ARABIDOPSIS-THALIANA NADPH OXIDOREDUCTASE HOMOLOGS CONFER TOLERANCE OF YEASTS TOWARD THE THIOL-OXIDIZING DRUG DIAMIDE

Citation
E. Babiychuk et al., ARABIDOPSIS-THALIANA NADPH OXIDOREDUCTASE HOMOLOGS CONFER TOLERANCE OF YEASTS TOWARD THE THIOL-OXIDIZING DRUG DIAMIDE, The Journal of biological chemistry, 270(44), 1995, pp. 26224-26231
Citations number
57
Categorie Soggetti
Biology
ISSN journal
00219258
Volume
270
Issue
44
Year of publication
1995
Pages
26224 - 26231
Database
ISI
SICI code
0021-9258(1995)270:44<26224:ANOHCT>2.0.ZU;2-A
Abstract
To isolate new plant genes involved in the defense against oxidative s tress, an Arabidopsis cDNA library in a yeast expression vector was tr ansformed into a yeast strain deficient in the YAP1 gene, which encode s a b-Zip transcription factor and regulates general stress response i n yeasts. Cells from approximate to 10(5) primary transformants were s ubjected to a tolerance screen toward the thiol-oxidizing drug diamide , which depletes the reduced glutathione in the cell, Four types of Ar obidopsis cDNAs were isolated, Three of these cDNAs (PI, Pa, and P4) b elong to a plant zeta-crystallin family and P3 is an Arabidopsis homol og of isoflavonoid reductases. As such, all four isolated cDNAs are ho mologous to NADPH oxidoreductases. PI, P2, and PS steady-state mRNAs a ccumulated rapidly in Arabidopsis plants under various oxidative stres s conditions, such as treatment with paraquat, t-butylhydroperoxide, d iamide, and menadione. The data suggested that proteins encoded by the isolated cDNAs play a distinct role in plant antioxidant defense and are possibly involved in NAD(P)/NAD(P)H homeostasis.