Genetic Tests of the Roles of the Embryonic Ureases of Soybean
- 1 November 1991
- journal article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in Plant Physiology
- Vol. 97 (3) , 1004-1010
- https://doi.org/10.1104/pp.97.3.1004
Abstract
We assayed the in vivo activity of the ureases of soybean (Glycine max) embryos by genetically eliminating the abundant embryo-specific urease, the ubiquitous urease, or a background urease. Mutant embryos accumulated urea (250-fold over progenitor) only when lacking all three ureases and only when developed on plants lacking the ubiquitous urease. Thus, embryo urea is generated in maternal tissue where its accumulation is not mitigated by the background urease. However, the background urease can hydrolyze virtually all urea delivered to the developing embryo. Radicles of 2-day-old germinants accumulated urea in the presence or absence of the embryo-specific urease (2 micromoles per gram dry weight radicle). However, mutants lacking the ubiquitous urease exhibited increased accumulation of urea (to 4-5 micromoles urea per gram dry weight radicle). Thus, the ubiquitous and not the embryo-specific urease hydrolyzes urea generated during germination. In the absence of both of these ureases, the background urease activity (4% of ubiquitous urease) may hydrolyze most of the urea generated. A pleiotropic mutant lacking all urease accumulated 34 micromoles urea per gram dry weight radicle (increasing 2.5-fold at 3 days after germination). Urea (20 millimolar) was toxic to in vitro-cultured cotyledons which contained active embryo-specific urease. Cotyledons lacking the embryo-specific urease accumulated more protein when grown with urea than with no nitrogen source. Among cotyledons lacking the embryo-specific urease, fresh weight increases were virtually unchanged whether grown on urea or on no nitrogen and whether in the presence or absence of the ubiquitous urease. However, elimination of the ubiquitous urease reduced protein deposition on urea-N, and elimination of both the ubiquitous and background ureases further reduced urea-derived protein. The evidence is consistent with the lack of a role in urea hydrolysis for the embryo-specific urease in developing embryos or germinating seeds. Because the embryo-specific urease is deleterious to cotyledons cultured in vitro on urea-N, its role may be to hydrolyze urea in wounded or infected embryos, creating a hostile environment for pest or pathogen. While the ubiquitous urease is operative in leaves and in seedlings, all or most of its function can be assumed by the background urease in embryos and in seedlings.Keywords
This publication has 12 references indexed in Scilit:
- Comparisons of soybean urease isolated from seed and tissue culture.Published by Elsevier ,2021
- Soybean Roots Retain the Seed Urease Isozyme Synthesized during Embryo DevelopmentPlant Physiology, 1990
- Arginine Metabolism in Developing Soybean CotyledonsPlant Physiology, 1989
- Pleiotropic soybean mutants defective in both urease isozymesMolecular Genetics and Genomics, 1987
- Recovery of a soybean urease genomic clone by sequential library screening with two synthetic oligodeoxynucleotidesGene, 1987
- Structure and Possible Ureide Degrading Function of the Ubiquitous Urease of SoybeanPlant Physiology, 1985
- Soybean Leaf Urease: A Seed Enzyme?Plant Physiology, 1984
- Nickel Is Not Required for Apourease Synthesis in Soybean SeedsPlant Physiology, 1983
- Inhibition by Adenine Derivatives of the Cyanide-Insensitive Electron Transport Pathway of Plant MitochondriaPlant Physiology, 1982
- A Soybean Seed Urease-Null Produces Urease in Cell CulturePlant Physiology, 1982