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American Journal of Botany, Vol 85, 1033, Copyright © 1998 by Botanical Society of America, Inc.
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KW Hilu and LV Sharova
Prolamin is the dominant class of seed storage protein in grasses (Poaceae). Information on the 10 kDa multigene family coding for prolamins characteristic of the bambusoid-oryzoid grasses is limited. Two genes encoding 10 kDa prolamin were cloned and sequenced in the bambusoid species Phyllostachys aurea to assess the sequence diversity of this gene family in the oryzoid-bambusoid grasses. The genes, ~417 bp in length, were 96% similar at the DNA sequence level, differing in 12 base substitutions dispersed throughout the sequence. Eight of these mutations were nonsynonymous, leading to amino acid substitutions in the coding region, and one was nonsense, producing an amber stop codon. One gene had an open reading frame (ORF) of 139 amino acids, while the other gene had a shorter ORF (106 amino acids) due to the presence of a stop codon in the coding region and, thus, represents a pseudogene. Deduced proteins showed amino acid composition similar to that of rice. The study underscores the overall conserved nature of this multigene family and reflects considerable sequence divergence at the DNA and amino acid levels between the Oryza and the Phyllostachys genes. The systematic implication of the data is discussed in light of the inconsistent placement of Oryza in the Bambusoideae or Oryzoideae.
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