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Publication no. C-2004-0203-02R
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ARTICLE
Biochemical Characterization of gamma-75 k Secalins of Rye I. Amino Acid
Sequences.
Claudia Gellrich (1), Peter Schieberle (1), and Herbert Wieser (1,2). (1)
Deutsche Forschungsanstalt für Lebensmittelchemie and Kurt-Hess Institut für
Mehl- und Eiweißforschung, Lichtenbergstr. 4, D-85748 Garching. (2)
Corresponding author. E-mail: <h.wieser@Lrz.tum.de> Cereal Chem.
81(2):290-295. Accepted September 1, 2003. Copyright 2004 American Association
of Cereal Chemists, Inc.
The prolamin fraction of the rye cultivar Danko was reduced with
dithioerythritol and separated by reversed-phase HPLC on C(18) silica gel. Two
major gamma-75k secalins, P1 and P2, were collected, purified by
rechromatography, derivatized with 4-vinylpyridine, and digested in parallel
with alpha-chymotrypsin, thermolysin, and trypsin. The different enzymatic
hydrolyzates were preparatively separated by two-step reversed-phase HPLC on
C(18) silica gel, and the resulting peptides were characterized by sequence
analysis and, in parts, by mass spectrometry. By means of overlapping peptides
and by comparison with a known DNA sequence of a gamma-75k secalin (gSec2A)
derived from a wheat translocation line (2RS. 2BL), 84% of the P1 sequence and
35% of the P2 sequence could be assigned. Heterogeneity at several sequence
positions demonstrated that both protein preparations were not pure and
contained at least two or three components. The sequence of the C-terminal
domain of P1 was almost completely determined except for one of the 148 residues
which could not be identified. The partially determined sequences of P2 were
highly homologous with those of P1. The results revealed a close relationship
between P1, P2, and gSec2A and a high degree of homology with gamma-gliadins of
wheat including eight cysteine residues in homologous positions. The partially
sequenced N-terminal domain of P1 was similar to that of gSec2A and consisted of
repetitive sequences rich in glutamine, proline, and aromatic amino acids.
Differences from gamma-gliadins were found in the strongly increased number of
residues, in the more frequent modifications of the repetitive motifs, and in
the presence of a cysteine residue at position 12. The partial amino acid
sequence of the N-terminal domain of P2 was in agreement with that of P1,
besides a few exceptions in single positions and in the presence of a second
cysteine residue.
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