Structure and possible ureide degrading function of the ubiquitous urease of soybean
- PMID: 16664493
- PMCID: PMC1074972
- DOI: 10.1104/pp.79.3.794
Structure and possible ureide degrading function of the ubiquitous urease of soybean
Abstract
Ubiquitous soybean urease, as opposed to the seed-specific urease, designates the seemingly identical ureolytic activities of suspension cultures and leaves. It also appears to be the basal urease in developing seeds of a variety, Itachi, which lacks the seed-specific urease (Polacco, Winkler 1984 Plant Physiol 74: 800-804). On native polyacrylamide gels the ureolytic activities in crude extracts of these three tissues comigrate as determined by assays of gel slices. At this level of resolution the ubiquitous urease also migrates with or close to the fast (trimeric) form of the seed-specific urease.The ubiquitous urease was purified approximately 100-fold from suspension cultures of two cultivars (Itachi and Prize) as well as from developing seeds of Itachi. These partially purified preparations allowed visualization of native urease on polyacrylamide gels by activity staining and of urease subunits on denaturing lithium dodecyl sulfate gels by electrophoretic transfer to nitrocellulose and immunological detection ("Western Blot"). The ubiquitous urease holoenzyme migrates slightly less rapidly than the fast seed urease in native gels; its subunit migrates slightly less rapidly than the 93.5 kilodaltons subunit of either the fast or slow (hexameric) seed enzyme. The ubiquitous urease elutes from an agarose A-0.5 meter column with the fast form of the seed urease species suggesting that the ubiquitous urease, like the fast seed urease, exists as a trimeric holoenzyme. The soybean cultivar, Prize, produces the hexameric seed urease; yet its ubiquitous urease (from leaf and suspension culture) is trimeric.The pH dependence of the ureolytic activity of seed coats of both seed urease-negative (Itachi) and seed urease-positive (Williams) cultivars suggests that this activity is exclusively the ubiquitous urease. Its relatively higher levels in seed coats than in embryos of Itachi suggests that the ubiquitous urease is involved in degradation of urea derived from ureides. Consistent with a ureide origin for urea is the observation that addition of a urease inhibitor, phenylphosphordiamidate, to extracts of developing Itachi seeds (seed coat plus embryo) results in accumulation of urea from allantoic acid.
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