza.
Biochim Biophys Acta
1290:
53-62
[Medline]
Nakazato H,
Okamoto T,
Ishikawa K,
Okuyama H
(1997a)
Purification and characterization of phosphatase inducibly synthesized in Spirodela oligorrhiza grown under phosphate-deficient conditions.
Plant Physiol Biochem
35:
437-446
Nakazato H,
Okamoto T,
Nishikoori M,
Washio K,
Morita N,
Haraguchi K,
Thompson GA Jr,
Okuyama H
(1997b)
Characterization and cDNA cloning of the GPI-anchored phosphatase from Spirodela oligorrhiza.
In
T Ando,
K Fujita,
T Mae,
H Matsumoto,
S Mori,
J Sekiya,
eds, Plant Nutrition
For Sustainable Food Production and Environment.
Kluwer Academic Publishers, Dordrecht, The Netherlands, pp 229-230
Posner HB (1967) Aquatic vascular plants. In FA Witt,
NK Wessels, eds, Methods in Developmental Biology. Crowell, New York,
pp 301-317
Robinson PJ (1997) Signal transduction via GPI-anchored
membrane proteins. In F Haag, F Koch-Nolte, eds,
ADP-Ribosylation in Animal Tissues. Plenum Press, New York, pp 365-370
Stöhr C,
Schuler F,
Tischner R
(1995)
Glycosyl-phosphatidylinositol-anchored proteins exist in the plasma membrane of Chlorella saccharophila (Krüger) Nadson: plasma membrane-bound nitrate reductase as an example.
Planta
196:
284-287
Sugiura Y,
Kawabe H,
Tanaka H
(1980)
New manganese(III)-containing acid phosphatase.
Evidence for an intense charge-transfer band and tyrosine phenolate coordination J Am Chem Soc
102:
6581-6582
Sugiura Y,
Kawabe H,
Tanaka H,
Fujimoto S,
Ohara A
(1981)
Purification, enzymatic properties and active site environment of a novel manganese(III)-containing acid phosphatase.
J Biol Chem
256:
10664-10670
[Abstract/Free Full Text]
Takos AM,
Dry IB,
Soole K
(1997)
Detection of glycosyl-phosphatidylinositol-anchored proteins on the surface of Nicotiana tabacum protoplasts.
FEBS Lett
405:
1-4
[CrossRef][ISI][Medline]
Vincent JB,
Averill BA
(1990)
An enzyme with a double identity: purple acid phosphatase and tartrate-resistant acid phosphatase.
FASEB J
4:
3009-3014
[Abstract]