Plastid‐localised seed acyl‐carrier protein of Brassica napus is encoded by a distinct, nuclear multigene family

Abstract
Acyl‐carrier protein (ACP) is a key component involved in the regulation of fatty acid biosynthesis in plants. cDNA clones encoding ACP from Brassica napus (oil seed rape) embryos have been isolated using oligonucleotide probes derived from heterologous ACPs. Analysis of the DNA sequence data, in conjunction with N‐terminal amino acid sequence data, revealed ACP to be synthesized from nuclear DNA as a precursor containing a 51‐amino‐acid N‐terminal extension. Immunocytochemical studies showed ACP to be localised solely within the plastids of B. napus seed tissue and it would therefore appear that the N‐terminal extension functions as a transit peptide to direct ACP into these organelles. Analysis of several cDNA clones revealed sequence heterogeneity and thus evidence for an ACP multigene family. From ten cDNA clones, six unique genes, encoding five different mature ACP polypeptides, were identified. Northern blot hybridisation studies provide evidence that the seed and leaf forms of rape ACP are encoded by structurally distinct gene sets.